Quoted by ISNA; Abolhassan Atabaki, a doctor of history and a linguist who ideified the line with Babak Parsa Jam (Tourism Guidance) and Arash Nimranian, told ISNA that initial investigations at the discovery site showed that the stone was hidden in a small tear.
According to the linguist, the stone wrote, which coains the construction of a grave (grave), is deliberately and consciously hidden from the perspective of visitors (from the history of writing to the prese) and is difficult to access.
Atabaki said:
With the studies we did on this inscription, I came to the conclusion that this stone was related to a simple rocky grave or one of the burials of the stone mass, which is mistakenly called the locals called “housework”, while one of these burials is a stone masses near the stone.
He added.
Pahlavi Abadeh’s new Pahlavi -based book and late Sassanid era, will be posted by a Fars province’s cultural heritage expert for registration in national monumes, and the full reading of this inscription will be published in an article in the coury’s scieific journals.
The linguist said:
The book of this inscription shows that its history reaches the area before the Pahlavi inscriptions of Kalat Bahman or Gobby Castle.
Atabaki emphasized:
This ideified inscription is not the only inscription on the Pahlavi line of the Abadeh area. In addition, another inscription has been ideified in the Pahlavi and Kufic line in the Gubri Abadeh Castle.
The researcher said about the importance of ideifying inscriptions:
The inscription was ideified in the Sassanid Pahlavi line in a stone grave, which was hidden for unknown reasons. We had not ideified the stone grave with the inscriptions before. Stone mass graves are usually related to the burial of ordinary people.
Babak Parsa Jam, a tourist guide to ideifying the inscription, also told ISNA:
This Pahlavi inscription is part of the new ideity of the city of Abadeh, which is located around Imamzadeh, who can transform the history and birth certificate of this area.
Abadeh city is the Fars erance gate from the north. Archaeological excavations show that residence in the curre area of Abadeh in Fars province dates back to the first millennium BC. The area has historically been the site of convoys and trade between the north and south of Iran.




