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Persepolis Administrative Archives

The Persepolis Fortification Archive and Persepolis Treasury Archive are two groups of clay administrative archives — sets of records physically stored together[1] – found in Persepolis dating to the Achaemenid Persian Empire. The discovery was made during legal excavations conducted by the archaeologists from the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago in the 1930s. Hence they are named for their in situ findspot: Persepolis. The archaeological excavations at Persepolis for the Oriental Institute were initially directed by Ernst Herzfeld from 1931 to 1934 and carried on from 1934 until 1939 by Erich Schmidt.[2]

Persepolis tablet

While the political end of the Achaemenid Empire is symbolized by the burning of Persepolis by Alexander the Great (dated 330/329 BCE), the fall of Persepolis paradoxically contributed to the preservation of the Achaemenid administrative archives that might have been lost due to passage of time and natural and man-made causes.[3] According to archaeological evidence, the partial burning of Persepolis did not affect the Persepolis Fortification Archive tablets, but may have caused the eventual collapse of the upper part of the northern Fortification wall that preserved the tablets until their recovery by the Oriental Institute's archaeologists.[2]

Thousands of clay tablets, fragments and seal impressions in the Persepolis archives are a part of a single administrative system representing continuity of activity and flow of data over more than fifty consecutive years (509 to 457 BCE).[4] These records can throw light on the geography, economy, and administration, as well as the religion and social conditions of the Persepolis region, the heartland of the Persian Great Kings from Darius I the Great to Artaxerxes I.[3]

The Persepolis Administrative Archives are the single most important extant primary source for understanding the internal workings of the Persian Achaemenid Empire. But while these archives have the potential for offering the study of the Achaemenid history based on the sole surviving and substantial records from the heartland of the empire, they are still not fully utilized as such by a majority of historians.[5] The reason for the slow adoption of study of Persepolis administrative archives can also be attributed to the administrative nature of the archives, lacking the drama and excitement of narrative history.[4]

Persepolis Fortification Archive edit

The Persepolis Fortification Archive (PFA), also known as Persepolis Fortification Tablets (PFT, PF), is a fragment of Achaemenid administrative records of receipt, taxation, transfer, storage of food crops (cereals, fruit), livestock (sheep and goats, cattle, poultry), food products (flour, breads and other cereal products, beer, wine, processed fruit, oil, meat), and byproducts (animal hides) in the region around Persepolis (larger part of modern Fars), and their redistribution to gods, the royal family, courtiers, priests, religious officiants, administrators, travelers, workers, artisans, and livestock.[2]

But before the Persepolis archives could have offered any clues to the better understanding of the Achaemenid history, the clay tablets, mostly written in a late dialect of Elamite, an extremely difficult language still imperfectly understood, had to be deciphered.[6] So, in 1935, Iranian authorities loaned the Persepolis Fortification Archive to the Oriental Institute for research and publication. The archive arrived in Chicago in 1936 and has been under studies since 1937.[2] It was not until 1969, when Richard Hallock published his magisterial edition of 2,087 Elamite Persepolis Fortification Tablets, leading to the renaissance of Achaemenid studies in the 1970s. The long-term project spanning over seven decades is far from completion.[7]

153 tablets, approximately 30,000 fragments and an unknown number of uninscribed tablets were returned to Iran in the 1950s.[2] So far about 450 tablets and tens of thousands of fragments have already been returned to Iran in total.[8]

The narrow content of the Persepolis Fortification Archive, recording only the Achaemenid administration's transactions dealing with foodstuff, must be taken into consideration in regards to the amount of information that can be deduced from them.[5]

Discovery edit

Excavations directed by Ernst Herzfeld at Persepolis between 1933 and 1934 for the Oriental Institute, discovered tens of thousands of unbaked clay tablets, badly broken fragments and bullae in March 1933. Before attempting to build a pathway for easy removal of debris from the ruins of palaces on the Persepolis terrace, Herzfeld decided to excavate the location first to ensure that building a passage would not harm anything. He found two rooms filled up with clay tablets that were arranged in order, as in a library. The uncleaned tablets and fragments were covered up with wax and after drying, they were wrapped up in cotton and packed in 2,353 sequentially numbered boxes[2] for shipping.[9][10]

At the time, Herzfeld estimated that the find included about 30,000 or more inscribed and sealed clay tablets and fragments.[11] However, Herzfeld himself did not leave precise notes and never published a proper archaeological report.[2]

Location edit

Persepolis Fortification Archive was found at the northeastern corner of the terrace of Persepolis, in two rooms in the fortification wall.[12] The tablets had been stored in a small space near the staircase in the tower in the fortification wall. The upper floor of the fortification wall may have collapsed at the time of the Macedonian invasion, both partially destroying the order of the tablets while protecting them until 1933.[2] The entrance to the rooms were bricked up in antiquity.[13]

Components edit

There are three main kinds of clay tablets and fragments in the Persepolis Fortification Archive:[14]

  • Elamite: the remains of more than 15,000 original records in the Elamite language, in cuneiform script.[15]
  • Aramaic: the remains of somewhat less than 1,000 original records in the Aramaic language and script.
  • Uninscribed: the remains of about 5,000 or more original records with only impressions of seals and no texts.

However, the functional relationships among these components are not still clear.[14][16]

Numbers edit

As of 2010, about 20,000-25,000 tablets and fragments representing about 15,000-18,000 original records remain at the Oriental Institute.[17]

Size of the original archive for the same period of time could have been as many as 100,000 Elamite tablets. The edited samples to-date may represent no more than five percent of the original Achaemenid archive.[2]

Size of the original archive for the entire reign of Darius I the Great, from 522 to 486 BCE, just for the distribution of foodstuff, could have been as many as 200,000 records.[2]

Scope edit

The Persepolis Fortification Archive covers sixteen years, from 509 to 493 BCE, from the 13th to the 28th regnal year of Darius I the Great. The chronological distribution of the archive is uneven, with the largest concentration from the 22nd and 23rd regnal years.[18]

Elamite records edit

Current understanding of the Persepolis Fortification Archive is based on a sample of the Elamite records that includes 2,120 published texts by Richard Hallock (2,087 tablets in 1969 and 33 tablets in 1978),[19] as well as analysis of 1,148 seals accompanying published Elamite records.[20] About 20 new tablets have also been published after Hallock by various scholars.[18]

A majority of the Elamite records are memoranda of single transactions. The earliest known dated Elamite text was written in month 1, regnal year 13 of Darius I the Great (April 509 BCE) and the latest in month 12, regnal year 28 (March/April 493 BCE).[18]

The Elamite records mention about 150 places in the region controlled by Achaemenid administration at Persepolis — most of modern Fars, and perhaps parts of modern Khuzestan, including villages, estates, parks and paradises, storehouses, fortresses, treasuries, towns, rivers, and mountains.[21]

Sample edit

A sample transliteration and translation of an Elamite record from Persepolis Fortification Archive by Richard Hallock:[22]

PF 53
2 w.pi-ut kur-min m.Šu-te-na-na Ba-ir-ša-an ku-ut-ka hu-ut-ki+MIN-nam
Ba-ka-ba-da Na-ba-ba du-iš-da be-ul 21-na
2 (BAR of) figs, supplied by Šutena, was taken (to) Persepolis, for the (royal) stores.
Bakabada (and) Nababa received (it). 21st year.
Pronunciation of transliteration edit
š sh as in shall

Aramaic records edit

About 680 Fortification tablets and fragments with monolingual Aramaic texts (also called Imperial Aramaic) have been identified.[23][24]

