Taq-i Kisra

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Coordinates: 33°5′37.4″N, 44°34′50.6″E

Picture from 1932
Picture from 1932

The Taq-i Kisra (Persian طاق كسرى , meaning Iwan of Khosrau) is a Persian monument in Al-Mada'in which is the only visible remaining structure of the ancient city of Ctesiphon. It is near the modern town of Salman Pak, Iraq.

The arch was part of the imperial palace complex. The Throne room—presumably under or behind the arch—was more than 30 m (110 ft) high and covered an area 24 m (80 ft) wide by 48 m (160 ft) long. It was the largest vault ever constructed in Persia. The parabolic arch was built without centring.

The Taq-i Kisra is now all that remains above ground of a city that was, for seven centuries, the main capital of the successor dynasties of the Seleucids, Parthians and Sassanids of Persia. The structure left today was the main portico of the audience hall of the Sassanids who maintained the same site chosen by the Parthians and for the same reason, namely proximity to the Roman Empire whose expansionist aims could be better contained at the point of contact.

1824 drawing by Captain Hart
1824 drawing by Captain Hart

In 1888, floods destroyed a third of the ruins.

The monument was in the process of being rebuilt by Saddam Hussein's government in the course of the 1980s, when the fallen northern wing was partially rebuilt. All works, however, stopped after 1991 Persian gulf War. The Iraqi government is cooperating with the University of Chicago's "Diyala Project" to restore the site.

Alternative spellings: Tâgh-i Kasrâ, Ayvan-e Khosrow, Ayvan-a Kesra, Ayvān-a Kesrā, Ayvān-e Madā'en, Taq-i Khusrau, Taq i Kisra, Iwan-i Kisra, Taq-e Kisra, Tagh-i Kasra, Great arch of Ctesiphon.

The arch was the subject of a prize-winning aerial photograph taken by the author Roald Dahl. It is mentioned, with a copy of the photograph, in his autobiography 'Going Solo'.


1923 Iraqi postage stamp, featuring the arch
1923 Iraqi postage stamp, featuring the arch

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