Ravansar is a city and capital of Ravansar County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16,383, in 3,838 families. Ravansar Spring is a huge karst spring located prominently in the city of Ravansar. The area around Ravansar is karstified, the karst ground water emerges in various springs like homonymous Ravansar Spring, which are very important for the supply of drinking water and as the main source of Qara Su River.
Archaeology
Ravansar has important prehistoric and historical sites, and in this respect it has a special place in the archaeology of the west of Iran. The earliest evidence of human habitation around Ravansar extend back to the Middle Paleolithic that continues to end of glacial period, whose remains were found in the caves of the Kolian and Jawri, as well as the Garab River. Another important discovery at the region is an elephant molar tooth that dates back to the Pleistocene era and has been discovered near Rawansar. Other important archaeological site is Musaei mound and its two nearby smaller mounds, it has been inhabited since the end of Neolithic period. , Kermanshah, Zagros In the course of the Assyrian campaigns into Zagros, Rawansar was one of the bases of this Mesopotamian government that called Nikour, and it was used as a military base in which Assyrian soldiers gathered horses and other goods that were sent to Assyria. Stronach and Calmeyer proposed Ravansar as a possible candidate for the place of Bit-Istar, an Assyrian town and a local kingdom at western Zagros. The rock-cut tomb of Rawansar or Dekhmeh Rawansar, which local people call "Kōshk", is located in the eastern face of a limestone rock in the northeast of Ravansar, which dates back to Achaemenid period. The tomb consists of a small chamber that opens to the east and overlooks the slope. The figure of Ahura Mazda, a person and mass of firewood, appears on the right side of the entrance to this tomb. There is also a pillar base next to the Goni Khani Spring, called "Takhti Zangi", which may have been created at the same time as the tomb, indicating the presence of a palace or smaller buildings near the spring. Therefore, during the Achaemenid period, Rawansar was probably one of the important centers of this government in the west of the country. In the Parthian period, Rawansar was a small town in the west of the present town which today is close to a spring called Kani Wayan. From the Sassanid period, a collection of silverware has been discovered in Quri Qala Cave. There was also a cemetery from the Safavid period on the northern slopes of Qola Mount. The gravestones exhibiting the Kofi scripts, which unfortunately have been looted or broken in recent decades. This Safavid cemetery shows the importance of Ravansar in the Safavid period. Main Archaeological sites