A view of the reflecting pool in front of the iwans from atop the mountain. A weeping willow tree (Salix Babylonica, bid in Persian) can be seen.
The Taq-e-Bostan (“arch of stone”) is a site 5 km from Kermanshah in Western Iran, famous for the well-preserved Sassanian rock carvings that it contains in two grottos treated as iwans. There are two iwans, one larger than the other.
Photograph created March 1967. Photograph processed September 1967. Formerly catalogued as B45.726. Notes written on the slide or index: Taq-i Bustan.