- This article is about the ancient city. For other uses, see Persepolis
(disambiguation).
Persepolis (Old Persian: 'Pars', New Persian: تخت جمشید, 'Takht-e Jamshid') was
an ancient ceremonial capital of the Persian Empire. It was built during the reign of Cyrus II (Cyrus the Great) around 560
BCE.[citation needed] The largest and most complex
building in Persepolis was the audience hall, or Apadana with 72 columns. Persepolis is situated
some 70 km northeast of the modern city of Shiraz in the Fars Province of Iran. In contemporary Iran the site is known as Takht-e
Jamshid (Throne of Jamshid). To the ancient Persians, the city was known as Parsa, meaning
The City of Persians, Persepolis being the Greek interpretation of the name Περσες (meaning Persian)+ πόλις (meaning
city).
Construction
Archaeological evidence shows the earliest remains of Persepolis date from around 515 BCE.
Andre Godard, the French archaeologist who excavated
Persepolis in the early 1930s, believed that it was Cyrus the Great who chose the site
of Persepolis, but it was Darius the Great who built the terrace and the
great palaces.
Darius ordered the construction of Apadana Palace and the Debating hall (Tripylon or the
three-gated hall), the main imperial Treasury and its surroundings, which were completed at the time of the reign of his son,
King Xerxes I. Further construction of the buildings at the terrace continued until
the downfall of the Achaemenid dynasty.
Archaeological research
The first westerner to visit Persepolis was Antonio de Gouveia from Portugal who wrote about
cuneiform inscriptions following his visit in 1602. His first written report on Persia,
the "Jornada", was published in 1606. The first scientific excavation at Persepolis was carried out by Ernst Herzfeld in 1931, commissioned by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. He
believed the reason behind the construction of Persepolis was the need for a majestic atmosphere, as a symbol for their empire
and to celebrate special events, especially the “Nowruz”, (the Iranian New Year held on
21 March). For historical reasons and deep rooted interests it was built on the birthplace of
the Achaemenid dynasty, although this was not the centre of their Empire at that time.
The main characteristic of Persepolitan architecture is its columns, which were made of wood. Only when even the largest
cedars of Lebanon or the teak trees of India did not fulfill
the required sizes did the architects resort to stone. The bases and the capitals were always of stones, even on wooden shafts,
but the existence of wooden capitals is probable.
The remains including the bas-reliefs and sculptures provide an insight into hearts and beliefs of the ancient Iranians. The
buildings at Persepolis are divided into three areas; military quarters, the treasury and the reception and occasional houses for
the King of Kings. These included the Great Stairway, the Gate of Nations (Xerxes), the Apadana
palace of Darius, the Hall of a Hundred Columns, the Tripylon
Hall and Tachara palace of Darius, the Hadish palace of
Xerxes, the palace of Artaxerxes III, the Imperial Treasury, the Royal Stables and the
Chariot house.
Site
Persepolis is near the small river Pulwar which flows into the Kur (Kyrus). The site is marked by a large 125,000 square meter terrace, partly artificially constructed and partly
cut out of a mountain, with its east side leaning on Kuh-e Rahmet ("the Mountain of Mercy"). The other three sides are formed by
retaining walls, which varies in height with the slope of the ground. From 5 to 13 meters
on the west side there is a double stair, gently sloping, which leads to the top. To create the level terrace, any depressions
that were present were filled up with soil and heavy rocks. They joined the rocks together with metal clips.
Gray limestone was the main material used in building Persepolis. To reach the top terrace,
the construction of a broad Stairway, 20 meters above the ground, was planned to be the only main entrance. This was begun around
518 BCE. The dual stairway, known as the Persepolitan stairway, was built in a symmetrical manner on the western side of the
Great Wall. The 111 steps were 6.9 meters wide with treads of 31 centimeters and rises of 10 centimeters. Originally the steps
were believed to have been constructed to allow for nobles and royalty to ascend by horseback, new theories suggest that this was
to allow visiting dignitaries to in fact walk up the stairs while keeping a regal appearance, permissible by the ease in which
the stairs could be climbed due to the small distance between each step.
The top of the stairways led to a small yard in the northeastern side of the terrace, opposite the Gate of Nations. After
natural rock had been leveled and the depressions filled in, the terrace was prepared. Major tunnels for sewage were dug
underground through the rock. A large elevated water storage tank was carved at the eastern foot of the mountain. Professor
Olmstead suggested the cistern was constructed at the same time the construction of the towers
began.
