Persepolis Lion and Bull Combat
Could this ancient battle
symbolize Darius the Persian mentioned in the Bible?
Lion and bull in combat: limestone frieze from the stairway facing Palace H at Persepolis, Iran, ca. 358-338 BCE. From the Oriental Institute of Chicago. Persepolis - Palace of Darius, Facade of W Stairway, Panel with Lion-Bull Combat at S End.
This relief of a lion battling a bull is seen at the ancient throne room of Darius in his palace at Persepolis, the seat of his vast Achaemenid Empire. The lion is seen in Persepolis as the symbol of absolute power and heroic triumph. The bull is also a symbol of power in ancient Persia and is seen throughout Persepolis on top of columns and guarding gates. The magnificent palace complex at Persepolis was founded by Darius the Great around 518 BC., although more than a century passed before it was finally completed. Persepolis was called by the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus "the richest city under the sun, with storehouses filled with gold, silver, and all kinds of riches." When Alexander the Great and his army looted and burned Persepolis in 331 B.C. they did a very thorough job. According to the Greek historian Plutarch Alexander carried away the treasures of Persepolis on "20,000 mules and 5,000 camels." The Persepolis Lion and Bull Combat is important in the study of Biblical Archaeology and the Persian Period.
"And Ahuramazda was of such a mind, together with all the other gods, that this fortress be built, and then I built it, and I built it secure and beautiful and adequate, just as I was intending to." - Darius Inscription
"The Levites in the days of Eliashib, Joiada, and Johanan, and Jaddua, were recorded chief of the fathers: also the priests, to the reign of Darius the Persian." Nehemiah 12:22
Oriental Institute Excerpt
ANCIENT IRAN: Persepolis - Palace of Darius, Facade of W Stairway, Panel with Lion-Bull Combat at S End.
Twelve columns supported the roof of the central hall from which three small stairways descend. Reliefs on these stairways depict servants coming up the steps carrying animals and food in covered dishes to be served at the king's tables. On the eastern and western doorjambs are reliefs showing the king in formal dress leaving the palace, followed by two attendants; reliefs on the northern and southern doorways depict the king in combat with monsters.
The lion and bull in combat at ancient Persepolis
Close up of the Lion at Persepolis
List of Kings from the Achaemenid Dynasty
Achaemenid Dynasty
Achaemenes
Teispes
Cyrus I
Cambyses I (Kambiz)
Achaemenid Become an Empire
Cyrus II the Great, 559BC -530BC
Kambiz II, 530BC - 522BC
Smerdis (the Magian), 522BC
Darius I the Great, 522BC - 486BC
Xerxes I (Khashyar), 486BC - 465BC
Artaxerxes I , 465BC - 425BC
Xerxes II, 425BC - 424BC (45 days)
Darius II, 423BC - 404BC
Artaxerxes II, 404BC - 359BC
Artaxerxes III, 359BC - 339BC
Arses, 338BC - 336BC
Darius III, 336BC - 330BC
Note: Esther became queen of Persia around 478 B.C. during the reign of Xerxes I (Ahasuerus).
Panoramic view
of the Naqsh-e Rustam. This site contains the tombs of four
Achaemenid kings, including those of Darius I and Xerxes.
Kings of the Bible
David
Solomon
The Kings of Israel (all wicked)
Jeroboam I (933-911 BC) twenty-two years
Nadab (911-910) two years
Baasha (910-887) twenty-four years
Elah (887-886) two years
Zimri (886) seven days
Omri (886-875) twelve years
Ahab (875-854) twenty-two years
Ahaziah (855-854) two years
Jehoram (Joram) (854-843) twelve years
Jehu (843-816) twenty-eight years
Jehoahaz (820-804) seventeen years
Jehoash (Joash) (806-790) sixteen years
Jeroboam II (790-749) forty-one years
Zechariah' (748) six months
Shallum (748) one month
Menahem (748-738) ten years
Pekahiah (738-736) two years
Pekah (748-730) twenty years
Hoshea (730-721) nine years
The Kings of Judah (8 were good)
Rehoboam (933-916 BC) seventeen years
Abijam (915-913) three years
Asa (Good) (912-872) forty-one years
Jehoshaphat (Good) (874-850) twenty-five years
Jehoram (850-843) eight years
Ahaziah (843) one year
Athaliah (843-837) six years
Joash (Good) (843-803) forty years
Amaziah (Good) (803-775) 29 years
Azariah (Uzziah) (Good) (787-735) fifty-two years
Jotham (Good) (749-734) sixteen years
Ahaz (741-726) sixteen years
Hezekiah (Good) (726-697) 29 years
Manasseh (697-642) fifty-five years
Amon (641-640) two years
Josiah (Good) (639-608) thirty-one years
Jehoahaz (608) three months
Jehoiachim (608-597) eleven years
Jehoiachin (597) three months
Zedekiah (597-586) eleven years
Some Scriptures mentioning the word "Persia"
Ezra 4:7
- And in the days of Artaxerxes wrote Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel,
and the rest of their companions, unto Artaxerxes king of
Persia; and the writing of the letter [was] written in the
Syrian tongue, and interpreted in the Syrian tongue.
