Public and private lives in Iran: An introduction to the archaeology of the 2003 Bam earthquake

LP Yazdi - Archaeologies, 2010 - Springer
Archaeologies, 2010Springer
Bam, Iran, was destroyed by a powerful earthquake in December 2003. In what is perhaps
Iran's greatest tragedy in living memory, the majority of the mud brick houses and concrete
buildings were completely flattened and more than half of the city's population was killed.
Five years after the disaster, a team of Iranian archaeologists and ethnographers excavated
the remains of six houses destroyed in the earthquake. The excavated material culture
demonstrates the stark contrasts between the residents' public lives lived outside of their …
Abstract
Bam, Iran, was destroyed by a powerful earthquake in December 2003. In what is perhaps Iran’s greatest tragedy in living memory, the majority of the mud brick houses and concrete buildings were completely flattened and more than half of the city’s population was killed. Five years after the disaster, a team of Iranian archaeologists and ethnographers excavated the remains of six houses destroyed in the earthquake. The excavated material culture demonstrates the stark contrasts between the residents’ public lives lived outside of their homes, and their private lives lived inside of their homes.
Springer
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