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year 7, Issue 24 (8-2023)                   Parseh J. Archaeol. Stud. 2023, 7(24): 311-340 | Back to browse issues page


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Nokandeh J. (2023). Late Bronze Age Shields from the Bazgir Metal Hoard, Gorgan Plain, Iran. Parseh J. Archaeol. Stud.. 7(24), 311-340. doi:10.30699/PJAS.7.24.311
URL: http://journal.richt.ir/mbp/article-1-906-en.html
Assistant Professor, Iranian Center for Archaeology (ICAR), Research Institute of Cultural Heritage and Tourism, Tehran, Iran (RICHT). , j.nokandeh@richt.ir
Abstract:   (2697 Views)
Tappeh Bazgir is one of the most important archaeological sites of the Late Bronze Age in northeastern Iran. At this site, a hoard of 759 Bronze Age copper-alloy objects with an approximate weight of more than two tons was excavated. This find is unique in terms of volume and the extraordinary finds it contained. This archaeological hoard was discovered by chance in 2001, and in 2010 a rescue excavation was carried out at the findspot. This hoard had been buried in the virgin soil and deliberately concealed under a residential floor in the Late Bronze Age. The objects recovered served different purposes; they include agricultural and household implements, tools, ceremonial objects and a variety of weapons. The artifacts were all located next to each other in a pit and had been arranged in a regular manner. There were also three shields among these objects. They had been placed next to each other under basins with gutter-shaped pipes and on top of daggers, hatchets, axes, two-pronged forks, and stone rods. These weapons had evidently been positioned at close to the domestic objects. The shields are of strikingly similar shapes, but they differ slightly in the number of openings and bars. Up to now, no similar shields have been found at any other archaeological site. These shields seem to be the oldest shields excavated in Iran. XRD and XRF analyses revealed that one of the shields and other objects of the hoard were made of cast copper-alloy, and they were subjected to cold forging/hammering later.
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Type of Study: Research | Subject: Special Archeology
Received: 2022/10/29 | Accepted: 2023/01/30 | Published: 2023/08/1

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