Ezra 4:3
- But Zerubbabel, and Jeshua, and the rest of the chief of the
fathers of Israel, said unto them, Ye have nothing to do with us to
build an house unto our God; but we ourselves together will build
unto the LORD God of Israel, as king Cyrus the king of Persia
hath commanded us.
Ezra 9:9
- For we [were] bondmen; yet our God hath not forsaken us in our
bondage, but hath extended mercy unto us in the sight of the kings
of Persia, to give us a reviving, to set up the house
of our God, and to repair the desolations thereof, and to give us a
wall in Judah and in Jerusalem.
Ezra 6:14
- And the elders of the Jews builded, and they prospered through the
prophesying of Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo. And
they builded, and finished [it], according to the commandment of the
God of Israel, and according to the commandment of Cyrus, and
Darius, and Artaxerxes king of Persia.
2
Chronicles 36:23 - Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia,
All the kingdoms of the earth hath the LORD God of heaven given me;
and he hath charged me to build him an house in Jerusalem, which
[is] in Judah. Who [is there] among you of all his people? The LORD
his God [be] with him, and let him go up.
Daniel 10:1
- In the third year of Cyrus king of Persia a thing
was revealed unto Daniel, whose name was called Belteshazzar; and
the thing [was] true, but the time appointed [was] long: and he
understood the thing, and had understanding of the vision.
Ezra 1:2
- Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia, The LORD God of
heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the earth; and he hath
charged me to build him an house at Jerusalem, which [is] in Judah.
Esther 1:3
- In the third year of his reign, he made a feast unto all his
princes and his servants; the power of Persia and
Media, the nobles and princes of the provinces, [being] before him:
Ezra 3:7
- They gave money also unto the masons, and to the carpenters; and
meat, and drink, and oil, unto them of Zidon, and to them of Tyre,
to bring cedar trees from Lebanon to the sea of Joppa, according to
the grant that they had of Cyrus king of Persia.
Ezra 4:24
- Then ceased the work of the house of God which [is] at Jerusalem.
So it ceased unto the second year of the reign of Darius king of
Persia.
Daniel
10:20 - Then said he, Knowest thou wherefore I come unto
thee? and now will I return to fight with the prince of Persia:
and when I am gone forth, lo, the prince of Grecia shall come.
Esther 10:2
- And all the acts of his power and of his might, and the
declaration of the greatness of Mordecai, whereunto the king
advanced him, [are] they not written in the book of the chronicles
of the kings of Media and Persia?
Daniel 11:2
- And now will I shew thee the truth. Behold, there shall stand up
yet three kings in Persia; and the fourth shall be far
richer than [they] all: and by his strength through his riches he
shall stir up all against the realm of Grecia.
Esther 1:14
- And the next unto him [was] Carshena, Shethar, Admatha, Tarshish,
Meres, Marsena, [and] Memucan, the seven princes of Persia
and Media, which saw the king's face, [and] which sat the first in
the kingdom;)
Esther 1:18
- [Likewise] shall the ladies of Persia and Media say
this day unto all the king's princes, which have heard of the deed
of the queen. Thus [shall there arise] too much contempt and wrath.
Ezra 1:8
- Even those did Cyrus king of Persia bring forth by
the hand of Mithredath the treasurer, and numbered them unto
Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah.
