Sar Mashhad (Persian: سرمشهد)[a] is a village in Dadin Rural District of Jereh and Baladeh District, Kazerun County, Fars province, Iran.
[2] The place is notable for being the site of a Sasanian rock relief made during the reign of king (shah) Bahram II (r. 274–293).
[7] The relief portrays him as a hunter who has slain a lion while throwing his sword at another.
[7] His wife is holding his right hand in a signal of safeguard, while the high priest Kartir and another figure, most likely a prince, are watching.
[7] The scenery has been the subject of several symbolic and metaphorical meanings, though it is most likely supposed to portray a simple royal display of bravery during a real-life hunt.