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Shahr-i Sokhta 1
Shahr-i Sokhta 2
Shahr-i Sokhta 3
Shahr-i Sokhta 4
Shahr-i Sokhta 5
© UNESCO World Heritage Centre
UNESCO WHCCulturalInscribed 2014

Shahr-i Sokhta

Overview

Shahr-i Sokhta, meaning ‘Burnt City’, is located at the junction of Bronze Age trade routes crossing the Iranian plateau. The remains of the mudbrick city represent the emergence of the first complex societies in eastern Iran. Founded around 3200 BC, it was populated during four main periods up to 1800 BC, during which time there developed several distinct areas within the city: those where monuments were built, and separate quarters for housing, burial and manufacture. Diversions in water courses and climate change led to the eventual abandonment of the city in the early second millennium. The structures, burial grounds and large number of significant artefacts unearthed there, and their well-preserved state due to the dry desert climate, make this site a rich source of information regarding the emergence of complex societies and contacts between them in the third millennium BC.

About Shahr-i Sokhta

Shahr-e Sukhteh, c. 3550–2300 BC, also spelled as Shahr-e Sūkhté and Shahr-i Sōkhta, is an archaeological site of a sizable Bronze Age urban settlement, associated with the Helmand culture. It is located in Sistan and Baluchistan Province, the southeastern part of Iran, on the bank of the Helmand River, near the Zahedan-Zabol road. It was placed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in June 2014.

Read more on Wikipedia

Selection Criteria

(ii)(iii)(iv)

Components(1 location)

Details

Countries
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
ISO Codes
IR
Area
275 ha
Coordinates
30.5939, 61.3278
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Shahr-i Sokhta