Almost all Aramaic records are formed around knotted strings. All Aramaic texts have seal impressions and are incised with styluses or written in ink with pens or brushes, and are similar to Elamite memoranda. They are records of transporting or storing foodstuff, disbursal of seed, disbursal of provisions for travelers, and disbursal of rations for workers.[23][25]

Uninscribed records edit

About 5,000 or more tablets and fragment have only impressions of seals and no texts. Almost all such records are formed around knotted strings. It is noted that none of the uninscribed tablets and fragments bear the seals of high-ranking officials of the Achaemenid administration.[26]

Buttons, coins such as Athenian tetradrachms and Achaemenid darics, or other common objects are also used instead of seals in a few cases.[27]

Seals edit

More than 2,200 distinct cylinder seals and stamp seals have been identified, among them scenes of heroic combat, hunting, worship, animals in combat, as well as abstract designs. The number may well increase with study of more records, making Persepolis administrative archives one of the largest collection of imagery in the ancient world, displaying a wide range of styles and skills in the designers and engravers.[28][29]

More than 100 of the seals have inscriptions identifying the owner of the seal or his superior. Many of the seals on the Elamite tablets can be associated with Persepolis administrative officials named in the archives, such as Parnâkka (Old Persian *Farnaka).[30][31]

Records in other languages edit

Persepolis was inhabited by a multitude of people speaking many different languages. There are unique archival records in other languages that attest to the usage of many languages by the administration at Persepolis,[32] such as:[33]

  • One tablet written in Greek recording only the amount of wine and an Aramaic month-name.[34]
  • One tablet written in Old Persian recording disbursement of some dry commodity among five villages.[34]
  • One tablet written in Babylonian dialect of Akkadian is a legal document recording the purchase of a slave at Persepolis in the reign of Darius I the Great, among parties and witnesses with Babylonian names. The legal record conforms to Babylonian conventions.[35]
  • One tablet written in Phrygian has not been interpreted.[36]
  • One tablet written in unknown cuneiform.[2]

Significance edit

Until the discovery of the Persepolis administrative archives, the main sources for information about the Achaemenids were the Greek sources such as Herodotus and ancient historians of Alexander the Great and biblical references in Hebrew Bible, providing a partial and biased view of the ancient Persians.[7][37]

Persepolis Fortification Archive is a sophisticated and comprehensive administrative and archival system, representing a highly complex and extensive institutional economy resulting from careful, long term and large scale planning. The archive offers unique opportunity for research on important subjects like organization and status of workers, regional demography, religious practices, royal road, relation between the state institution and private parties, and record management.[2] Research is yielding a better understanding of the territory under purview of the Achaemenid administrators of Persepolis and the system that underlay the structuring of the territory.[21] Among Persepolis workers, there are as many women as men recorded in the Persepolis Fortification Archive. Some women receive more rations than any of the men in a work group, probably due to their ranks or special skills. New mothers are also mentioned, where they receive single rations with mothers of boys receiving twice as much as mothers of girls.[38]

Iranian words and names in the Elamite and Aramaic records are the largest source of Old Iranian languages preserved due to their usage in the Persepolis archives, including evidence of lexicon, phonology and dialect variation that are not found elsewhere.[39]

Fragmentary finds with Elamite texts from other sites in the Achaemenid Empire point to similar common practices and administrative activities.[40] Archival records found in Bactria, one of the satrapies of the Achaemenid Empire, use administrative vocabulary, practice and book-keeping found in the Persepolis administrative archives.[41]

Discovery of a record written in Old Persian for a routine administrative task challenges the previously held notion that Old Persian language was only used for imperial monumental inscriptions.[4]

Persepolis administration treats all the gods equally. Among various gods named in Persepolis administrative archives receiving food offerings are: Elamite Humban, Inshushinak and Šimat, Mazdean Ahuramazda, Semitic Adad and other gods otherwise unknown.[42] No reference to Mithra has been found in the Persepolis administrative archives.[2]

Landmark lawsuit edit

In 2004 the Persepolis Fortification Archive was caught in the middle of a landmark lawsuit in the U.S. Federal Court system.[43]

In 1997 five American tourists were killed and many more were wounded when terrorists set off suitcase bombs in a shopping mall in Jerusalem. The Palestinian organization Hamas claimed responsibility for the bombings.[7]

In 2001 the survivors of the attack and their family members brought lawsuits against Hamas and Iran, claiming Iran had provided financial and logistical support to Hamas. The court agreed and awarded $71.5 million in compensatory damages and $300 million in punitive damages from Iran to the plaintiffs.

In order to collect on the judgment, the plaintiffs sued a number of U.S. museums in 2004, in an attempt to appropriate various Iranian artifacts and collections and sell them to satisfy the claim for damages. Oriental Institute and the Persepolis Fortification Archive were among this group.[43]

The case, Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, was argued December 4, 2017 and decided 8–0 in favor of Iran on February 21, 2018. Since the Persian artifacts were not being used commercially by Iran, they could not be taken under subsections (a) and (g) of 28 U.S.C. § 1610.

The majority view of the academic community as well as international institutions such as UNESCO is the protection of the cultural heritage, exchange and scholarly research must transcend politics.[7][44][45]

PFA Project edit

The threat of losing the Persepolis Fortification Archive to scholarly research as a result of the litigation since 2004, prompted the Oriental Institute to accelerate and enlarge the PFA Project in 2006, headed by Dr. Matthew Stolper, Professor of Assyriology. Scholars from various universities, students and volunteers are urgently digitizing the Persepolis Fortification Archive and making it available through online resources for further research worldwide.[46]

The PFA Project editors are:[47]

Annalisa Azzoni, Aramaic texts, Vanderbilt University, Nashville
Elspeth Dusinberre, seal impressions on Aramaic texts, University of Colorado, Boulder
Mark Garrison, seal impressions on all components, Trinity University, San Antonio
Wouter Henkelman, Elamite texts, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and École pratique des hautes études, Paris
Charles Jones, Elamite texts, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York
Matthew Stolper, Elamite texts, Oriental Institute, Chicago

Persepolis Treasury Archive edit

Excavations directed by Erich Schmidt at Persepolis between 1934 and 1939 for the Oriental Institute, discovered a second group of clay tablets and fragments that became known as the Persepolis Treasury Archive (PTA), also known as Persepolis Treasury Tablets (PTT). They were packed in small metal cigarette boxes, filled with sawdust for shipping to Tehran.[48]

Persepolis Treasury Archive deals mostly with payments of silver from the Persepolis treasury made in lieu of partial or full in-kind rations of sheep, wine, or grain to workers and artisans employed at or near Persepolis. Some records are administrative letters ordering payments to groups of workers and confirmation that such payments were made.[49]

Location edit

Persepolis Treasury Archive was found on the southeastern part of Persepolis terrace in the block of buildings identified as the "Royal Treasury" where small pieces of gold leaves were found, hence the name Persepolis Treasury Archive.[48]

Components edit

There are two main kinds of clay tablets and fragments in the Persepolis Treasury Archive:[50]

  • Elamite: records in Elamite language and cuneiform script.
  • Uninscribed: objects of various shapes with impressions of stamp seals, cylinder seals and seal rings. Many of them have marks of strings that secured bags or boxes and/or attached the sealings to containers.
  • One tablet written in the Babylonian dialect of Akkadian, is the Treasury records of taxes paid in silver by three (3) individuals at an unknown location in regnal years 19th and 20th of Darius I the Great.[51][52]

