Bishapur

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Template:Expand French Template:Infobox ancient site Bishapur (Middle Persian: Bay-Šāpūr; Template:Langx, Bishâpûr) was an ancient city in Sasanid Persia (Iran) on the ancient road between Persis and Elam. The road linked the Sassanid capitals Estakhr (very close to Persepolis) and Ctesiphon. It is located south of modern Faliyan in the Kazerun County of Fars province, Iran. Bishapur was built near a river crossing and at the same site there is also a fort with rock-cut reservoirs and a river valley with six Sassanid rock reliefs.

History

File:Bishapour palais Shapur.jpg
Ruins of Shapour Palace in Bishapur

The name Bishapur derives from Bay-Šāpūr, which means Lord Shapur.[1][needs verification]

According to an inscription, the city itself was founded in 266 AD by Shapur I (241–272), who was the second Sassanid king and inflicted a triple defeat on the Romans, having killed Gordian III, captured Valerian and forced Philip the Arab to surrender. The city was not a completely new settlement: archaeologists have found remains from the Parthian and Elamite eras. The city remained important until the Arab conquest of Persia the rise of Islam in the second quarter of the 7th century AD.

The city has a rectangular plan with a grid pattern of regular intra urban streets, resembling Roman city design. This design was never repeated in the architecture of Iran.[2]

Excavations and research

File:Bishapur by Eugène Flandin.jpg
Bishapur in 1840; a painting by Eugène Flandin in the book "Travel in Persia" (Voyage en Perse)

The site was cleared by the Russian-French archaeologist Roman Ghirshman in the 1930s. The British archaeologist Georgina Herrmann has also written a book about the Sasanian rock reliefs in Bishapur which was published in 1980.[3]

Decoration

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The floor was paved with black marble slabs, with a mosaic border. At the top of each alcove there was a picture of women naked under their transparent veils: courtesans, musicians, dancers, women twisting garlands, together with a few richly attired noble ladies.

See also

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References

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External links

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