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Banesh

Banesh
بانش
village
Banesh is located in Iran
Banesh
Banesh
Coordinates: 30°06′04″N 52°25′45″E / 30.10111°N 52.42917°E / 30.10111; 52.42917Coordinates: 30°06′04″N 52°25′45″E / 30.10111°N 52.42917°E / 30.10111; 52.42917
Country  Iran
Province Fars
County Sepidan
District Beyza
village Banesh
Population (2006)
 • Total 2,904
Time zone IRST (UTC+3:30)
 • Summer (DST) IRDT (UTC+4:30)

Banesh (Persian: بانش‎‎, also Romanized as Bānesh; also known as Bānish) is a village in Beyza District, Sepidan County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,904, in 688 families.

The Banesh is located 60 km north of Shiraz.

This area was occupied from the sixth millennium BC. During the Proto-Elamite period (late fourth millennium BC), the nearby Anshan became one of the main cities of the Elamite region, thanks to its location on important trade routes.

Archaeologists describe one of the earliest cultural phases in Iran as the Banesh period. It is dated in 3400-2800 BC. Banesh is the typesite for this period.

In the Early Banesh phase, around 3300 BC, Proto-Elamite culture emerged in the Kur River (or Kor River) basin. During the Susa III period (c. 3200 BC), when Susa was reestablished, its pottery was predominantly Banesh style, also featuring characteristic Proto-Elamite administrative devices.

Banesh is part of the Marv Dasht area, which is a complex of several interconnected valleys and plains. During the mid-late Banesh Period (3100-2800 BC) Anshan was a huge city. It also featured a number of subsidiary villages and campsites.

"Comprehensive studies of Banesh plant (Miller 1990) and animal (Zeder 1988, 1991) remains show that Banesh people focused on intensive cultivation of wheat and herding of sheep. Some craft activity, particularly ceramic and some stone vessel manufacture, was concentrated in specialized villages, at least earlier in the period (Alden 1982). In the main center, however, other craft activity, specifically copper processing, is attested only as small production areas in domestic contexts (Nicholas 1990)."


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