Numbers edit

A total find of 746 clay tablets and fragments were reported by the excavators - 198 tablets and large fragments and 548 smaller fragments. 46 clay tablets were given to the Oriental Institute by the Iranian authorities and the rest were sent to the Museum of Ancient Iran (modern National Museum of Iran) in Tehran. A part of the collection has been in the Tablet Hall of the National Museum of Iran since 1998.[48] 199 sealings without inscriptions were also found during the excavation.[50]

Scope edit

Persepolis Treasury Archive covers thirty five (35) years, from 492 to 457 BCE, from regnal year 30th of Darius I the Great, to regnal year 7th of Artaxerxes I, with largest concentration from regnal years 19th and 20th of Xerxes.[53]

Sample edit

A sample transliteration and translation of an Elamite record from Persepolis Treasury Archive by George Cameron:[54]

No. 1957:5
ma-u-ú-iš kán-za-bar-ra tu-ru-iš ir-da-tak-ma na-an KI.MIN 2 kur-šá-am KÚ.BABBAR şa-ik pír-nu-ba-ik
gal-na SÌ.SÌ-du gal ruh mu-ši-in sìk-ki-ip i-ia-an-uk-ku-ma ma-u-ú-iš da-ma gal
Edge [ITU ha-ši-ia-ti]-iš-
Reverse n [a be-ul] 19-um-me-man-na 4 ruh un-ra [Lines 12-15 completely destroyed li]-ka du-me
ba-ka-gi-i-a(sic!)-ik-mar
(To) Vahush the treasurer speak, Artataxma says: 2 karsha silver, the remaining half of the wage,
give as wages to men, accountants at the court, sub-ordinate to Vahush.
(It is) the wage for the month Açiyadiya(?) of the 19th year.
4 men, each...
Lines 12-15 destroyed.
[This sealed order] has been given. The receipt (came) from Bagagiya.

Significance edit

Persepolis archives are a rich resource for the study of all the official languages used in the Persian Achaemenid Empire, both individually and collectively in connection with each other.[39]

Persepolis Treasury Archive furthermore contributes to the study of economic history by providing a record of the introduction of coined silver money to the regional economy of the Persepolis and its eventual adoption. Persepolis Fortification Archive, a generation before the Persepolis Treasury Archive, only attests to the payment in-kind at Persepolis (wine, beer, grain, flour, sheep, and the like).[55]

Other Achaemenid records from Persepolis edit

Excavations directed by Akbar Tajvidi at Persepolis between 1968 and 1973, recovered more clay tablets. Excavating the upper towers of the fortification wall on top of Kuh-e Rahmat (Mountain of Mercy), excavators found sealed uninscribed Achaemenid Bullae.[56] From a group of 52 uninscribed sealings, some impressions were similar to the sealings found in the Persepolis Treasury Archive.[57]

Future excavations in the areas currently unexcavated, such as the southeastern part of the Persepolis terrace and mountain fortifications, might yield other archives.[48]

Online resources edit

  • OCHRE – The Online Cultural and Historical Research Environment – at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago is the main online database for the Persepolis Fortification Archive (PFA) Project, where all the components of the Persepolis Administrative Archives – Elamite, Aramaic, glyptic, and miscellany – can be seen, linked and searched.[58]
  • InscriptiFact - The West Semitic Research Project – at the University of Southern California (USC) is a site that produces two kinds of high resolution online images of the Persepolis Fortification Archive tablets in collaboration with the Oriental Institute, allowing online handling of the images.[58]
  • CDLI - The Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative – at the University of California, Los Angeles, (UCLA), is a site that provides fast, low resolution online images of the Persepolis Fortification Archive Elamite tablets.[58]
  • Achemenet and MAVI – at Collège de France is a site for Achaemenid studies, providing full editions and translations of Persepolis Fortification Archive components. These editions are linked to MAVI interface to view high resolution online images on the .[58]
  • ARTA – Achaemenid Research on Texts and Archaeology – at Collège de France is the site for Achaemenid studies online journal, providing periodic bulletins on the discoveries made in the course of studying Persepolis Administrative Archives.[58]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kuhrt "The Persepolis Archives:concluding observations," Persika 12, 2008:567.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Henkelman 2008:Ch 2.
  3. ^ a b Wiesehöfer 10-11.
  4. ^ a b c Stolper "What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets?" The Oriental Institute News & Notes, 2007.
  5. ^ a b Kuhrt "The Persepolis Archives:concluding observations," Persika 12, 2008:563-568.
  6. ^ Cameron 1948:Preface.
  7. ^ a b c d Stein 2007.
  8. ^ Jones & Stolper "How Many Persepolis Fortification Tablets Are There?" Persika 12, 2008:37-44.
  9. ^ Hallock 1969:1.
  10. ^ Razmjou "Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis," Persika 12, 2008:51.
  11. ^ Anonymous 1934:232.
  12. ^ Schmidt 1953:3.
  13. ^ Herzfeld 1941:226.
  14. ^ a b Henkelman 2008:157-162.
  15. ^ Persepolis Fortification Archive. Oriental Institute - The University of Chicago
  16. ^ Garrison "The uninscribed tablets from the Fortification archive: a preliminary analysis," Persika 12, 2008:149-238.
  17. ^ Jones & Stolper “How Many Persepolis Fortification Tablets Are There?” Persika 12, 2008:37-44.https://nyu.academia.edu/CharlesJones/Papers/84747/How-many-Persepolis-Fortification-tablets-are-there--
  18. ^ a b c Henkelman 2008: Ch 2.
  19. ^ Hallock 1969, 1978.
  20. ^ Garrison and Root 1998, 2001.
  21. ^ a b Henkelman "From Gabae to Taoce: the geography of the central administrative province," Persica 12, 2008:303-314.
  22. ^ Hallock 1969:96.
  23. ^ a b Azzoni "The Bowman MS and the Aramaic tablets," Persika 12, 2008:253-274.
  24. ^ Dusinberre "Seal impressions on the Persepolis Fortification Aramaic tablets: preliminary observations," Persika 12, 2008:239-252.
  25. ^ Henkelman 2008, Ch 2.
  26. ^ Garrison 2008:180-84.
  27. ^ Root 1989.
  28. ^ Garrison 2000.
  29. ^ Root "The legible image: how did seals and sealing matter in Persepolis?" Persika 12, 2008: 87-148.
  30. ^ Garrison 2002:71.
  31. ^ Henkelman 2008:95-103.
  32. ^ Tavernier "Multilingualism in the Fortification and Treasury archives," Persika 12, 2008:59-64.
  33. ^ Stolper & Tavernier 2007:1-5.
  34. ^ a b Stolper & Tavernier 2007:3f., 24f.
  35. ^ Stolper 1984:300-303.
  36. ^ Brixhe 2004:118-126.
  37. ^ Lewis 1990.
  38. ^ Hallock 1969:5-6.
  39. ^ a b Tavernier 2007.
  40. ^ Kuhrt 2007.
  41. ^ Shaked 2004.
  42. ^ Hallock 1969:5.
  43. ^ a b Wawrzyniak 2007.
  44. ^ Esfandiari, Golnaz (2006-07-12). "Iran: Tehran, U.S. Academics Challenge Seizure Of Persian Tablets". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 2007-02-28.
  45. ^ Heath & Schwartz 2009.
  46. ^ Parisi 2008.
  47. ^ Research Projects: Persepolis Fortification Archive
  48. ^ a b c d Razmjou "Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis," Persika 12, 2008:55.
  49. ^ Cameron 1948, 1958.
  50. ^ a b Schmidt 1957:4-5.
  51. ^ Cameron 1948.
  52. ^ Briant 2002:441.
  53. ^ Cameron 1948, 1958, 1965.
  54. ^ Cameron 1958:176.
  55. ^ Cameron 1948:1.
  56. ^ Razmjou "Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis," Persika 12, 2008:57.
  57. ^ Tajvidi 1976:195.
  58. ^ a b c d e Briant et al. (eds.) Persika 12, 2008:22-24.

