Footnotes

1.

As we know from Achaemenid texts, the ancient Persians called the city “Parsa,” which referred to both a district (what is now the province of Fars), and to its royal residence, Persepolis. Consequently, the Greek “Persia” (from “Parsa”), used to refer to the entire country, is a misnomer.

2.

In the 1930s, Persepolis’s first excavator, the German archaeologist Ernst Herzfeld, uncovered remains of an Achaemenid palace 1,000 feet south of the platform. In 1952 the building was completely excavated by Ali Sami, who found inscriptions on column bases identifying the structure as a “palace of Xerxes the king.” Set in a large garden with an ornamental pool, this palace seems to have been one of the main residences of the Achaemenid kings during visits to Persepolis. Nearer the platform, Sami also uncovered the remains of a larger building with a four-columned central hall. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Akbar Tadjvidi excavated seven other architectural complexes in the south plain, as well as a portion of the citadel’s north-south enclosure wall, 330 feet west of the platform. The huge stone platform, we now know, was the core of a larger settlement that has only been partially excavated.

3.

The earliest scientific excavations at Persepolis, conducted by the German archaeologists Ernst Herzfeld (1931–1934) and Erich Schmidt (1934–1939), were sponsored by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.

4.

This is not unprecedented: In the trilingual inscription at the rock of Bisitun, carved around 521 B.C. and telling of Darius’s victories in seizing control of the empire, the Elamite text was carved first.

Endnotes

1.

Ctesias, Persika 15.

2.

Diodorus Siculus, World History 17.69-73; and Arrian, Anabasis, 3.18, 10. See also Strabo, Geography, 15.729; and Quintus Curtius, History of Alexander 6.9.

3.

Plutarch, “Life of Alexander” 37.6.

4.

See Ali Shapur Shahbazi, Persepolis Illustrated (Siraz, 1976), p. 41.

5.

Erich F. Schmidt, Persepolis I (Chicago, 1953), p. 62; Akbar Tadjvidi, Five Years of Excavations at Parsa, pp. 34–35.

6.

J. Perrot, D. Ladiray and F. Vallat, “The Propylaeum of the Palace of Darius at Susa,” in The Iranian World . Essays on Iranian Art and Archaeology Presented to E. O. Negahban, eds. A. Alizadeh, Y. Majidzadeh and S. M. Shahmirzadi (Tehran, 1999), pp. 158–177.

7.

Schmidt, Persepolis I, p. 70.

8.

Ann Britt Tilia, Studies and Restorations at Persepolis I (Rome, 1972), pp. 151–165.

9.

Schmidt, Persepolis I, p. 71.

10.

Schmidt, Persepolis I, p. 157.

11.

Wolfram Kleiss, “Zur Plannung von Persepolis,” Variatio Delectat: Iran und der Westen (Münster, 2000), p. 361 and fig. 7.

12.

Richard T. Hallock, “The evidence of the Persepolis tablets,” Cambridge History of Iran II (Cambridge, 1971), p. 10.

13.

George G. Cameron, Persepolis Treasury Tablets (Chicago, 1948), p. 13.

14.

Cameron, Treasury Tablets, p. 17.

15.

Hallock, Persepolis Fortification Tablets (Chicago, 1969), p. 1, note 1.

16.

Ernst Herzfeld, Iran in the Ancient East, (London, 1941), p. 269; The Persian Empire (Wiesbaden, 1968), p. 7; and Roman Ghirshman, “Notes iraniennes VII: à propos de Persépolis,” Artibus Asiae 20 (1957), pp. 265–278.

17.

Arthur Upham Pope, “Persepolis as a ritual city,” Archaeology 10, 1957; Richard N. Frye, “Persepolis again,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 33 (1974), pp. 383–386.

18.

Wolfgang Lentz, “Has the function of Persepolis been fully recognized so far?” Memorial Volume of the Vth International Congress of Iranian Art and Archaeology in 1968 (Tehran, 1972), pp. 289–290; James George, lecture given in the VIIIth International Congress of Iranian Art and Archaeology (Munich, 1976).

19.

Tadjvidi, Five Years of Excavations at Persepolis (Tehran, 1976), p. 55 (in Persian).

20.

Ali Mousavi, “Parsa, a stronghold for Darius: a preliminary study on the defence system of Persepolis,” East and West 42 (1992), pp. 203–226.