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New finds suggest Urartians may have settled near Lake Urmia

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  • New finds suggest Urartians may have settled near Lake Urmia

    New finds suggest Urartians may have settled near Lake Urmia

    Mehr News Agency, Iran
    Aug 1 2005

    TEHRAN, Aug. 1 (MNA) -- Iranian archaeologists recently discovered
    over 50 ancient sites dating back to the Urartian era northwest of
    Lake Urmia which seem to confirm the theory of Urartian settlement
    in the region.

    The discoveries, which were made near Salmas and Khoy in West
    Azarbaijan Province, include mounds, castles, cemeteries, and tombs,
    West Azarbaijan Cultural Heritage and Tourism Department archaeologist
    Reza Heydari announced on Monday.

    The sites are similar to the Urartian sites located near Lake Van in
    Turkey, Heydari added.

    The ancient kingdom of Urartu, the biblical Ararat, flowered in the
    area south of the Caucasus from the ninth century to the seventh
    century BC.

    Urartu, centered in the mountainous region around Lake Van, existed
    from about 1000 BC, or earlier, until 585 BC, and stretched from
    northern Mesopotamia through the southern Caucasus, including parts
    of present-day Armenia up to Lake Sevan.

    "The similar sites discovered in Turkey indicate that there was
    a wide range of political, social, commercial, and economic ties
    between Iran and Turkey at that time," he noted.

    According to Heydari, the Lake Urmia region's copper, metal, and salt
    mines, fertile land, and central location on trade routes were the
    main reasons that the Urartians chose to settle in the area.

    One feature of Urartu architecture, that was to be very influential
    in the Near East, was the blind arch. The layout of Urartu buildings
    was the precursor to that of the Iranian Apadana layouts.

    Experts believe that Urartian architects played a major role in
    designing Iranian fortified buildings. Urartu fortresses were solid
    structures of stone blocks.
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