THE
BURNT CITY
Shahr-i
Sokhta, one of the wonders in the ancient world, a unique sample
of the first, the biggest and the most advanced urban establishments
in the southeast of Iran, had been founded along the direction of
the Hirmand River to Hamun Lake.
Shahr-i Sokhta and its civilization, with more than 5000 years history,
as a scientific, industrial, social, cultural and artistic center,
was an archaeological site in the Bronze Age.
The establishment here initiated from 3200 BC and the archaeologists
found the traces of four phases of life up to 1800 BC.
Shahr-i Sokhta is composed of five sectors including the residential
area in the northeast of the city; the central part; industrial
zone; historical monuments; and cemetery; all are observable as
a series of sequential and connected hills.
The following highly diverse archaeological findings in the city
indicate the existence of a rich and powerful civilization there:
Sokhta palace, so-called "Staircase" houses, the first
brain surgery, the first artificial eye in the world, the first
motion picture, a wooden ruler, chess and backgammon, jewelry, regular
water supply system and wastewater discharge, industries as textile
weaving, spinning, woodturning, marquetry, marble making, fishing
net weaving, pottery, seal making, mat weaving and making metal
tools.
This city is one of the few ancient cities in which women were financially
responsible for their families. The name of site is not only derived
from a change in the direction of Hirmand River and continuous droughts
that followed it, but also from periodic conflagrations here.
Shahr-i
Sokhta or Shahr-e Sukhteh (literally Burnt City) is a Bronze Age
urban settlement in the southeast of Iran, in Sistan. Shar-e Sukhteh
is located on the bank of the Helmand River and beside the Zahedan-Zabol
road.
The oldest known backgammon, oldest known caraway seed and the oldest
known animation together with numerous metallurgical finds (e.g.
slag and crucible pieces) are among the finds which have been unearthed
by archaeological excavations from this site. The site has been
excavated by Italian and Iranian archaeological teams in 70's and
80's.
Oldest
Animation :
First
Animation of the World Found In Burnt City, Iran
An animated piece on an earthen goblet that belongs to 5000 years
ago was found in Burnt City in Sistan-Baluchistan province, southeastern
Iran. On this ancient piece that can be called the first animation
of the world, the artist has portrayed a goat that jumps toward
a tree and eats its leaves. The earthenware found in Burnt City,
one of the most developed civilizations dating back to 5000 years
ago, show the images of goat and fish more than any other subject.
It seems these animals were used more than any other by the people
of this city. On this goblet, with a diameter of 8 cm and height
of 10 cm, the images show movement in an intricate way that is an
unprecedented discovery. Some earthenware found in Burnt City show
repetitive images, but none of them implicate any movements.
"While excavating the grave in which the cream-colored goblet
has been found, we came across a skeleton that probably belongs
to the creator of this piece", Mansour Sajjadi, the Iranian
archeologist responsible for excavations in Burnt City told CHN.
The archeologists have managed to make an animated piece on the
basis of these images in the form of a 20-second film.
After 8 seasons of research in Burnt City, this 5000-year-old site
dating back to 2nd or 3rd century BC still holds many secrets within.
Burnt City was civilized and developed, and cherished very important
ancient crafts including jewelry making and pottery.
Oldest
Backgammon :
The
oldest backgammon in the world along with 60 pieces has been unearthed
beneath the rubbles of the legendary Burnt City (Shahr-i Sokhta)
in Sistan-Baluchistan province, southeastern Iran.
Iranian archeologists working on the relics of the 5,000-year-old
civilization argue this backgammon is much older than the one already
discovered in Mesopotamia and their evidence is strong enough to
claim the board game was first played in the Burnt City and then
transferred to other civilizations.
"The board is rectangular and made of ebony, which did not
grow in Sistan and merchants used to import it from India."
the board features an engraved serpent coiling around itself for
20 times, thus producing 20 slots for the game, more affectionately
known in Persian as Takhte Nard. The engraving, artistically done,
indicates artisans in the Burnt City were masters of the craft.
"The 60 pieces were also unearthed inside a terracotta vessel
beside the board. They were made of common stones quarried in the
city, including agate and turquoise.
Experts still wonder why they played the game with 60 pieces and
are trying to discern its rules, but it at least shows it is 100-200
years older than the one discovered in Mesopotamia.
