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India: Plan of the interior of a Parsee dakhma or 'Tower of Silence', Bombay / Mumbai. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency, Bombay, 1896

India: Plan of the interior of a Parsee <i>dakhma</i> or 'Tower of Silence', Bombay / Mumbai. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency, Bombay, 1896

A Tower of Silence or Dakhma is a circular, raised structure used by Zoroastrians for exposure of the dead. There is no standard technical name for such a construction. The common dakhma or dokhma (from Middle Persian dakhmag) originally denoted any place for the dead. Similarly, in the medieval texts of Zoroastrian tradition, the word astodan appears, but today denotes an ossuary.

In the Iranian provinces of Yazd and Kerman, the technical term is deme or dema. In India, the term doongerwadi came into use after a tower was constructed on a hill of that name. The word dagdah appears in the texts of both India and Iran but, in 20th century India, signified the lowest grade of temple fire (cf. Fire temple). The term 'Tower of Silence' is a neologism attributed to one Robert Murphy, who, in 1832, was a translator of the British colonial government in India.

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