The ruins of Pird-i Kinachan, “the Maiden's Bridge”, are situated on the left bank of the river Sirwan, to the south-west of Halabja. The purpose of this article is to document the remains of this bridge, which are no longer accessible since they have been submerged in the reservoir of Darband-i Khan, and thereby to assist future investigations in the region to identify the location of the city of Shahrizur and other cities which flourished in the plain of Shahrizur during the Abbasid period.
The existence of these ruins was first reported by Čirikov, on whose account Minorsky depended in writing: “A Sassanian bridge on the Sirwan defended by the fortress of Shamiran indicates the line of communication between Qasr-i Shirin and Nim-rah”. Sirwan is the name of the upper part of the Diyala river, from the Darband-i Khan gorge eastwards; Shamiran is the mountainous district which extends from the Sirwan southwards and from the Zimkan river westwards (see accompanying map, Plate XXXII); Nim-rah or Nim-az-rah is the other ancient name of Shahrizur, with the meaning “half-way”, which refers to its position between Ctesiphon, the capital of the Sassanians, and Shiz, the city in Adharbaijan which housed their main fire temple.
Edmonds mentions the bridge by its nam e Pird-i Kinachan, but he did not see it. During his visit to the land of the Kakais, which extends to the east and south-east of Halabja, he did however see the remains of two other bridges: one of these is near the village Kosawa, about 25 km. upstream from Pird-i Kinachan, and the other is 15 km. further east and referred to as Pird-i Kurhan, “the Young Men's Bridge.” He was able to see four piers of the former, from a distance, and five of the latter.