2
Chronicles 36:20 - And them that had escaped from the sword
carried he away to Babylon; where they were servants to him and his
sons until the reign of the kingdom of Persia:
Ezra 7:1
- Now after these things, in the reign of Artaxerxes king of
Persia, Ezra the son of Seraiah, the son of Azariah, the son
of Hilkiah,
Ezekiel
27:10 - They of Persia and of Lud and of Phut
were in thine army, thy men of war: they hanged the shield and
helmet in thee; they set forth thy comeliness.
Daniel 8:20
- The ram which thou sawest having [two] horns [are] the kings of
Media and Persia.
Ezekiel
38:5 - Persia, Ethiopia, and Libya with them;
all of them with shield and helmet:
Ezra 1:1
- Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that
the word of the LORD by the mouth of Jeremiah might be fulfilled,
the LORD stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia,
that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and [put it]
also in writing, saying,
2
Chronicles 36:22 - Now in the first year of Cyrus king of
Persia, that the word of the LORD [spoken] by the mouth
of Jeremiah might be accomplished, the LORD stirred up the spirit of
Cyrus king of Persia, that he made a proclamation
throughout all his kingdom, and [put it] also in writing, saying,
Ezra 4:5
- And hired counsellors against them, to frustrate their purpose,
all the days of Cyrus king of Persia, even until the
reign of Darius king of Persia.
Daniel
10:13 - But the prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me one and twenty days: but, lo, Michael, one of the chief
princes, came to help me; and I remained there with the kings of
Persia.
Persia in Easton's Bible Dictionary
an ancient
empire, extending from the Indus to Thrace, and from the Caspian Sea
to the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf. The Persians were originally a
Medic tribe which settled in Persia, on the eastern side of the
Persian Gulf. They were Aryans, their language belonging to the
eastern division of the Indo-European group. One of their chiefs,
Teispes, conquered Elam in the time of the decay of the Assyrian
Empire, and established himself in the district of Anzan. His
descendants branched off into two lines, one line ruling in Anzan,
while the other remained in Persia. Cyrus II., king of Anzan,
finally united the divided power, conquered Media, Lydia, and
Babylonia, and carried his arms into the far East. His son,
Cambyses, added Egypt to the empire, which, however, fell to pieces
after his death. It was reconquered and thoroughly organized by
Darius, the son of Hystaspes, whose dominions extended from India to
the Danube.
https://free-bible.com/eastons/P/Persia/
Persia in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Ezekiel 27:10; Ezekiel 38:5. "Persia proper" was originally a small
territory (Herodot. 9:22). On the N. and N.E. lay Media, on the S.
the Persian gulf, Elam on the W., on the E. Carmania. Now Furs,
Farsistan. Rugged, with pleasant valleys and plains in the mid
region and mountains in the N. The S. toward the sea is a hot sandy
plain, in places covered with salt. Persepolis (in the beautiful
valley of the Bendamir), under Darius Hystaspes, took the place of
Pasargadae the ancient capital; of its palace "Chehl Minar," "forty
columns," still exist. Alexander in a drunken fit, to please a
courtesan, burned the palace. Pasargadae, 40 miles to the N., was
noted for Cyrus' tomb (Arrian) with the inscription, "I am Cyrus the
Achaemenian." (See CYRUS.) The Persians came originally from the E.,
from the vicinity of the Sutlej (before the first contact of the
Assyrians with Aryan tribes E. of Mount Zagros, 880 B.C.), down the
Oxus, then S. of the Caspian Sea to India. There were ten castes or
tribes: three noble, three agricultural, four nomadic; of the last
were the "Dehavites" or Dali (Ezra 4:9). The Pasargadae were the
noble tribes, in which the chief house was that of the Achaemenidae.
Darius on the rock of Behistun inscribed: "from antiquity our race
have been kings. There are eight of our race who have been kings
before me, I am the ninth." frontELAM on its relation to Persia.)
