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Zigurrate e Chogazanbil
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Chogha
Zanbil (Persian: چُغازَنبیل) is an
ancient Elamite complex in the Khuzestan
province of Iran It is one of the few
extant ziggurats outside of Mesopotamia
It lies approximately 25 kilometeres
west Dezfoul, 45 kilometres south of
Susa and 230 kilometres north of Abadan
by way of Ahvaz which is 120 kilometres
away.
It was built about 1250 BC by the king
Untash-Napirisha, mainly to honor the
great god Inshushinak. Its original name
was Dur Untash, which means 'town of
Untash', but it is unlikely that many
people, besides priests and servants,
ever lived there. The complex is
protected by three concentric walls
which define the main areas of the
'town'. The inner area is wholly taken
up with a great ziggurat dedicated to
the main god, which was built over an
earlier square temple with storage rooms
also built by Untash-Napirisha. The
middle area holds eleven temples for
lesser gods. It is believed that
twenty-two temples were originally
planned, but the king died before they
could be finished, and his successors
discontinued the building work. In the
outer area are royal
palaces, a funerary
palace containing five subterranean
royal tombs.
Although construction in the city
abruptly ended after Untash-Napirisha's
death, the site was not abandoned, but
continued to be occupied until it was
destroyed by the Assyrian king
Ashurbanipal in 640 BCE. Some scholars
speculate, based on the large number of
temples and sanctuaries at Chogha Zanbil,
that Untash-Napirisha attempted to
create a new religious center (possibly
intended to replace Susa) which would
unite the gods of both highland and
lowland Elam at one site.
Archaeological excavations undertaken
between 1951 and 1962 revealed the site
again, and the ziggurat is considered to
be the best preserved example in the
world. In 1979, Chogha Zanbil became the
first Iranian site to be inscribed on
the UNESCO World Heritage List.
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