Tangeh Bolāghi, also transliterated as Tange-ye Bolāghi[1] (
Persian: تنگه بلاغی), or Bolāghi
Gorge, is an archaeologically significant valley consisting of 130 ancient settlements, dating back to the period between 5000 BCE and the
Sassanian dynastic era (224-651 CE). It is situated in
Iran’s southern province of
Fars, some 7 kilometres from
Pasargadae, Iran. This is the valley of the Polvar River, a tributary to
Kor River.
Archaeological research since 2005 have discovered a section of the
Royal Road (Rāh-e Shāhi — راه شاهی) connecting Pasargadae to
Persepolis,
Susa and other regions of the
Persian Empire up to
Sardis. Excavations have provided
archaeologists with a unique insight into the lives of the people living in the
Achaemenid dynastic era.
Archaeology
Prior to
Sivand Dam being completed in 2007, rescue archaeology was conducted in the area.
In May 2005, archaeologists unearthed a complete human skeleton at one of the excavation sites, thought to date back to the
Sassanid era (224-651). The skeleton, found in a
squatting position, is of an adult man. An
earthenware item was also found at this site which is considered to be the largest ancient earthenware of its kind ever found in Iran. In April 2006 this find was overshadowed by the discovery of the 7000-years old skeleton of a young woman dating from the
Tell-i Bakun Era (the fifth and fourth millennia BC) by a joint Iranian-German team of archaeologists in the same area. The archaeologists further found eight stone beads with the skeleton close to her wrists and neck. "The girl was buried while sleeping on her side and bending her legs with arms under her head like the sleep position of most children", according to the head of the team.[2][3]
When the Sivand Dam came into full service in 2007, part of an ancient site including the Achaemenid Shah's Road between
Cyrus's tomb and
Pasargadae, 130 ancient settlements and a palace ascribed to
Darius the Great may have been immersed in water from the rising Polvar River. Yet some reports indicated that there was not enough water flow in the river to fill up the dam completely.
Gallery
Skeleton of a young woman (estimated to have been between 14 and 16 at the time of death) dating from 7000 years ago, excavated in Tangeh Bolāghi
Pasargadae World Heritage Site, Pasargadae official website.
[1]Nota bene: This domain name seems to have been sold to a commercial company and therefore does not represent the original site.
International Committee to Save the Archaeological Sites of Pasargad:
English,
Persian.
Mohammad Sālehi-Zādeh and Negār Sālehi-Zādeh, directors and producers, The last screams of Bolāghi Gorge and Pasargadae Plains ("Ākharin Faryād'ha'ye Tang-e ye Bolāghi va Dasht-e Pāsār'gād"), dedicated to International Committee to Save the Archaeological Sites of Pasargad,
YouTube.