The Persian empire stretched at one time from India to Egypt and
Thrace, including all western Asia between the Black Sea, the
Caucasus, the Caspian, the Jaxartes upon the N., the Arabian desert,
Persian gulf, and Indian ocean on the S. Darius in the inscription
on his tomb at Nakhsh- irustam enumerates thirty countries besides
Persia subject to him, Media, Susiana, Parthia, Aria, Bactria,
Sogdiana, Chorasmia, Zarangia, Arachosia, Sattagydia, Gaudaria,
India, Scythia, Babylonia, Assyria, Arabia, Egypt, Armenia,
Cappadocia, Saparda, Ionia, the Aegean isles, the country of the
Scodrae (European), Ionia, the Tacabri, Budians, Cushites, Mardians,
and Colchians. The organization of the Persian kingdom and court as
they appear in Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, accords with independent
secular historians. The king, a despot, had a council, "seven
princes of Persia and Media which see his face and sit the first in
the kingdom" (Esther 1:14; Ezra 7:14). So Herodotus (iii. 70-79) and
Behistun inscription mention seven chiefs who organized the revolt
against Smerdis (the Behistun rock W. of Media has one inscription
in three languages, Persian, Babylonian, and Stythic, read by
Grotefend). "The law of the Persians and Medes which alters not"
(Esther 1:19) also controlled him in some measure. In Scripture we
read of 127 provinces (Esther 1:1) with satraps (Esther 3:12; Esther
8:9; Xerxes in boasting enlarged the list; 60 are the nations in his
armament according to Herodotus) maintained from the palace (Ezra
4:14), having charge of the revenue, paid partly in money...
https://free-bible.com/faussets/P/Persia/
Persia in Hitchcock's Bible Names
that cuts or divides; a nail; a gryphon; a horseman
https://free-bible.com/hitchcock/P/Persia/
Persia in Naves Topical Bible
An empire which extended from India to Ethiopia, comprising
one-hundred and twenty-seven provinces Es 1:1; Da 6:1 -Government
of, restricted by constitutional limitations Es 8:8; Da 6:8-12
-Municipal governments in, provided with dual governors Ne
3:9,12,16-18 -The princes were advisors in matters of administration
Da 6:1-7 -Status of women in; queen sat on the throne with the king
Ne 2:6 -Vashti was divorced for refusing to appear before the king's
courtiers Es 1:10-22; 2:4 -Israel captive in 2Ch 36:20 -Captivity
foretold Ho 13:16 -Men of, in the Tyrian army Eze 27:10 -Rulers of
Ahasuerus Es 1:3 -Darius Da 5:31; 6; 9:1 -Artaxerxes I Ezr 4:7-24 -Artaxerxes
II Ezr 7; Ne 2; 5:14 -Cyrus 2Ch 36:22,23; Ezr 1; 3:7; 4:3;
5:13,14,17; 6:3; Isa 41:2,3; 44:28; 45:1-4,13; 46:11; 48:14,15
-Princes of Es 1:14 -System of justice Ezr 7:25 -Prophecies
concerning Isa 13:17; 21:1-10; Jer 49:34-39; 51:11-64; Eze 32:24,25;
38:5; Da 2:31-45; 5:28; 7; 8; 11:1-4
https://free-bible.com/naves/P/PERSIA/
Persia in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(pure, splended), Per'sians. Persia proper was a tract of no very
large dimensions on the Persian Gulf, which is still known as Fars
or Farsistan, a corruption of the ancient appellation. This tract
was bounded on the west by Susiana or Elam, on the north by Media on
the south by the Persian Gulf and on the east by Carmania. But the
name is more commonly applied, both in Scripture and by profane
authors to the entire tract which came by degrees to be included
within the limits of the Persian empire. This empire extended at one
time from India on the east to Egypt and Thrace on the west, and
included. besides portions of Europe and Africa, the whole of
western Asia between the Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Caspian and
the Jaxartes on the north, the Arabian desert the Persian Gulf and
the Indian Ocean on the south. The only passage in Scripture where
Persia designates the tract which has been called above "Persia
proper" is Eze 38:5 Elsewhere the empire is intended. The Persians
were of the same race as the Medes, both being branches of the great
Aryan stock. 1. Character of the nation. --The Persians were a
people of lively and impressible minds, brave and impetuous in war,
witty, passionate, for Orientals truthful, not without some spirit
of generosity: and of more intellectual capacity than the generality
of Asiatics. In the times anterior to Cyrus they were noted for the
simplicity of their habits, which offered a strong contrast to the
luxuriousness of the Medes; but from the late of the Median
overthrow this simplicity began to decline. Polygamy was commonly
practiced among them. They were fond of the pleasures of the table.
