Great Wall of Gorgan

Great Wall of Gorgan
Near Gorgan in Iran
TypeSeries of ancient defensive fortifications
Length200 km
Site history
Built5th or 6th century
MaterialsMud-brick, fired brick, gypsum, and mortar

37°15′38″N 55°00′37″E / 37.2604343°N 55.010165°E / 37.2604343; 55.010165 (fort (14))

The Great Wall of Gorgan is a Sasanian-era defense system located near modern Gorgan in the Golestān Province of northeastern Iran, at the southeastern corner of the Caspian Sea. The western, Caspian Sea, end of the wall is near the remains of the fort at: 37°08′23″N 54°10′44″E / 37.13981°N 54.1788733°E / 37.13981; 54.1788733; the eastern end of the wall, near the town of Pishkamar, is near the remains of the fort at: 37°31′14″N 55°34′37″E / 37.5206739°N 55.5770498°E / 37.5206739; 55.5770498.[1] The title coordinate is for the location of the remains of a fort midway along the wall.

The wall is located at a geographic narrowing between the Caspian Sea and the mountains of northeastern Iran. It is one of several Caspian Gates at the eastern part of a region known in antiquity as Hyrcania, on the nomadic route from the northern steppes to the Iranian heartland. The wall is believed to have protected the Sassanian Empire to the south from the peoples to the north,[2] probably the White Huns. In his book Empires and Walls, Chaichian (2014) questions the validity of this interpretation using historical evidence of potential political-military threats in the region as well as the economic geography of Gorgan Wall's environs.[3] It is described as "amongst the most ambitious and sophisticated frontier walls" ever built in the world,[4] and the most important of the Sasanian defense fortifications.[5]

It is 195 km (121 mi) long and 6–10 m (20–33 ft) wide,[6] and features over 30 fortresses spaced at intervals of between 10 and 50 km (6.2 and 31.1 mi). It is surpassed only by the walls systems of the Great Wall of China and Cheolli Jangseong (in modern-day North Korea) as the longest single-segment building and the longest defensive wall in existence.

  1. ^ Kiani, M. Y. Gorgan, iv. Archeology (online edition). New York. Retrieved 22 November 2016. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Omrani Rekavandi, H., Sauer, E., Wilkinson, T. & Nokandeh, J. (2008), The enigma of the red snake: revealing one of the world’s greatest frontier walls, Current World Archaeology, No. 27, February/March 2008, pp. 12-22.PDF 5.3 MB Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Chaichian, Mohammad (2014). Empires and Walls. Leiden, the Netherlands: Brill. pp. 52–89. ISBN 9789004236035.
  4. ^ Ball, Warwick (2016). Rome in the East: The Transformation of an Empire. Routledge. p. 365. ISBN 9781317296355.
  5. ^ Kleiss, Wolfram (15 December 1999). "Fortifications". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. X, Fasc. 1. pp. 102–106. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  6. ^ The Enigma of the Red Snake (Archaeology.co.uk) Archived 2009-03-11 at the Wayback Machine