References edit

  • Anonymous: "Recent Discoveries at Persepolis," Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, pp. 226–232, 1934.
  • Briant, Pierre: From Cyrus to Alexander, a History of the Persian Empire, Winona Lake, 2002.
  • Briant, Pierre, Henkelman, Wouter F.M., and Stolper, Matthew W. (eds.): L’archive des Fortifications de Persépolis: État des questions et perspectives de recherches, Persika 12, Paris: De Boccard, 2008.
  • Brixhe, C.: "Corpus des Inscriptions paleo-phrygiennes, Suppl. II," Kadmos 43:1-130, 2004.
  • Cameron, George G.: Persepolis Treasury Tablets, Oriental Institute Publications 65, Chicago, 1948.
  • Cameron, George G.: "Persepolis Treasury Tablets Old and New," Journal of Near Eastern Studies 17:161-176, 1958.
  • Cameron, George G.: "New Tablets from the Persepolis Treasury," Journal of Near Eastern Studies 24:167-192, 1965.
  • Garrison, Mark B.: "The 'Late Neo-Elamite' Glyptic Style: A Perspective from Fars," Bulletin of the Asian Institute 16: 65–102, 2002.
  • Garrison, Mark B.: "Achaemenid iconography as evidenced by glyptic art, subject matter, social function, audience and diffusion," in Christoph Uehlinger (ed.): Images as Media, Sources for the Cultural History of the Near East and the Eastern Mediterranean (1st Millennium BCE), Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 175, Fribourg and Göttingen, 115–163, 2000.
  • Garrison, Mark B. and Cool Root, Margaret: Seals on the Persepolis Fortification Tablets, I: Images of Heroic Encounter, Oriental Institute Publications 117, http://www.achemenet.com/actualites/Hallock.pdf, Chicago, 2001.
  • Garrison, Mark B. and Cool Root, Margaret: Persepolis Seal Studies. An Introduction with Provisional Concordance of Seal Numbers and Associated Documents on Fortification Tablets 1-2087, Achaemenid History 9, corrected edition. Leiden, 1998.
  • Hallock, Richard T.: "New Light from Persepolis," Journal of Near Eastern Studies 9:237-252, 1950.
  • Hallock, Richard T.: "A New Look at the Persepolis Treasury Tablets," Journal of Near Eastern Studies 19:90-100, 1960.
  • Hallock, Richard T.: Persepolis Fortification Tablets, Oriental Institute Publications 92, , Chicago, 1969.
  • Hallock, Richard T.: "Selected Fortification Texts," Cahiers de la Délégation Archéologique Française en Iran http://www.achemenet.com/actualites/Hallock.pdf, 8:109-136, 1978.
  • Heath, Sebastian, and Schwartz, Glenn M.: "Legal Threats to Cultural Exchange of Archaeological Materials," American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 113 No. 3 (July 2009), http://www.ajaonline.org/note/294.
  • Henkelman, Wouter F.M.:The Other Gods Who Are: Studies in Elamite-Iranian Acculturation based on the Persepolis Fortification Texts Achaemenid History 14. Leiden, 2008.
  • Herzfeld, Ernst: Iran in the Ancient East, London, 1941.
  • Lewis, D.M.: "Persepolis Fortification Texts", in H. Sancisi-Weerdenburg & A. Kuhrt Achaemenid History IV: Centre and Periphery, Proceedings of the Groningen 1986 Achaemenid History Workshop, pp. 2–6, Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 1990.
  • Parisi, Daniel: "Of Ancient Empires and Modern Litigation", Tableau Winter 2008.
  • Schmidt, Erich F.: The Treasury of Persepolis and Other Discoveries in the Homeland of the Achaemenians, Oriental Institute Communications 21, Chicago, 1939.
  • Schmidt, Erich F.: Persepolis, II: Contents of the Treasury and Other Discoveries, Oriental Institute Publications 69, Chicago, 1957.
  • Shaked, Shaul: Le satrape de Bactriane et son gouverneur. Documents araméens du IVe s. avant notre ère provenant de Bactriane, Persika 4, Paris, 2004.
  • Sider, Alison: "The Trial of the Centuries", The Chicago Maroon, , March 5, 2009.
  • Stein, Gil J.: "A Heritage Threatened: The Persepolis Tablets Lawsuit and the Oriental Institute" The Oriental Institute News & Notes, Winter 2007.
  • Stolper, Matthew W.: " The Neo-Babylonian Text from the Persepolis Fortification," Journal of Near Eastern Studies 43: 299–310, 1984.
  • Stolper, Matthew W. and Tavernier, Jan: "From the Persepolis Fortification Archive Project, 1: An Old Persian Administrative Tablet from the Persepolis Fortification," ARTA 2007.001 http://www.achemenet.com/document/2007.001-Stolper-Tavernier.pdf, 2007.
  • Stolper, Matthew W.: "What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets?" The Oriental Institute News & Notes, Winter 2007.
  • Tajvidi, Akbar: Dānistānihā-ye nuvīn dar barāh-e hunār va bāstānšināsi-ye asr-e Hakhāmaniši bar bunyād-e kāvushā-ye panj sālah-e Takht-e Jamshīd, Tehran, 1976.
  • Tavernier, Jan: Iranica in the Achaemenid Period (c. 550-330 BC), Lexicon of Old Iranian Proper Names and Loanwords, Attested in Non-Iranian Texts, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 158, Paris, 2007.
  • Wawrzyniak, James A.: "Rubin v. The Islamic Republic of Iran - A Struggle for Control of Persian Antiquities in America", Harvard Law School http://works.bepress.com/james_wawrzyniak/1 [dead link] September 2007. Archived 2020-11-02. Archive-url: . Retrieved 2021-12-04. unpublished.
  • Wiesehöfer, Josef: Ancient Persia: from 550 BC to 650 AD London, 1996, 2001.

Further reading edit

English edit

  • Arfaee, Abdolmajid: Persepolis Fortification Tablets, Fortification and Treasury texts, Ancient Iranian Studies v. 5., The Center for The Great Islamic Encyclopedia, Tehran, Iran, 2008.
  • Briant, Pierre: From Cyrus to Alexander, a History of the Persian Empire, Winona Lake, 2002.
  • Briant, Pierre, Wouter Henkelman, and Matthew Stolper (eds.): L’archive des Fortifications de Persépolis: État des questions et perspectives de recherches, Persika 12, Paris, 2008.
  • Brosius, Maria: Women in Ancient Persia 559-331 B.C., Oxford, 1996.
  • Brosius, Maria (ed.): Ancient Archives and Archival Traditions. Concepts of Record-Keeping in the Ancient World, Oxford, 2003.
  • Curtis, John and Tallis, Nigel (eds.): Forgotten Empire: the World of Ancient Persia, London, 2005.
  • Henkelman, Wouter F.M.: The Other Gods Who Are: Studies in Elamite-Iranian Acculturation based on the Persepolis Fortification Texts, Achaemenid History 14, Leiden, 2008.
  • Kuhrt, Amélie: "Bureaucracy, Production, Settlement" in Kuhrt, Amélie: The Persian Empire, a Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period, 2 Vols., London, 2007.