In war they fought bravely, but without discipline. 2. Religion.
--The religion which the Persians brought with there into Persia
proper seems to have been of a very simple character, differing from
natural religion in little except that it was deeply tainted with
Dualism. Like the other Aryans, the Persians worshipped one supreme
God. They had few temples, and no altars or images. 3. Language.
--The Persian language was closely akin to the Sanskrit, or ancient
language of India. Modern Persian is its degenerate representative,
being largely impregnated with Arabic. 4. History. --The history of
Persia begins with the revolt from the Medes and the accession of
Cyrus the Great, B.C. 558. Cyrus defeated Croesus, and added the
Lydian empire to his dominions. This conquest was followed closely
by the submission of the Greek settlements on the Asiatic coast, and
by the reduction of Caria and Lycia The empire was soon afterward
extended greatly toward the northeast and east. In B.C. 539 or 538,
Babylon was attacked, and after a stout defence fell into the hands
of Cyrus. This victory first brought the Persians into co...
https://free-bible.com/smiths/P/Persia/
Persia in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
pur'-sha, (parats; Persia; in Assyrian Parsu, Parsua; in Achemenian
Persian Parsa, modern Fars): In the Bible (2 Ch 36:20,22,23; Ezr
1:1,8; Est 1:3,14,18; 10:2; Ezek 27:10; 38:5; Dan 8:20; 10:1; 11:2)
this name denotes properly the modern province of Fars, not the
whole Persian empire. The latter was by its people called Airyaria,
the present Iran (from the Sanskrit word arya, "noble"); and even
now the Persians never call their country anything but Iran, never
"Persia." The province of Persis lay to the East of Elam (Susiana),
and stretched from the Persian Gulf to the Great Salt Desert, having
Carmania on the Southeast. Its chief cities were Persepolis and
Pasargadae. Along the Persian Gulf the land is low, hot and
unhealthy, but it soon begins to rise as one travels inland. Most of
the province consists of high and steep mountains and plateaus, with
fertile valleys. The table-lands in which lie the modern city of
Shiraz and the ruins of Persepolis and Pasargadae are well watered
and productive. Nearer the desert, however, cultivation grows scanty
for want of water. Persia was doubtless in early times included in
Elam, and its population was then either Semitic or allied to the
Accadians, who founded more than one state in the Babylonian plain.
The Aryan Persians seem to have occupied the country in the 8th or
9th century BC.
https://free-bible.com/isbe/P/PERSIA/
PERSEPOLIS,
an ancient city of Persia, situated some 40 m. N.E. of Shiraz, not
far from where the small river Pulwar flows into the Kur (Kyrus).
The site is marked by a large terrace with its east side leaning on
Kuhi Rahmet (" the Mount of Grace "). The other three sides are
formed by a retaining wall, varying in height with the slope of the
ground from 14 to 41 ft.; on the west side a magnificent double
stair, of very easy steps, leads to the top. On this terrace are the
ruins of a number of colossal buildings, all constructed of
dark-grey marble from the adjacent mountain. The stones were laid
without mortar, and many of them are still in situ. Especially
striking are the huge pillars, of which a number still stand erect.
Several of the buildings were never finished. F. Stolze has shown
that in some cases even the mason's rubbish has not been removed.'
These ruins, for which the name Kizil minare or Chihil menare (" the
forty columns or minarets "), can be traced back to the 13th
century, are now known as Takhti Jamshid (" the throne of Jamshid
"). That they represent the Persepolis captured and partly destroyed
by Alexander the Great has been beyond dispute at least since the
time of Pietro della Valle.2 Behind Takhti Jamshid are three
sepulchres hewn out of the rock in the hillside, the facades, one of
which is incomplete, being richly ornamented with reliefs. About 8
m. N.N.E., on the opposite side of the Pulwar, rises a perpendicular
wall of rock, in which four similar tombs are cut, at a considerable
height from the bottom of the valley. The modern Persians call this
place Nakshi Rustam (" the picture of Rustam ") from the Sassanian
reliefs beneath the opening, which they take to be a representation
of the mythical hero Rustam. That the ' Cf. J. Chardin, E. Kaempfer,
C. Niebuhr and W. Ouseley. Niebuhr's drawings, though good, are, for
the purposes of the architectural student, inferior to the great
work of C. Texier, and still more to that of E. Flandin and P. Coste.