They are also intrigued that inhabitants of ancient civilizations,
widely believed to be concerned with their daily survival, could
afford to indulge in such luxuries as playing board games.
LONDON, (CAIS) -- With discovering and documenting some 130 historical
sites including satellite villages in the archeological site of
Burnt City within only 6 months, archeologists of the Cultural Heritage
Center of Burnt City have surpassed all the previous records in
identifying and registering archeological sites in Iran.
“Discovery
and registration of 130 historical sites within 6 months of archeological
excavations in Burnt City indicates that almost every day one discovery
has been made and announced to be registered in the list of Iran’s
National Heritage, something which is absolutely unprecedented in
the history of archeological excavations in Iran and should be registered
as a successful record for Iran’s Cultural Heritage and Tourism
Organization (ICHTO),” said Alireza Khosravi, head of Cultural
Heritage Center of Burnt City.
Khosravi
also announced that experts are currently working on preparing a
map on which distribution of archeological sites in Sistan Plain
is pinned down as well as a digital map from the area.
According
to Khosravi, this project aims to highlight the tourism potentials
of the region through identifying and documenting the historical
sites that exist in the area. It also intends to introduce the unique
archeological features of the Sistan Plain and the rich civilization
and cultural values of Burnt City, southeast Iran, and to reveal
some unknown aspects of this historical site.
Prior
to this, some 137 historical hills had been identified by this Center
in the vicinity of Burnt City historical site. Archeologists believed
that most probably these hills were settled by the Burnt City inhabitants
during the ancient times. The discovered historical sites are located
6-8 kilometers from the Burnt City and some cultural evidence such
as broken clays similar to those discovered in Burnt City have been
unearthed in these hills.
Located
57 kilometers from the city of Zabol in Sistan va Baluchestan province,
southeast Iran, the Burnt City covers an area of 150 hectares and
was one of the world’s largest cities at the dawn of the urban
era. It was built around 3200 BCE and was destroyed some time around
2100 BCE. The city had four stages of civilization and was burnt
down three times, which is why it is called Burnt City (Shahr-e
Sukhteh in Persian).
Toward
the end of the second millennium BCE, Burnt City came to a cultural
standstill; and archeological evidence shows that this ancient civilization
of the eastern plateau of Iran somehow vanished from the face of
the earth at the beginning of the first millennium BCE.
According
to Khosravi, archeologists are determined to trace the settlement
area of human beings during the latest periods of settlement in
Burnt City which coincided with the dawn of civilization in eastern
half of the Iranian Plateau. Comparing and studying the discovered
cultural evidence such as earthenware remains scattered in the region
in different areas from the basin of Hirmand River to the satellite
villages as well as identifying the location of the settlement areas
in other parts of Sistan Plain where life existed at a time Burnt
City was still alive and discovering the process of development
of the art of pottery-making in Sistan Plain and finding the trend
of civilization in the region are the other objectives behind this
year’s archeological excavations in the vicinity of Burnt
City.
Although
9 seasons of archeological excavations have been carried out on
the Burnt City so far, there are still many questions remained unanswered
about the ethnicity and language of its inhabitants. Moreover, archeologists
have not yet figured out what happened to the people of the region
and where they migrated to after they abandoned their city.
Excavation
on the Burnt City was initiated in 1967 when Professor Maurizzio
Tosi, Italian archeologists and his colleagues joined Iranian archeologists.
Later, in 1988-89, excavations were resumed by Dr. Sajjadi under
the auspices of Iran’s Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization.
The outcome of the research has been published in 170 books and
papers so far in Persian, English, Italian, Japanese, German, and
Spanish languages.
According
to excavations and researches, the Burnt City has come to be known
as one of the most important proofs for the independence of the
eastern part of Iran from Mesopotamia. Based on the discovered historical
relics such as rope, basket, cloth, wooden objects, fingernail and
hair, weaving equipment such as hooks, shoe lace, human and animal
statuettes seldom unearthed in other archeological sites so far,
archeologists have concluded that Burnt City was the most significant
center of settlement and in fact the whole region’s social,
economic, political and cultural center during the 3rd and 2nd millennia
BCE.