Persian edit

  • Rahimifar, Mahnaz: "Mo‘arafī-ye barxi az barčasbhā-ye geli-ye Taxt-e Jamšīd", Bāstān Šenāsī, 1:72-76, 2005.
  • Tadjvidi, Akbar: Dānistānihā-ye nuvīn dar barāh-e hunār va bāstānšināsi-ye asr-e Hakhāmaniši bar bunyād-e kāvushā-ye panj sālah-e Takht-e Jamshīd, Tehran, 1976.

External links edit

  • Persepolis Fortification Archive Project
  • Persepolis Fortification Archive Project Blog
  • What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets?
  • Persepolis Fortification Archive Project: Preserving the Legacy of the Achaemenid Persians
  • Overview of Legal Issues and Latest Legislative Developments
  • Persepolis Fortification Tablets Jona Lendering, livius.org
  • Cuneiforme elamita Enrique Quintana, University of Murcia, click on CARTAS , then click on Persépolis, for transliteration and Spanish translation of some Elamite tablets

persepolis, administrative, archives, persepolis, fortification, archive, persepolis, treasury, archive, groups, clay, administrative, archives, sets, records, physically, stored, together, found, persepolis, dating, achaemenid, persian, empire, discovery, mad. The Persepolis Fortification Archive and Persepolis Treasury Archive are two groups of clay administrative archives sets of records physically stored together 1 found in Persepolis dating to the Achaemenid Persian Empire The discovery was made during legal excavations conducted by the archaeologists from the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago in the 1930s Hence they are named for their in situ findspot Persepolis The archaeological excavations at Persepolis for the Oriental Institute were initially directed by Ernst Herzfeld from 1931 to 1934 and carried on from 1934 until 1939 by Erich Schmidt 2 Persepolis tablet While the political end of the Achaemenid Empire is symbolized by the burning of Persepolis by Alexander the Great dated 330 329 BCE the fall of Persepolis paradoxically contributed to the preservation of the Achaemenid administrative archives that might have been lost due to passage of time and natural and man made causes 3 According to archaeological evidence the partial burning of Persepolis did not affect the Persepolis Fortification Archive tablets but may have caused the eventual collapse of the upper part of the northern Fortification wall that preserved the tablets until their recovery by the Oriental Institute s archaeologists 2 Thousands of clay tablets fragments and seal impressions in the Persepolis archives are a part of a single administrative system representing continuity of activity and flow of data over more than fifty consecutive years 509 to 457 BCE 4 These records can throw light on the geography economy and administration as well as the religion and social conditions of the Persepolis region the heartland of the Persian Great Kings from Darius I the Great to Artaxerxes I 3 The Persepolis Administrative Archives are the single most important extant primary source for understanding the internal workings of the Persian Achaemenid Empire But while these archives have the potential for offering the study of the Achaemenid history based on the sole surviving and substantial records from the heartland of the empire they are still not fully utilized as such by a majority of historians 5 The reason for the slow adoption of study of Persepolis administrative archives can also be attributed to the administrative nature of the archives lacking the drama and excitement of narrative history 4 Contents 1 Persepolis Fortification Archive 1 1 Discovery 1 2 Location 1 3 Components 1 4 Numbers 1 5 Scope 1 6 Elamite records 1 6 1 Sample 1 6 1 1 Pronunciation of transliteration 1 7 Aramaic records 1 8 Uninscribed records 1 9 Seals 1 10 Records in other languages 1 11 Significance 1 12 Landmark lawsuit 1 13 PFA Project 2 Persepolis Treasury Archive 2 1 Location 2 2 Components 2 3 Numbers 2 4 Scope 2 4 1 Sample 2 5 Significance 3 Other Achaemenid records from Persepolis 4 Online resources 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 English 8 2 Persian 9 External linksPersepolis Fortification Archive editThe Persepolis Fortification Archive PFA also known as Persepolis Fortification Tablets PFT PF is a fragment of Achaemenid administrative records of receipt taxation transfer storage of food crops cereals fruit livestock sheep and goats cattle poultry food products flour breads and other cereal products beer wine processed fruit oil meat and byproducts animal hides in the region around Persepolis larger part of modern Fars and their redistribution to gods the royal family courtiers priests religious officiants administrators travelers workers artisans and livestock 2 But before the Persepolis archives could have offered any clues to the better understanding of the Achaemenid history the clay tablets mostly written in a late dialect of Elamite an extremely difficult language still imperfectly understood had to be deciphered 6 So in 1935 Iranian authorities loaned the Persepolis Fortification Archive to the Oriental Institute for research and publication The archive arrived in Chicago in 1936 and has been under studies since 1937 2 It was not until 1969 when Richard Hallock published his magisterial edition of 2 087 Elamite Persepolis Fortification Tablets leading to the renaissance of Achaemenid studies in the 1970s The long term project spanning over seven decades is far from completion 7 153 tablets approximately 30 000 fragments and an unknown number of uninscribed tablets were returned to Iran in the 1950s 2 So far about 450 tablets and tens of thousands of fragments have already been returned to Iran in total 8 The narrow content of the Persepolis Fortification Archive recording only the Achaemenid administration s transactions dealing with foodstuff must be taken into consideration in regards to the amount of information that can be deduced from them 5 Discovery edit Excavations directed by Ernst Herzfeld at Persepolis between 1933 and 1934 for the Oriental Institute discovered tens of thousands of unbaked clay tablets badly broken fragments and bullae in March 1933 Before attempting to build a pathway for easy removal of debris from the ruins of palaces on the Persepolis terrace Herzfeld decided to excavate the location first to ensure that building a passage would not harm anything He found two rooms filled up with clay tablets that were arranged in order as in a library The uncleaned tablets and fragments were covered up with wax and after drying they were wrapped up in cotton and packed in 2 353 sequentially numbered boxes 2 for shipping 9 10 At the time Herzfeld estimated that the find included about 30 000 or more inscribed and sealed clay tablets and fragments 11 However Herzfeld himself did not leave precise notes and never published a proper archaeological report 2 Location edit Persepolis Fortification Archive was found at the northeastern corner of the terrace of Persepolis in two rooms in the fortification wall 12 The tablets had been stored in a small space near the staircase in the tower in the fortification wall The upper floor of the fortification wall may have collapsed at the time of the Macedonian invasion both partially destroying the order of the tablets while protecting them until 1933 2 The entrance to the rooms were bricked up in antiquity 13 Components edit There are three main kinds of clay tablets and fragments in the Persepolis Fortification Archive 14 Elamite the remains of more than 15 000 original records in the Elamite language in cuneiform script 15 Aramaic the remains of somewhat less than 1 000 original records in the Aramaic language and script Uninscribed the remains of about 5 000 or more original records with only impressions of seals and no texts However the functional relationships among these components are not still clear 14 16 Numbers edit As of 2010 about 20 000 25 000 tablets and fragments representing about 15 000 18 000 original records remain at the Oriental Institute 17 Size of the original archive for the same period of time could have been as many as 100 000 Elamite tablets The edited samples to date may represent no more than five percent of the original Achaemenid archive 2 Size of the original archive for the