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Kul-e Farah (or "Kul-e Fara") is the site of six Elamite rock reliefs that are located in a gorge on the plain's east side. Kul-e Farah is located near the city of Izeh in Khuzestan, southwest Iran. The reliefs were first visited in European research by Austen Henry Layard in 1841. Layard copied the 24-line cuneiform inscription on relief I, and five of the short epigraphs on some of the figures. It has been suggested that this is a kind of open sanctuary for religious ceremonies involving the sacrifice of animals. Three are on rock faces, while the other three are on large boulders. They depict scenes of sacrifice, processions and a banquet, and three show groups of musicians. The inscription on relief I mentions Hanni, the son of Tahhi, and is therefore dated to Hanni's time (7th century BCE?). But the reliefs may belong to several periods, with reliefs III, IV, and VI dated to the end of the 2nd or the beginning of the 1st millennium BCE.〔 ==Gallery== File:Kul-e Farah I.jpg|Kul-e Farah I File:Kul-e Farah II.JPG|Kul-e Farah II File:Kul-e Farah IIIS.JPG|Kul-e Farah III File:Kul-e Farah IVg.JPG|Kul-e Farah IV File:Kul-e Farah V.jpg|Kul-e Farah V File:Kul-e Farah VI.JPG|Kul-e Farah VI File:Kul-e Farah IVi.JPG|Kul-e farah IV (other view) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kul-e Farah」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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