One
of the prominent ancient relics found in the Burnt City is a skull
that anthropologists believe might have been the first evidence
of brain surgeries in prehistoric Iran. The skull was found in a
mass grave in 1978 during excavations by the Italian team, lead
by Maurizzio Tosi.
Results
of 10 years of excavations in the historical site of Burnt City
are to be published in a book in which major archeological findings
in this historical site will be documented.
The Burnt City, a Great Civilization in a Small Desert :
Abstract:
The Burnt City in eastern Iran dates back to 5,000 years ago and
is spread in an area of 150 hectares. In its life span of 1100 years,
the Burnt City has been witness to four civilization eras. It was
unearthed in the year 1915.
The
area, 56 km from the city of Zabol in Sistan-Baluchestan Province,
is the place that is known by some local people as the "region
of bandits" but in fact far from any wickedness, it is the
place where our past history has taken shape. The place is the "Burnt
City", a land that has come from 5000-years ago, and has opened
up its secrets to archaeologists to enable them to reveal its magnificence
to the contemporary generation.
Thousands
of years ago some people used to live on this desert land and its
hot soil that is hard to bear today, who had their own civilization
and architectural style, the remains of which that had once been
buried under the layers of soil have now been pulled out of the
ancient hills of the region.
The
entire vast desert is filled with fragments of clay works spread
all over the area. However, we were not able to inspect the entire
region due to the hot weather and wind.
"With
every step that we took the soil under our feet moved aside, revealing
more fragments of clay works. We were told that after each rain
the earth will be washed away and fragments will come out to the
surface and that the more fragments they collect the generous land
will give them more pieces of the precious gifts. The moment we
touched the clay fragments that were buried under the soil we sensed
a strange feeling that reminded us of our Oriental background and
this feeling made us to search for our lost identity within the
Burnt City" (Dr. Mansour Seyed Sajjadi, an archaeologist who
has for years made research works in the Burnt City).
"The
Burnt City with a span of 150 hectares of land is the largest areas
in the Middle East dating back to the Brass Age. It was founded
in 3200 BCE and was ruined in 2100 BCE and in the course of its
1100-year life was witness to four civilization eras. It was burnt
for three times and completely ruined in the third fire. That is
the reason as to why the city is called the "Burnt City".
So
far, no one has found out the real name of the city and only in
the case that archaeologists gain access to the historical record
of the ancient city, it would be possible to find out the real name
of the city by reading the unearthed manuscripts.
The
available evidences indicate that the Burnt City was first discovered
by British scholar Orwell Stein in the year 1915 and later in the
1960s, a team from the Italian institute for the Middle East and
Oriental studies launched archeological excavations with the cooperation
of the Archeology General Department in a period between 1967 to
1978.
With
the discovery of 250 graves, the team collected interesting valuable
information. However, excavations were halted in the ancient area
from 1978 for a period of 18 years but archeological activities
once again resumed in the area in 1997.
Dr.
Sajjadi, whose abundant love for the ancient region is hard to be
estimated, was greatly cautious lest anybody might damage the newly
repaired walls of the invaluable historical heritage by walking
on it.
He
believed that the Burnt City is a big laboratory in the heart of
the desert that has housed various sectors such as residential quarters,
historical monuments, graveyards and industrial units. Given that
so far no defensive fortress or walls have been discovered in the
Burnt City, archaeologists believe that the inhabitants of the city
were all peace-loving and calm people who lived a peaceful life
in the absence of any boundaries and without getting involved in
any war or confrontation.
Studies
show that in the early stage of their settlement in the region (3200
to 2800 BCE) the people of the Burnt City had established contacts
and entered into transactions with the people in the Eastern and
North-Eastern parts of the Greater Iran, the Central Asia and Quetta
(in what is today known as Pakistan's Baluchistan).
Dr.
Sajjadi, the expert archaeologist of the Burnt City, says that in
the second phase of their settlement (2800 to 2500 BCE) the people
halted their contacts with Khuzestan but preserved their ties with
Central Asia. Seals that have been discovered in the Burnt City,
Mishmahig (Bahrain), Kuwait and southern Khvarvaran (Iraq) lend
further proof to such a theory.
The
world's first mesurment found in Burnt city (Ruller)
In
the third phase (2500 to 2300 BCE) and even in the fourth phase
(2300 to 2100 BCE) the inhabitants of the Burnt City had contacts
with northern and eastern areas but gradually lowered the level
of their relationship.