entire reign of Darius I the Great from 522 to 486 BCE just for the distribution of foodstuff could have been as many as 200 000 records 2 Scope edit The Persepolis Fortification Archive covers sixteen years from 509 to 493 BCE from the 13th to the 28th regnal year of Darius I the Great The chronological distribution of the archive is uneven with the largest concentration from the 22nd and 23rd regnal years 18 Elamite records edit Current understanding of the Persepolis Fortification Archive is based on a sample of the Elamite records that includes 2 120 published texts by Richard Hallock 2 087 tablets in 1969 and 33 tablets in 1978 19 as well as analysis of 1 148 seals accompanying published Elamite records 20 About 20 new tablets have also been published after Hallock by various scholars 18 A majority of the Elamite records are memoranda of single transactions The earliest known dated Elamite text was written in month 1 regnal year 13 of Darius I the Great April 509 BCE and the latest in month 12 regnal year 28 March April 493 BCE 18 The Elamite records mention about 150 places in the region controlled by Achaemenid administration at Persepolis most of modern Fars and perhaps parts of modern Khuzestan including villages estates parks and paradises storehouses fortresses treasuries towns rivers and mountains 21 Sample edit A sample transliteration and translation of an Elamite record from Persepolis Fortification Archive by Richard Hallock 22 PF 53 2 w pi ut kur min m Su te na na Ba ir sa an ku ut ka hu ut ki MIN nam Ba ka ba da Na ba ba du is da be ul 21 na 2 BAR of figs supplied by Sutena was taken to Persepolis for the royal stores Bakabada and Nababa received it 21st year Pronunciation of transliteration edit s sh as in shall Aramaic records edit About 680 Fortification tablets and fragments with monolingual Aramaic texts also called Imperial Aramaic have been identified 23 24 Almost all Aramaic records are formed around knotted strings All Aramaic texts have seal impressions and are incised with styluses or written in ink with pens or brushes and are similar to Elamite memoranda They are records of transporting or storing foodstuff disbursal of seed disbursal of provisions for travelers and disbursal of rations for workers 23 25 Uninscribed records edit About 5 000 or more tablets and fragment have only impressions of seals and no texts Almost all such records are formed around knotted strings It is noted that none of the uninscribed tablets and fragments bear the seals of high ranking officials of the Achaemenid administration 26 Buttons coins such as Athenian tetradrachms and Achaemenid darics or other common objects are also used instead of seals in a few cases 27 Seals edit More than 2 200 distinct cylinder seals and stamp seals have been identified among them scenes of heroic combat hunting worship animals in combat as well as abstract designs The number may well increase with study of more records making Persepolis administrative archives one of the largest collection of imagery in the ancient world displaying a wide range of styles and skills in the designers and engravers 28 29 More than 100 of the seals have inscriptions identifying the owner of the seal or his superior Many of the seals on the Elamite tablets can be associated with Persepolis administrative officials named in the archives such as Parnakka Old Persian Farnaka 30 31 Records in other languages edit Persepolis was inhabited by a multitude of people speaking many different languages There are unique archival records in other languages that attest to the usage of many languages by the administration at Persepolis 32 such as 33 One tablet written in Greek recording only the amount of wine and an Aramaic month name 34 One tablet written in Old Persian recording disbursement of some dry commodity among five villages 34 One tablet written in Babylonian dialect of Akkadian is a legal document recording the purchase of a slave at Persepolis in the reign of Darius I the Great among parties and witnesses with Babylonian names The legal record conforms to Babylonian conventions 35 One tablet written in Phrygian has not been interpreted 36 One tablet written in unknown cuneiform 2 Significance edit Until the discovery of the Persepolis administrative archives the main sources for information about the Achaemenids were the Greek sources such as Herodotus and ancient historians of Alexander the Great and biblical references in Hebrew Bible providing a partial and biased view of the ancient Persians 7 37 Persepolis Fortification Archive is a sophisticated and comprehensive administrative and archival system representing a highly complex and extensive institutional economy resulting from careful long term and large scale planning The archive offers unique opportunity for research on important subjects like organization and status of workers regional demography religious practices royal road relation between the state institution and private parties and record management 2 Research is yielding a better understanding of the territory under purview of the Achaemenid administrators of Persepolis and the system that underlay the structuring of the territory 21 Among Persepolis workers there are as many women as men recorded in the Persepolis Fortification Archive Some women receive more rations than any of the men in a work group probably due to their ranks or special skills New mothers are also mentioned where they receive single rations with mothers of boys receiving twice as much as mothers of girls 38 Iranian words and names in the Elamite and Aramaic records are the largest source of Old Iranian languages preserved due to their usage in the Persepolis archives including evidence of lexicon phonology and dialect variation that are not found elsewhere 39 Fragmentary finds with Elamite texts from other sites in the Achaemenid Empire point to similar common practices and administrative activities 40 Archival records found in Bactria one of the satrapies of the Achaemenid Empire use administrative vocabulary practice and book keeping found in the Persepolis administrative archives 41 Discovery of a record written in Old Persian for a routine administrative task challenges the previously held notion that Old Persian language was only used for imperial monumental inscriptions 4 Persepolis administration treats all the gods equally Among various gods named in Persepolis administrative archives receiving food offerings are Elamite Humban Inshushinak and Simat Mazdean Ahuramazda Semitic Adad and other gods otherwise unknown 42 No reference to Mithra has been found in the Persepolis administrative archives 2 Landmark lawsuit edit In 2004 the Persepolis Fortification Archive was caught in the middle of a landmark lawsuit in the U S Federal Court system 43 In 1997 five American tourists were killed and many more were wounded when terrorists set off suitcase bombs in a shopping mall in Jerusalem The Palestinian organization Hamas claimed responsibility for the bombings 7 In 2001 the survivors of the attack and their family members brought lawsuits against Hamas and Iran claiming Iran had provided financial and logistical support to Hamas The court agreed and awarded 71 5 million in compensatory damages and 300 million in punitive damages from Iran to the plaintiffs In order to collect on the judgment the plaintiffs sued a number of U S museums in 2004 in an attempt to appropriate various Iranian artifacts and collections and sell them to satisfy the claim for damages Oriental Institute and the Persepolis Fortification Archive were among this group 43 The case Rubin v Islamic Republic of Iran was argued December 4 2017 and decided 8 0 in favor of Iran on February 21 2018 Since the Persian artifacts were not being used commercially by Iran they could not be taken under subsections a and g of 28 U S C 1610 The majority view of the academic community as well as international institutions such as UNESCO is the protection of the cultural heritage exchange and scholarly research must transcend politics 7 44 45 PFA Project edit The threat of losing the Persepolis Fortification Archive to scholarly research as a result of the litigation since 2004 prompted the Oriental Institute