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The Band-e Kaisar (), Pol-e Kaisar ("Caesar's bridge"), Bridge of Valerian or Shadorvan was an ancient arch bridge in the city of , Khuzestan province, , and the first in the country to combine it with a dam. Built by the Sassanids during the 3rd century CE, using prisoners of war as the workforce,; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; it is the easternmost example of design and . Its dual-purpose design exerted a profound influence on Iranian civil engineering and was instrumental in developing Sassanid water management techniques.Impact on civil engineering: ; on water management:

The approximately 500m long over the , Iran's most effluent river, was the core structure of the Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System (سازه‌های آبی شوشتر) from which the city derived its agricultural productivity.Length: ; ; extensive irrigation system: The arched superstructure carried across the important road between and the Sassanid capital . Repaired repeatedly throughout the Islamic period, the dam bridge remained in use until the late 19th century.; In 2009, it was designated by as Iran's 10th World Heritage Site. Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System, UNESCO, retrieved on 1 May 2010


History
According to Persian tradition, the Band-e Kaisar is named after the Roman emperor Valerian (253–260 AD), who was captured with his entire army by the Sassanid ruler after having been defeated in the Battle of Edessa (260). This vast labour force, which may have numbered up to 70,000 men and included the Roman engineering corps, was employed by the victors for construction work in Shushtar, an important agricultural center in south-western Iran.; engineers: To service its large stretches of arable land, altogether some 150,000 , the Romans set out to construct three structures: a canal called , and the two dams of Band-e Kaisar and Band-e Mizan, which directed the water flow of the river into the artificial watercourse.; hectares: The names of the two barrages are confused by Smith (1971) and Hodge (1992 & 2000). O'Connor (1993), too, incorrectly locates the Band-e Kaisar on the Ab-i Gargar branch.

The story is related by the Muslim historians Tabari and in the 9th and 10th centuries. Although their novelistic narrative cannot be blindly trusted, the historical presence of the Romans is corroborated by modern local names, such as "Roumischgan" for a nearby village, and a tribe by the name of "Rumian". Moreover, local tradition ascribes to Roman settlers the origin of a number of trades, like the production of , and several popular customs.

The dam bridge at Shushtar belonged to the important road connection between the Sassanid centres of and . Two further Sassanid dam bridges on this road, the Pa-i-Pol across the and the one at over the Ab-i Diz, are also assumed to be the contemporary work of Roman prisoners of war. Both exhibit typically Roman masonry bound with mortar, a technique completely foreign to indigenous architecture.Roman masonry: ; Iranian non-use:

Modelled on the Roman example, the integration of a bridge superstructure into dam design became a standard practice of Iranian hydraulic engineering which lasted until about 1000 AD, when it culminated in the still existing Band-e Amir at .;


Construction
Shushtar lies on a rocky plateau above the Karun, Iran's most effluent river. An early dam, built by the Sassanids to divert water for the town and its extensive irrigable hinterland, did not work properly. The irrigation scheme put into effect after the arrival of the Roman labour force included three steps: First, the river was redirected towards the Ab-i Gargar, a channel which branches off the Karun at a point upstream of the dam construction site, rejoining the main river some 50 km south; the island it forms, called Mianâb ("Paradise"), is known for its plantations.; length: ; orchards: Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System, UNESCO, retrieved on 1 May 2010

Then, the Band-e Kaisar was built across the dried-up riverbed, with its foundations following a winding course in search for solid strata of .; sandstone: As the water flowed permanently over the top, the hydraulic structure conforms to the definition of a rather than a dam. Estimations of the raised water level range from a few feet to 7–10 m, but was most likely in the order of 3–4 m, which was enough to supply water for the irrigation conduits on both banks during the dry season. Despite its modest height, the weir wall was quite thick (9–10 m) to accommodate the arcaded superstructure.30–40 feet:

On top of the weir, a roadway originally supported by at least forty arches ran along its entire length of around 500 m. The which visually dominate the present-day structure, or rather its remains, are testimony to numerous reconstruction and maintenance works executed in Islamic times.Reconstructed arches: ; other repairs: The typical clear span of the Pol-e Kaisar was between 6.6 and 9 m.

The piers, protected on their upstream side by pointed cutwaters, were of rectangular shape and pierced by high-set floodways; their considerable thickness of 5 to 6.4 m restricted the waterway by nearly one-half. By comparison, pier thicknesses of Roman bridges located within the ’s frontiers commonly made up one-fourth of the length of the bridge and did not exceed a maximum of one-third.

The facing of the piers and the foundation consists of cut sandstone blocks bonded by mortar and joined by iron clamps; the interior was filled with ,; a building technique also observed in the Pa-i-pol bridge. On the upstream face, the river-bed was paved with large stone slabs, probably to prevent the current from undermining the dam base.; slabs: One former Persian name of the dam, "Shadirwan", derives from this paving.

Finally, another smaller barrage, the Band-e Mizan, whose construction may postdate the Roman works, was erected upstream to control the flow of water into the Ab-i Gargar canal. The time it took the Roman labour force to complete the ancient Shushtar hydraulic complex is variously reported as spanning three to seven years.

The site has been referred to as "a masterpiece of creative genius" by UNESCO. Along with the hydraulic works, it also includes Selastel Castle and a tower for water level measurement, as well as a series of .


Gallery
نمایی از پل معروف به بند قیصر.jpg A historical painting of Shadirwan Bridge.jpg پل معروف به بند قیصر - شوشتر.jpg نمایی دیگر از پل معروف به بند قیصر - شوشتر.jpg


See also
  • List of Roman bridges
  • List of Roman dams
  • Romans in Persia


Notes


Sources

Further reading

External links

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