Good sketches, chiefly after Flandin, are given by C. Kossowicz,
Inscriptiones palaeopersicae (St Petersburg, 1872). In addition to
these we have the photographic plates in F. Stolze's Persepolis (2
vols., Berlin, 1882).
Lettera XV. (ed. 'Brighton, 1843), ii. 246 seq.
occupants of these seven tombs were kings might be inferred from the
sculptures, and one of those at Nakshi Rustam is expressly declared
in its inscription to be the tomb of Darius Hystaspis, concerning
whom Ctesias relates that his grave was in the face of a rock, and
could only be reached by means of an apparatus of ropes. Ctesias
mentions further, with regard to a number of Persians kings, either
that their remains were brought " to the Persians," or that they
died there.' Now we know that Cyrus was buried at Pasargadae and if
there is any truth in the statement that the body of Cambyses was
brought home " to the Persians " his burying-place must be sought
somewhere beside that of his father. In order to identify the graves
of Persepolis we must bear in mind that Ctesias assumes that it was
the custom for a king to prepare his own tomb during his lifetime.
Hence the kings buried at Nakshi Rustam are probably, besides
Darius, Xerxes I., Artaxerxes I. and Darius II. Xerxes II., who
reigned for a very short time, could scarcely have obtained so
splendid a monument, and still less could the usurper Sogdianus (Secydianus).
The two completed graves behind Takhti Jamshid would then belong to
Artaxerxes II. and Artaxerxes III. The unfinished one is perhaps
that of Arses, who reigned at the longest two years, or, if not his,
then that of Darius III. (Codomannus), who is one of those whose
bodies are said to have been brought " to the Persians "2 (see
Architecture, fig. 12). Another small group of ruins in the same
style is found at the village of Hajjiabad, on the Pulwar, a good
hour's walk above Takhti Jamshid. These formed a single building,
which was still intact goo years ago, and was used as the mosque of
the then existing city of Istakhr.
Since Cyrus was buried in Pasargadae, which moreover is mentioned in
Ctesias as his own city,' and since, to judge from the inscriptions,
the buildings of Persepolis commenced with Darius I., it was
probably under this king, with whom the sceptre passed to a new
branch of the royal house, that Persepolis became the capital 4 (see
Persia: Ancient History, V. 2) of Persia proper. As a residence,
however, for the rulers of the empire, a remote place in a difficult
alpine region was far from convenient, and the real capitals were
Susa, Babylon and Ecbatana. This accounts for the fact that the
Greeks were not acquainted with the city until it was taken and
plundered by Alexander the Great. Ctesias must certainly have known
of it, and it is possible that he may have named it simply IIEpvac,
after the people, as is undoubtedly done by certain writers of a
somewhat later date.' But whether the city really bore the name of
the people and the country is another question. And it is extremely
hazardous to assume, with Sir H. Rawlinson and J. Oppert, that the
words and Pdrsd, " in this Persia," which occur in an inscription on
the gateway built by Xerxes (D. 1.14), signify " in this city of
Parsa," and consequently prove that the name of the city is
identical with the name of the country. The form Persepolis (with a
play on 71-ports, destruction) appears first in Cleitarchus, one of
the earliest, but unfortunately one of the most imaginative
annalists of the exploits of Alexander.
It has been universally admitted that " the palaces " or "the palace
" (rd ,3aviXeca) burned down by Alexander are those now in ruins at
Takhti Jamshid. From Stolze's investigations it appears that at
least one of these, the castle built by Xerxes, bears evident traces
of having been destroyed by fire. The locality described by Diodorus
after Cleitarchus corresponds in important particulars with Takhti
Jamshid, for example, in being supported by the ' This statement is
not made in Ctesias (or rather in the extracts of Photius) about
Darius II., which is probably accidental; in the case of Sogdianus,
who as a usurper was not deemed worthy of honourable burial, there
is a good reason for the omission.
Arrian, iii. 22, I.