to accelerate and enlarge the PFA Project in 2006 headed by Dr Matthew Stolper Professor of Assyriology Scholars from various universities students and volunteers are urgently digitizing the Persepolis Fortification Archive and making it available through online resources for further research worldwide 46 The PFA Project editors are 47 Annalisa Azzoni Aramaic texts Vanderbilt University Nashville Elspeth Dusinberre seal impressions on Aramaic texts University of Colorado Boulder Mark Garrison seal impressions on all components Trinity University San Antonio Wouter Henkelman Elamite texts Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Ecole pratique des hautes etudes Paris Charles Jones Elamite texts Institute for the Study of the Ancient World New York Matthew Stolper Elamite texts Oriental Institute ChicagoPersepolis Treasury Archive editExcavations directed by Erich Schmidt at Persepolis between 1934 and 1939 for the Oriental Institute discovered a second group of clay tablets and fragments that became known as the Persepolis Treasury Archive PTA also known as Persepolis Treasury Tablets PTT They were packed in small metal cigarette boxes filled with sawdust for shipping to Tehran 48 Persepolis Treasury Archive deals mostly with payments of silver from the Persepolis treasury made in lieu of partial or full in kind rations of sheep wine or grain to workers and artisans employed at or near Persepolis Some records are administrative letters ordering payments to groups of workers and confirmation that such payments were made 49 Location edit Persepolis Treasury Archive was found on the southeastern part of Persepolis terrace in the block of buildings identified as the Royal Treasury where small pieces of gold leaves were found hence the name Persepolis Treasury Archive 48 Components edit There are two main kinds of clay tablets and fragments in the Persepolis Treasury Archive 50 Elamite records in Elamite language and cuneiform script Uninscribed objects of various shapes with impressions of stamp seals cylinder seals and seal rings Many of them have marks of strings that secured bags or boxes and or attached the sealings to containers One tablet written in the Babylonian dialect of Akkadian is the Treasury records of taxes paid in silver by three 3 individuals at an unknown location in regnal years 19th and 20th of Darius I the Great 51 52 Numbers edit A total find of 746 clay tablets and fragments were reported by the excavators 198 tablets and large fragments and 548 smaller fragments 46 clay tablets were given to the Oriental Institute by the Iranian authorities and the rest were sent to the Museum of Ancient Iran modern National Museum of Iran in Tehran A part of the collection has been in the Tablet Hall of the National Museum of Iran since 1998 48 199 sealings without inscriptions were also found during the excavation 50 Scope edit Persepolis Treasury Archive covers thirty five 35 years from 492 to 457 BCE from regnal year 30th of Darius I the Great to regnal year 7th of Artaxerxes I with largest concentration from regnal years 19th and 20th of Xerxes 53 Sample edit A sample transliteration and translation of an Elamite record from Persepolis Treasury Archive by George Cameron 54 No 1957 5 ma u u is kan za bar ra tu ru is ir da tak ma na an KI MIN 2 kur sa am KU BABBAR sa ik pir nu ba ik gal na SI SI du gal ruh mu si in sik ki ip i ia an uk ku ma ma u u is da ma gal Edge ITU ha si ia ti is Reverse n a be ul 19 um me man na 4 ruh un ra Lines 12 15 completely destroyed li ka du me ba ka gi i a sic ik mar To Vahush the treasurer speak Artataxma says 2 karsha silver the remaining half of the wage give as wages to men accountants at the court sub ordinate to Vahush It is the wage for the month Aciyadiya of the 19th year 4 men each Lines 12 15 destroyed This sealed order has been given The receipt came from Bagagiya Significance edit Persepolis archives are a rich resource for the study of all the official languages used in the Persian Achaemenid Empire both individually and collectively in connection with each other 39 Persepolis Treasury Archive furthermore contributes to the study of economic history by providing a record of the introduction of coined silver money to the regional economy of the Persepolis and its eventual adoption Persepolis Fortification Archive a generation before the Persepolis Treasury Archive only attests to the payment in kind at Persepolis wine beer grain flour sheep and the like 55 Other Achaemenid records from Persepolis editExcavations directed by Akbar Tajvidi at Persepolis between 1968 and 1973 recovered more clay tablets Excavating the upper towers of the fortification wall on top of Kuh e Rahmat Mountain of Mercy excavators found sealed uninscribed Achaemenid Bullae 56 From a group of 52 uninscribed sealings some impressions were similar to the sealings found in the Persepolis Treasury Archive 57 Future excavations in the areas currently unexcavated such as the southeastern part of the Persepolis terrace and mountain fortifications might yield other archives 48 Online resources editOCHRE The Online Cultural and Historical Research Environment at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago is the main online database for the Persepolis Fortification Archive PFA Project where all the components of the Persepolis Administrative Archives Elamite Aramaic glyptic and miscellany can be seen linked and searched 58 InscriptiFact The West Semitic Research Project at the University of Southern California USC is a site that produces two kinds of high resolution online images of the Persepolis Fortification Archive tablets in collaboration with the Oriental Institute allowing online handling of the images 58 CDLI The Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative at the University of California Los Angeles UCLA is a site that provides fast low resolution online images of the Persepolis Fortification Archive Elamite tablets 58 Achemenet and MAVI at College de France is a site for Achaemenid studies providing full editions and translations of Persepolis Fortification Archive components These editions are linked to MAVI interface to view high resolution online images on the Virtual Achaemenid Museum 58 ARTA Achaemenid Research on Texts and Archaeology at College de France is the site for Achaemenid studies online journal providing periodic bulletins on the discoveries made in the course of studying Persepolis Administrative Archives 58 See also editAchaemenid Empire Aramaic Chicago s Persian heritage crisis Darius I the Great Elamite cuneiform Elamite language Old Persian cuneiform Old Persian language Oriental Institute Chicago Persepolis Xerxes I of PersiaNotes edit Kuhrt The Persepolis Archives concluding observations Persika 12 2008 567 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Henkelman 2008 Ch 2 a b Wiesehofer 10 11 a b c Stolper What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets The Oriental Institute News amp Notes 2007 a b Kuhrt The Persepolis Archives concluding observations Persika 12 2008 563 568 Cameron 1948 Preface a b c d Stein 2007 Jones amp Stolper How Many Persepolis Fortification Tablets Are There Persika 12 2008 37 44 Hallock 1969 1 Razmjou Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis Persika 12 2008 51 Anonymous 1934 232 Schmidt 1953 3 Herzfeld 1941 226 a b Henkelman 2008 157 162 Persepolis Fortification Archive Oriental Institute The University of Chicago Garrison The uninscribed tablets from the Fortification archive a preliminary analysis Persika 12 2008 149 238 Jones amp Stolper How Many Persepolis Fortification Tablets Are There Persika 12 2008 37 44 https nyu academia edu CharlesJones Papers 84747 How many Persepolis Fortification tablets are there a b c Henkelman 2008 Ch 2 Hallock 1969 1978 Garrison and Root 1998 2001 a b Henkelman From Gabae to Taoce the geography of the central administrative province Persica 12 2008 303 314 Hallock 1969 96 a b Azzoni The Bowman MS and the Aramaic tablets Persika 12 2008 253 274 Dusinberre Seal impressions on the Persepolis Fortification Aramaic tablets preliminary observations Persika 12 2008 239 252 Henkelman 2008 Ch 2 Garrison 2008 180 84 Root 1989 Garrison 2000 Root The legible