Kangavar () is a city in the Central District of Kangavar County, Kermanshah province, Iran, serving as capital of both the county and the district.
Kangavar is in the easternmost part of Kermanshah province, on the modern road from Hamadan to Kermanshah, identical with a trace of the Silk Road, located at the distance of about 75 km from Hamadan and 96 km from Kermanshah.Wolfram Kleiss, "Kangavar", Encyclopaedia Iranica; accessed 31 October 2021.
In the early 20th century, Kangavar was held in fief by the family of a deceased court official, forming a separate government. Today, the town is best known for the Archaeology remains of a mixed Sassanid and Achaemenid edifice. During the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the ruins were misused as a source for building material for the expanding town.. Excavation first began in 1968, by which time the "large structure with its great columns set on a high stone platform". had been associated with a comment by Isidore of Charax, that refers to a "temple of Artemis" ( Parthian Stations 6) at "Concobar" in Lower Media, on the overland trade route between the Levant and India. References to Artemis in Iran are generally interpreted to be references to Anahita, and thus Isidore's "temple of Artemis" came to be understood as a reference to a temple of Anahita.
Although a general plan of the complex has been compiled, it is still not sufficient to learn about the function and shape of the terrace and the buildings that stood there. Given the lack of archaeological evidence for a temple-like building, "it is questionable whether the temple is identical with the ruins of Kangavar. Isidorus described obviously another temple of the first century AD, somewhere in the region of Congobar (Kangavar) or at the place of the later platform, which, according to the results of the excavation, seems to be built up in Sassanid times."
|
|