The uneven plan of part of the foundation of the terrace acted like a castle whose angled walls enabled its defenders to
target any section of the external front. Diodorus writes that Persepolis had three
walls with ramparts, which all had towers to provide protection space for the defense personnel. The first wall was 7 meters
tall, the second, 14 meters and the third wall, which covered all four sides, was 27 meters in height, though no presence of the
wall exists in modern times.
Ruins
On this terrace are the ruins of a number of colossal buildings, all constructed of dark-grey marble from the adjacent
mountain. A few of the remaining pillars are still intact, standing in the ruins. 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
Chehel minar ("the forty columns or minarets"), can be traced back to the 13th
century, are now known as Takht-e Jamshid - تخت جمشید ("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.
Behind Takht-e Jamshid are three sepulchres hewn out of the rock in the hillside. The facades, one of which is
incomplete, are richly decorated with reliefs. About 13 km NNE, 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 Naqsh-e Rustam - نقش رستام or Nakshi Rostam ("the picture of
Rostam"), from the Sassanian reliefs beneath the opening, which they take to be a representation
of the mythical hero Rostam. That the 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 the use of ropes. Ctesias mentions further, with
regard to a number of Persian kings, either that their remains were brought "to the Persians," or that they died there.
The Gate of All Nations
The Gate of all Nations, referring to subjects of the empire, consisted of a grand hall that was almost 25 square metres, with
four columns and its entrance on the Western Wall. There were two more doors, one to the south which opened to the Apadana yard
and the other one opened onto a long road to the east. Pivoting devices found on the inner corners of all the doors indicate that
they were two-leafed doors, probably made of wood and covered with sheets of ornate metal.
A pair of Lamassu's,which are bulls with the head of a bearded man stand on the western threshold, and another pair with wings
and a Persian head (Gopät-Shäh) on the eastern entrance, to reflect the Empire’s power.
Xerxes' name was written in three languages and carved on the entrances, informing everyone that he ordered this to be
built.
Apadana Palace
The Apadana Palace, northern stairway (detail)
Darius the Great built the greatest and most glorious palace at Persepolis
in the western side. This palace was named Apadana and was used for the King of Kings' official audiences. The work began in 515
BCE and was completed 30 years later, by his son Xerxes I. The palace had a grand hall in the shape of a square, each side 60m
long with seventy-two columns, thirteen of which still stand on the enormous platform. Each column is 19m high with a square
Taurus and plinth. The columns carried the weight of the vast and heavy ceiling. The tops of the columns were made from animal
sculptures such as two headed bulls, lions and eagles. The columns were joined to each other with the help of oak and cedar beams, which were brought from Lebanon. The walls were covered with a layer of mud and stucco to a depth of
5cm, which was used for bonding, and then covered with the greenish stucco which is found throughout the palaces. At the western,
northern and eastern sides of the palace there was a rectangular veranda which had twelve
columns in two rows of six. At the south of the grand hall a series of rooms were built for storage. Two grand Persepolitan
stairways were built, symmetrical to each other and connected to the stone foundations. To avoid the roof being eroded by rain
vertical drains were built through the brick walls. In the Four Corners of Apadana, facing outwards, four towers were built.
The Walls were tiled and decorated with pictures of lions, bulls, and flowers. Darius ordered his name and the details of his
empire to be written in gold and silver on plates, and to place them in covered stone boxes in the foundations under the Four
Corners of the palace. Two Persepolitan style symmetrical stairways were built on the northern and eastern sides of Apadana to
compensate for a difference in level. There were also two other stairways in the middle of the building. The external front views
of the palace were embossed with pictures of the Immortals, the Kings' elite guards.
The northern stairway was completed during Darius' reign, but the other stairway was completed much later.
The Throne Hall
Next to the Apadana, second largest building of the Terrace and the final edifices, is the Throne Hall or the Imperial Army's
hall of honour (also called the "Hundred-Columns Palace). This 70x70 square meter hall was started by Xerxes and completed by his son Artaxerxes I by the end of the
fifth century BCE. Its eight stone doorways are decorated on the south and north with reliefs of throne scenes and on the east
and west with scenes depicting the king in combat with monsters. In addition, the northern portico of the building is flanked by
two colossal stone bulls.
