Surkh Dum-i-Luri
Surkh Dum-i-Luri, also referred to as "Surkh Dum", "Surkah Dum", "Surkh-i Dum", and "Dum Surkh", in the Kuhdasht valley of Lorestan province in the southeast of modern Iran, is an ancient Near East archaeological site. It lies 10 kilometers of southeast of Koohdasht city. The ancient name of the town or its region are unknown. Very few results and finds were published after the sites excavation in 1938 but in recent years many more results have been published. A number of forgeries, purported to have a provenance of Surkh Dum-i-Luri, have appeared on the antiquities market. Many looted exemplars from the Luristan region have made their way into the museums of the world.
Not to be confused with Surkh Dum-i-Lakki, "Red Slope of the Lakks", also on the Kuhdasht plain.
Archaeology
The site was spotted by aerial surveying during the Second Holmes Expedition to Iran led by Erich Schmidt which focused primarily on Persepolis, Naqsh-i Rustam, Tall-i Bakun, and Tepe Hissar. Archaeological remains had recently been spotted at the site and looters had begun operating there for a month before the excavation began finding, in one location, "bronze pins, fragments of bronze vessels, and other artifacts" but that was stopped by the authorities.Traces of boulder walls were noted on the surface. The site was excavated, with Maurits N. van Loon and Richard C. Haines) for 19 days from June 7 to June 25, 1938, with 30 workers. Nine 10 meter by 10 meter areas QH, II, IJ, JH, JI, JJ, KG, KH, and KI) were excavated at the main building.The plan of the building was recovered and determined to be a temple of the first half millennium BC. A terraced square was found in the center of the main room and deemed to be an altar. This work also revealed the entrance of another building facing the main building across a wide street. One sounding was dug northeast and up slope of the main building finding "portions of additional heavy-walled buildings with parallel, narrow rooms and jogs in their exterior walls, separated by a street" and pottery sherds. The small finds included a ram-headed stone pestle, arrowheads, bronze mirrors, male and female figurines in frit as well as bronze, and most notably about 200 stamp seals and cylinder seals, many embedded in the walls and floors. A Giyan III cemetery 200 meters west was also excavated.
Finds included one Harappan etched carnelian bead which was found in an Iron AGE III context but dated to much earlier. Embedded into the walls were a number of sheet metal headed bronze pins. Another notable find, in an 8th-century BC context, was a bronze spike-butted axe-head with lion mask.
Periodization
The main building had three construction levels :- Level 3 - Two sublevels with 3B Dated by the excavators to the Late Bronze Age and 3A to the Early Iron Age. Built with 1.5 meter wide stone walls. Large pained jars were found, primarily in what appeared to be a storeroom. As in all levels buried hoards were found, ascribed to the next earlier level.
- Level 2 - The main building level, Iron Age. Three sublevels were determined. One area of the building in this level had been damaged by robber pits. Walls were about 1 meter in width and the many roomed building was deemed a sanctuary based on the find of an altar and many objects dedicated to the goddess Ninlil. In one room of level 2C, "many pins, cylinder seals, necklaces, and other disused items from the temple inventory had been incorporated by way of foundation deposits" which is typical for temples of this time and a similar deposit was found on Level 2B. Building plan lterations in Levels 2B and 2A were relatively small.
- Level 1 - The final construction level was 1B and Level I was used by the excavators designate unstratified surface and subsurface finds. Notably faience appears in 1B including a "Green faience beaker with handle in the shape of a kneeling human-headed bull".