Qadamgah (ancient site)


Qadamgah or Chasht-Khor is a -Achaemenid rock-cut monument at the southeastern part of the Kuh-e Rahmat mountain in Fars Province of Iran, about 40 km south of Persepolis. It consists of three platforms with rear walls and staircases, and features cavities on the back wall and a now-dry spring and pond at the bottom. Its function has been a matter of debate, with latest research pointing to a religious function related to the holy element Water.

Name

Qadamgah, also transliterated as Kadam Gah, is the modern Persian word for "footprint". Another local name is Qadamgāh-e Ali. The structure is also called Īvān-e Qadmgāh.
Another name is Chāsht-Khār, or Chāsht-Khor, which is also the name of the village nearby.

Studies, description, and function

The monument was first discovered by Capt. H. L. Wells in 1881 who published a drawing of the plan and section of it, but did not describe it. The structure and its purpose was later discussed by Forsat-od-Dowleh, Louis Vanden Berghe, Giorgio Gullini, Mohammad Taqi Mostafavi, Calmeyer, Rémy Boucharlat, Kleiss, and Jean-Claude Bessac.
The structure has been built by cutting two deep terraces vertically from the top of the rocky limestone slope, forming three superimposed platforms with vertical rear walls. The monument lacks any built structures. Underneath the lower terrace there has been a now-dry spring feeding a pool which overlooked the monument. The terraces are wide. The lower terrace is above the ground. The upper terrace, which is higher, is linked to the lower one by two rock-cut staircases on the sides. Three rows of five shallow cavities have been cut in rectangular form into the back wall above the upper terrace. Several shallow, hemispherical holes are also cut along the edge of the upper terrace.
The structure dates back to the Achaemenid or post-Achaemenid period. Several hypotheses have been proposed for its function, including an unfinished Royal tomb, a funerary function, or a cultural function. Later observations suggest the work was finished, and the cavities were likely covered with hypothetical stone slabs. Latest research by Jean-Claude Bessac favors a "cultic function related to water" and the presence of the spring and the pool, and dismisses the funerary function. This would make Qadamgah a unique Achaemenid cultic place known to the date. There are also cuneiform clay-tablets in the Persepolis Administrative Archives with possible references to this site.
The monument is fragile and is slowly decaying. The only published drawing of the plan and section of the monument is that of H. L. Wells. Rémy Boucharlat in Encyclopædia Iranica advises "a complete and careful survey... and some excavation at its foot".