In the beginning of Xerxes's reign the Throne Hall was used mainly for receptions for military commanders and representatives
of all the subject nations of the empire, but later the Throne Hall served to be as an imperial museum.
Other palaces and structures
There were other palaces built, these included the Tachara palace which was built under Darius I, the Imperial treasury which
was started by Darius in 510 BCE and finished by Xerxes in 480 BCE. The Hadish palace by Xerxes I, which occupies the highest
level of terrace and stand on the living rock. The Council Hall, the Tryplion Hall, The Palaces of D, G, H, Storerooms, Stables
and quarters, Unfinished Gateway and a few Miscellaneous Structures at Persepolis near the south-east corner of the Terrace, at
the foot of the mountain.
Tombs of King of Kings
Apadana Hall, Persian and Median soldiers
It is commonly accepted that Cyrus the Great was buried at Pasargadae. If there is any truth in the statement that the body of Cambyses II was brought home "to the Persians", his burying-place must be sought somewhere beside
that of his father. Ctesias assumes that it was the custom for a king to prepare his own tomb during his lifetime. Hence the
kings buried at Naghsh-e Rustam are probably Darius the Great,
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 of Persia, 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."
Another small group of ruins in the same style is found at the village of Hajjiäbäd, on the Pulwar, a good hour's walk above
Takhti Jamshid. These formed a single building, which was still intact 900 years ago, and was used as the mosque of the then existing city of Istakhr.
Since Cyrus the great was buried in Pasargadae,
which is mentioned by 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 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.
It has been universally admitted that "the palaces" or "the palace" 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 mountain on the east.
Ancient texts
Ancient texts found in Persepolis (Photographer: Ramin Dehdashti of iranpix.com)
The relevant passages from ancient scholars on the subject are set out below:
- (Diod. 17.70.1-73.2) 17.70 (1) Persepolis was the capital of the Persian
kingdom. Alexander described it to the Macedonians as the most hateful of the cities of Asia, and gave it over to his soldiers to
plunder, all but the palaces. (2) +It was the richest city under the sun and the private houses had been furnished with every
sort of wealth over the years. The Macedonians raced into it slaughtering all the men whom they met and plundering the
residences; many of the houses belonged to the common people and were abundantly supplied with furniture and wearing apparel of
every kind….
- 72 (1) Alexander held games in honour of his victories. He performed costly sacrifices to the gods and entertained his
friends bountifully. While they were feasting and the drinking was far advanced, as they began to be drunken a madness took
possession of the minds of the intoxicated guests. (2) At this point one of the women present, Thais by name and Attic by origin,
said that for Alexander it would be the finest of all his feats in Asia if he joined them in a triumphal procession, set fire to
the palaces, and permitted women's hands in a minute to extinguish the famed accomplishments of the Persians. (3) This was said
to men who were still young and giddy with wine, and so, as would be expected, someone shouted out to form up and to light
torches, and urged all to take vengeance for the destruction of the Greek temples. (4)
Others took up the cry and said that this was a deed worthy of Alexander alone. When the king had caught fire at their words, all
leaped up from their couches and passed the word along to form a victory procession [epinikion komon] in honour of
Dionysius.
- (5) Promptly many torches were gathered. Female musicians were present at the banquet, so the king led them all out for the
komos to the sound of voices and flutes and pipes, Thais the courtesan leading the whole
performance. (6) She was the first, after the king, to hurl her blazing torch into the palace. As the others all did the same,
immediately the entire palace area was consumed, so great was the conflagration. It was most remarkable that the impious act of
Xerxes, king of the Persians, against the acropolis at Athens should have been repaid in kind after many years by one woman, a
citizen of the land which had suffered it, and in sport.
- (Curt. 5.6.1-7.12) 5.6 (1) On the following day the king called together the leaders of his forces and informed them that
"no city was more mischievous to the Greeks than the seat of the ancient kings of Persia . . . by its destruction they ought to
offer sacrifice to the spirits of their forefathers."…
- 7 (1) But Alexander's great mental endowments, that noble disposition, in which he surpassed all kings, that intrepidity in
encountering dangers, his promptness in forming and carrying out plans, his good faith towards those who submitted to him,
merciful treatment of his prisoners, temperance even in lawful and usual pleasures, were sullied by an excessive love of wine.