image how did seals and sealing matter in Persepolis Persika 12 2008 87 148 Garrison 2002 71 Henkelman 2008 95 103 Tavernier Multilingualism in the Fortification and Treasury archives Persika 12 2008 59 64 Stolper amp Tavernier 2007 1 5 a b Stolper amp Tavernier 2007 3f 24f Stolper 1984 300 303 Brixhe 2004 118 126 Lewis 1990 Hallock 1969 5 6 a b Tavernier 2007 Kuhrt 2007 Shaked 2004 Hallock 1969 5 a b Wawrzyniak 2007 Esfandiari Golnaz 2006 07 12 Iran Tehran U S Academics Challenge Seizure Of Persian Tablets RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 2007 02 28 Heath amp Schwartz 2009 Parisi 2008 Research Projects Persepolis Fortification Archive a b c d Razmjou Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis Persika 12 2008 55 Cameron 1948 1958 a b Schmidt 1957 4 5 Cameron 1948 Briant 2002 441 Cameron 1948 1958 1965 Cameron 1958 176 Cameron 1948 1 Razmjou Find spots and find circumstances of documents excavated at Persepolis Persika 12 2008 57 Tajvidi 1976 195 a b c d e Briant et al eds Persika 12 2008 22 24 References editAnonymous Recent Discoveries at Persepolis Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society pp 226 232 1934 Briant Pierre From Cyrus to Alexander a History of the Persian Empire Winona Lake 2002 Briant Pierre Henkelman Wouter F M and Stolper Matthew W eds L archive des Fortifications de Persepolis Etat des questions et perspectives de recherches Persika 12 Paris De Boccard 2008 Brixhe C Corpus des Inscriptions paleo phrygiennes Suppl II Kadmos 43 1 130 2004 Cameron George G Persepolis Treasury Tablets Oriental Institute Publications 65 Chicago 1948 Cameron George G Persepolis Treasury Tablets Old and New Journal of Near Eastern Studies 17 161 176 1958 Cameron George G New Tablets from the Persepolis Treasury Journal of Near Eastern Studies 24 167 192 1965 Garrison Mark B The Late Neo Elamite Glyptic Style A Perspective from Fars Bulletin of the Asian Institute 16 65 102 2002 Garrison Mark B Achaemenid iconography as evidenced by glyptic art subject matter social function audience and diffusion in Christoph Uehlinger ed Images as Media Sources for the Cultural History of the Near East and the Eastern Mediterranean 1st Millennium BCE Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 175 Fribourg and Gottingen 115 163 2000 Garrison Mark B and Cool Root Margaret Seals on the Persepolis Fortification Tablets I Images of Heroic Encounter Oriental Institute Publications 117 http www achemenet com actualites Hallock pdf Chicago 2001 Garrison Mark B and Cool Root Margaret Persepolis Seal Studies An Introduction with Provisional Concordance of Seal Numbers and Associated Documents on Fortification Tablets 1 2087 Achaemenid History 9 corrected edition Leiden 1998 Hallock Richard T New Light from Persepolis Journal of Near Eastern Studies 9 237 252 1950 Hallock Richard T A New Look at the Persepolis Treasury Tablets Journal of Near Eastern Studies 19 90 100 1960 Hallock Richard T Persepolis Fortification Tablets Oriental Institute Publications 92 https web archive org web 20070621133316 http oi uchicago edu pdf OIP92 pdf Chicago 1969 Hallock Richard T Selected Fortification Texts Cahiers de la Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Iran http www achemenet com actualites Hallock pdf 8 109 136 1978 Heath Sebastian and Schwartz Glenn M Legal Threats to Cultural Exchange of Archaeological Materials American Journal of Archaeology Vol 113 No 3 July 2009 http www ajaonline org note 294 Henkelman Wouter F M The Other Gods Who Are Studies in Elamite Iranian Acculturation based on the Persepolis Fortification Texts Achaemenid History 14 Leiden 2008 Herzfeld Ernst Iran in the Ancient East London 1941 Lewis D M Persepolis Fortification Texts in H Sancisi Weerdenburg amp A Kuhrt Achaemenid History IV Centre and Periphery Proceedings of the Groningen 1986 Achaemenid History Workshop pp 2 6 Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten 1990 Parisi Daniel Of Ancient Empires and Modern Litigation Tableau https web archive org web 20080704192203 http humanities uchicago edu tableau issues Fall Win 08 pdf Winter 2008 Schmidt Erich F The Treasury of Persepolis and Other Discoveries in the Homeland of the Achaemenians Oriental Institute Communications 21 Chicago 1939 Schmidt Erich F Persepolis II Contents of the Treasury and Other Discoveries Oriental Institute Publications 69 Chicago 1957 Shaked Shaul Le satrape de Bactriane et son gouverneur Documents arameens du IVe s avant notre ere provenant de Bactriane Persika 4 Paris 2004 Sider Alison The Trial of the Centuries The Chicago Maroon https web archive org web 20110716141445 http www chicagomaroon com 2009 3 5 trial of the centuries the legal battle over ancient artifacts and global terror March 5 2009 Stein Gil J A Heritage Threatened The Persepolis Tablets Lawsuit and the Oriental Institute The Oriental Institute News amp Notes Winter 2007 Stolper Matthew W The Neo Babylonian Text from the Persepolis Fortification Journal of Near Eastern Studies 43 299 310 1984 Stolper Matthew W and Tavernier Jan From the Persepolis Fortification Archive Project 1 An Old Persian Administrative Tablet from the Persepolis Fortification ARTA 2007 001 http www achemenet com document 2007 001 Stolper Tavernier pdf 2007 Stolper Matthew W What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets The Oriental Institute News amp Notes Winter 2007 Tajvidi Akbar Danistaniha ye nuvin dar barah e hunar va bastansinasi ye asr e Hakhamanisi bar bunyad e kavusha ye panj salah e Takht e Jamshid Tehran 1976 Tavernier Jan Iranica in the Achaemenid Period c 550 330 BC Lexicon of Old Iranian Proper Names and Loanwords Attested in Non Iranian Texts Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 158 Paris 2007 Wawrzyniak James A Rubin v The Islamic Republic of Iran A Struggle for Control of Persian Antiquities in America Harvard Law School http works bepress com james wawrzyniak 1 dead link September 2007 Archived 2020 11 02 Archive url https web archive org web 20201102053357 https works bepress com james wawrzyniak 1 Retrieved 2021 12 04 unpublished Wiesehofer Josef Ancient Persia from 550 BC to 650 AD London 1996 2001 Further reading editEnglish edit Arfaee Abdolmajid Persepolis Fortification Tablets Fortification and Treasury texts Ancient Iranian Studies v 5 The Center for The Great Islamic Encyclopedia Tehran Iran 2008 Briant Pierre From Cyrus to Alexander a History of the Persian Empire Winona Lake 2002 Briant Pierre Wouter Henkelman and Matthew Stolper eds L archive des Fortifications de Persepolis Etat des questions et perspectives de recherches Persika 12 Paris 2008 Brosius Maria Women in Ancient Persia 559 331 B C Oxford 1996 Brosius Maria ed Ancient Archives and Archival Traditions Concepts of Record Keeping in the Ancient World Oxford 2003 Curtis John and Tallis Nigel eds Forgotten Empire the World of Ancient Persia London 2005 Henkelman Wouter F M The Other Gods Who Are Studies in Elamite Iranian Acculturation based on the Persepolis Fortification Texts Achaemenid History 14 Leiden 2008 Kuhrt Amelie Bureaucracy Production Settlement in Kuhrt Amelie The Persian Empire a Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period 2 Vols London 2007 Persian edit Rahimifar Mahnaz Mo arafi ye barxi az barcasbha ye geli ye Taxt e Jamsid Bastan Senasi 1 72 76 2005 Tadjvidi Akbar Danistaniha ye nuvin dar barah e hunar va bastansinasi ye asr e Hakhamanisi bar bunyad e kavusha ye panj salah e Takht e Jamshid Tehran 1976 External links editPersepolis Fortification Archive Project Persepolis Fortification Archive Project Blog What are the Persepolis Fortification Tablets Persepolis Fortification Archive Project Preserving the Legacy of the Achaemenid Persians Overview of Legal Issues and Latest Legislative Developments Persepolis Fortification Tablets Jona Lendering livius org Cuneiforme elamita Enrique Quintana University of Murcia click on CARTAS then click on Persepolis for transliteration and Spanish translation of some Elamite tablets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persepolis Administrative Archives amp oldid 1175107352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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