The Essaqwand Rock Tombs () are three rock-hewn tombs located 25 km southwest of Harsin in Kermanshah province, Iran. On top of the middle tomb, there is a rock relief of a man with his profile toward the viewers. He is holding his hands in prayer in front of him. There is also a torch and a fire altar in front of him. Behind the fire altar, there is another man, holding up something in his hands. The tombs have been attributed to different historical eras, including the Medes, Achaemenids, Seleucids, and Parthians.
The Essaqwand Rock Tombs are located approximately 25 km southwest of Harsin, on the rocky hillside within the rugged terrain of the Zagros Mountains. Located between the villages of Deh-e Now and Eshaghvand, the tomb is carved right into the face of an open cliff, in an open rural landscape characterized by sparse vegetation and overlooking adjacent valleys.
The rock tombs comprise three rock-hewn chambers excavated directly into the cliff face at the site, arranged in a horizontal row with the rightmost tomb positioned slightly higher than the others. Each features stone carvings resembling a door with a stepped border on three sides, with the opening to the burial chamber located on the upper half of the panel. The structures are simple in design, consisting of square niches carved into the rock to serve as burial spaces.
Construction took place directly into the natural rock, resulting in unfinished interiors without additional chambers, doors, or sarcophagi. The entrances open straightforwardly onto the facade, emphasizing their utilitarian purpose as basic tombs. The chambers vary in size: the left is a shallow niche, and the right features a spacious interior. The central tomb is distinguished by a carved relief on its facade depicting a praying figure, though the chamber itself remains a plain square hollow similar to its neighbor.