The archaeologist further opines that the Burnt City was the center
of a civilization known as "Civilization of the Hirmand River
Zone" that served as the capital of the civilizations that
existed 5000 years ago.
However,
due to the displacement and drying up of the Hirmand River's delta,
living in the region lost its charm. It is said that the Burnt City
had about 70 villages that were highly active in agriculture and
production of clay works.
In
the course of the 2001 archeological excavations in the area, over
one ton of clay objects were collected from inside the graves and
in architectural environments. The number of objects discovered
from the historical site is out of estimation. It was very hard
to make further comments on the people who lived in the Burnt City
when we heard that objects, including 12 patterns of fabrics in
different colors have been discovered in the area as well as inlaid
works dating back to 5000 years ago.
The
efficiency, knowledge and state-of-the-art deployed by those people
leaves no room for any judgment. We were told there that the oldest
sample of surgery on human's skull was carried out on a 13-year-old
girl suffering from hydrocephalic. The skull is due to be displayed
at the first medical history museum of Iran.
Apparently,
the major part of the information has been obtained from graves
that have been unearthed in the course of excavation operations.
"We
then slowly proceeded towards the graveyard section as if our steps
would disturb the sleeping ancestors. The graveyard sector was expanded
in an area of 20 hectares of the dead land", according to Dr.
Sajjadi.
The
graveyard embraces about 40,000 graves of which only 134 graves
have been excavated in the course of four operational seasons and
158 skeletons have been discovered out of them of which about 120
samples have undergone anthropological studies.
Research
studies show that due to the hard labor, men and women who lived
in the Burnt City had short span of life to the extent that men
died at the age of 26 to 53 and women at 26 to 46. On the other
hand, archaeologists evaluate these graves as data banks through
which they can find out the style of living, beliefs and professionals
of their ancestors.
Findings obtained in the course of four archeological seasons in
the Burnt City indicate that the people of the Burnt City had veteran
jeweler, painters, shepherds, farmers, weavers and craftsmen among
them.
Samples
of the precious stones cut in that period, some with less than a
millimeter thickness further reveals the delicacy of the art of
jewelry at that time.
Archaeologists
have also found remains of paints in a number of pots indicating
that artists of that time used to paint clay pots. Elaborating on
the people's belief in that era for putting pots inside the grave
and beside the buried body, the archaeologist said the inhabitants
of the Burnt City believed in the postmortem life and thus viewed
death as a temporary sleep that would come to end one day. Therefore,
they used to place dishes, water and all the basic requirements
in the graves so that on the resurrection day they would be used
when the dead body will be awakened again.
Dr.
Sajjadi also points out that some cloves of garlic have been found
in a number of graves, adding that in some countries in southern
Europe and certain Indo-European tribes it is believed that garlic
will expel the wicked spirits out of their homes. Therefore, it
is also believed that people who lived in the Burnt City put cloves
of garlic inside the graves for the same reason and in order to
keep evil away from the dead body. He said that the evidence found
in one of the graves attested to the commitment of a murder as the
head of the dead body together with the deadly weapon had been placed
underneath his feet.
Despite
the invaluable information that archaeologists have obtained out
of the graves in the Burnt City, however, Dr. Sajjadi believes that
until the time that 1,000 graves have not been examined no one can
express his idea definitely and all comments are based on assumptions.
According to him, by the deployment of the present technology it
takes 150 years to scientifically to excavate the area. In fact,
no end could be speculated to that ancient realm as it was spread
in a span of 150 hectares.
"We
were curious to find out what happened to the people in the last
fire of the city and in the aftermath of the drying of the Hirmand
River's Delta and that where we could find their traces following
their migration from the Burnt City". According to Dr. Sajjadi,
after migrating from the Burnt City, the people had apparently settled
in regions on the other side of the borders.
He
says that there is no trace of them after 2100 to 2000 BCE because
no scientific research work has been conducted in this regard. The
more we gathered information about the Burnt City and its people
the heavier became our grief.
Source
:
https://www.visitiran.ir/
attraction/shahr-i-sokhta
-burnt-city
http://hamechiirony.
blogspot.com/2006/10/
burnt-city.html
https://www.welcometoiran.com/
burnt-city-shahr-e-sukhteh