(2) At the very time when his enemy and his rival for a throne was preparing to renew the war, when those whom he had conquered
were but lately subdued and were hostile to the new rule, he took part in prolonged banquets at which women were present, not
indeed those whom it would be a crime to violate, but, to be sure, harlots who were accustomed to live with armed men with more
licence than was fitting.
- (3) One of these, Thais by name, herself also drunken, declared that the king would win most favour among all the Greeks, if
he should order the palace of the Persians to be set on fire; that this was expected by those whose cities the barbarians had
destroyed. (4) When a drunken strumpet had given her opinion on a matter of such moment, one or two, themselves also loaded with
wine, agreed. The king, too, more greedy for wine than able to carry it, cried: "Why do we not, then, avenge Greece and apply
torches to the city?" 5) All had become heated with wine, and so thy arose when drunk to fire the city which they had spared when
armed. The king was the first to throw a firebrand upon the palace, then the guests and the servants and courtesans. The palace
had been built largely of cedar, which quickly took fire and spread the conflagration widely. (6) When the army, which was
encamped not far from the city, saw the fire, thinking it accidental, they rushed to bear aid. (7) But when they came to the
vestibule of the palace, they saw the king himself piling on firebrands. Therefore, they left the water which they had brought,
and they too began to throw dry wood upon the burning building.
- (8) Such was the end of the capital of the entire Orient. . . .
- (10) The Macedonians were ashamed that so renowned a city had been destroyed by their king in a drunken revel; therefore the
act was taken as earnest, and they forced themselves to believe that it was right that it should be wiped out in exactly that
manner.
- (Cleitarchus, FGrHist. 137, F. 11 (= Athenaeus 13.
576d-e))
Scene from Persian mythology in
Apadana Hall:
Angra Mainyu
kills the primeval bull, whose seed is rescued by
Mah, the moon, as the source for all other
animals.
- And did not Alexander the Great have with him Thais, the Athenian hetaira? Cleitarchus speaks of her as having been the
cause for the burning of the palace at Persepolis. After Alexander's death, this same Thais was married to Ptolemy, the first
king of Egypt.
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 Humgi (Khumái)--the. grave of Cyrus at Pasargadae, the building at HäjjIãbãd, 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.
Destruction
After invading Persia, Alexander of Macedonia sent the main force of his army to
Persepolis in the year 333 BCE. By the Royal Road, Alexander stormed the Persian Gates (in the modern Zagros Mountains), then quickly
captured Persepolis before its treasury could be looted. After several months Alexander allowed
his troops to loot Persepolis. A fire broke out in the eastern palace of Xerxes and
spread to the rest of the city. It is not clear if it had been a drunken accident, or a deliberate act of revenge for the burning
of the Acropolis of Athens during the Second
Greco-Persian War. Although many historians argue that while Alexander's army were celebrating with a symposium they decided to take revenge against Persians in which case it would be a combination of the two.
The Book of Arda Wiraz, a Zoroastrian work composed in the 3rd or 4th century CE, also describes archives containing "all
the Avesta and Zand, written upon prepared cow-skins, and with gold ink" that were destroyed.
After the fall of Ancient Persia
Persepolis, 1878 engraving by Frederick Stacpoole ARA (1813–1907).
In 316 BCE Persepolis was still the capital of Persia 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 neighborhood.
About 200 CE we find the city Istakhr (properly Stakhr), five
kilometers north of Persepolis, 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 center of priestly wisdom and orthodoxy. The Sassanian kings have covered the face of the rocks in this neighborhood, 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.
Persepolis ruins after 2500 years
At the time of the Arabian conquest Istakhr offered a desperate resistance, but the city was still a place of considerable
importance in the first century of Islam, 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 Muslim 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 Asian 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.
Modern events
The UNESCO declared the citadel of Persepolis a World
Heritage Site in 1979.
Persepolis is also one of the 80 treasures featured on Around the World
in 80 Treasures presented by Dan Cruickshank.
In 1971, Persepolis was the main staging ground for the 2,500 year celebration of Iran's monarchy.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
External links
References
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia
Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public
domain.
Further reading
- Curtis, J. and Tallis, N. (eds). (2005). Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia. University of California
Press. ISBN 0520247310.
- Wilber, Donald Newton. (1989). Persepolis: The Archaeology of Parsa, Seat of the Persian Kings. Darwin Press. Revised
edition ISBN 0878500626.
Coordinates:
29°56′04″N, 52°53′29″E
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