' Cf. also in particular Plutarch, Artax. iii., where Pasargadae is
distinctly looked on as the sacred cradle of the dynasty.
4 The story of Aelian (H. A. i. 59), who makes Cyrus build his royal
palace in Persepolis, deserves no attention.
5 So Arrian (iii. 18, 1, lo), or rather his best authority, King
Ptolemy. So, again, the Babylonian Berossus, shortly after
Alexander. See Clemens Alex., Admon. ad gentes, c. 5, where, with
Georg Hoffmann (Pers. Martyrer, 137), Kai is to be inserted before
ll paacs, and this to be understood as the name of the metropolis.
mountain on the east.' There is, however, one formidable difficulty.
Diodorus says that the rock at the back of the palace containing the
royal sepulchres is so steep that the bodies could be raised to
their last resting-place only by mechanical appliances. This is not
true of the graves behind Takhti Jamshid, to which, as F. Stolze
expressly observes, one can easily ride up; on the other hand, it is
strictly true of the graves at Nakshi Rustam. Stolze accordingly
started the theory that the royal castle of Persepolis stood close
by Nakshi Rustam, and has sunk in course of time to shapeless heaps
of earth, under which the remains may be concealed. The vast ruins,
however, of Takhti Jamshid, and the terrace constructed with so much
labour, can hardly be anything else than the ruins of palaces; as
for temples, the Persians had no such thing, at least in the time of
Darius and Xerxes. Moreover, Persian tradition at a very remote
period knew of only three architectural wonders in that region,
which it attributed to the fabulous queen Humai (Khumai) - the grave
of Cyrus at. Murgab, the building at Hajjiabad, and those on the
great terrace.' It is safest therefore to identify these last with
the royal palaces destroyed by Alexander. Cleitarchus, who can
scarcely have visited the place himself, with his usual recklessness
of statement, confounded the tombs behind the palaces with those of
Nakshi Rustam; indeed he appears to imagine that all the royal
sepulchres were at the same place. In 316 B.C. Persepolis was still
the capital of Persis as a province of the great Macedonian Empire
(see Diod. xix, 21 seq., 46; probably after Hieronymus of Cardia,
who was living about 316). The city must have gradually declined in
the course of time; but the ruins of the Achaemenidae remained as a
witness to its ancient glory. It is probable that the principal town
of the country, or at least of the district, was always in this
neighbourhood. About A.D. 200 we find there the city Istakhr
(properly Stakhr) as the seat of the local governors. There the
foundations of the second great Persian Empire were laid, and
Istakhr acquired special importance as the centre of priestly wisdom
and orthodoxy. The Sassanian kings have covered the face of the
rocks in this neighbourhood, and in part even the Achaemenian ruins,
with their sculptures and inscriptions, and must themselves have
built largely here, although never on the same scale of magnificence
as their ancient predecessors. The Romans knew as little about
Istakhr as the Greeks had done about Persepolis - and this in spite
of the fact that for four hundred years the Sassanians maintained
relations, friendly or hostile, with the empire.
At the time of the Arabian conquest Istakhr offered a desperate
resistance, but the city was still a place of considerable
importance in the 1st century of Islam (see Caeiphate), although its
greatness was speedily eclipsed by the new metropolis Shiraz. In the
10th century Istakhr had become an utterly insignificant place, as
may be seen from the descriptions of Istakhr, a native (c. 950), and
of Mukaddasi (c. 985). During the following centuries Istakhr
gradually declines, until, as a city, it ceased to exist. This
fruitful region, however, was covered with villages till the
frightful devastations of the 18th century; and even now it is,
comparatively speaking, well cultivated. The " castle of Istakhr "
played a conspicuous part several times during the Mahommedan period
as a strong fortress. It was the middlemost and the highest of the
three steep crags which rise from the valley of the Kur, at some
distance to the west or north-west of Nakshi Rustam. We learn from
Oriental writers that one of the Buyid (Buwaihid) sultans in the
10th century of the Flight constructed the great cisterns, which may
yet be seen, and have been visited, amongst others, by James Morier
and E. Flandin. W. Ouseley points out that this castle was still
used in the 16th century, at least as a state prison. But when
Pietro della Valle was there in 1621 it was already in ruins.
[Encyclopedia Britannica 1911]
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