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Susa

Susa (/ˈssə/ SOO-sə; Middle Elamite: 𒀸𒋗𒊺𒂗, romanized: Šušen;[1] Middle and Neo-Elamite: 𒋢𒋢𒌦, romanized: Šušun;[1] Neo-Elamite and Achaemenid Elamite: 𒀸𒋗𒐼𒀭, romanized: Šušán;[2] Achaemenid Elamite: 𒀸𒋗𒐼, romanized: Šušá;[2] Persian: شوش Šuš [ʃuʃ]; Hebrew: שׁוּשָׁן Šūšān; Greek: Σοῦσα Soûsa; Syriac: ܫܘܫ Šuš;[3] Middle Persian: 𐭮𐭥𐭱𐭩 Sūš or 𐭱𐭥𐭮 Šūs; Old Persian: 𐏂𐎢𐏁𐎠 Çūšā) was an ancient city in the lower Zagros Mountains about 250 km (160 mi) east of the Tigris, between the Karkheh and Dez Rivers in Iran. One of the most important cities of the Ancient Near East, Susa served as the capital of Elam and the Achaemenid Empire, and remained a strategic centre during the Parthian and Sasanian periods.

Susa
شوش
The Palace of Darius I in Susa
Susa
Shown within Iran
Susa
Susa (West and Central Asia)
LocationShush, Khuzestan Province, Iran
RegionZagros Mountains
Coordinates32°11′26″N 48°15′28″E / 32.19056°N 48.25778°E / 32.19056; 48.25778Coordinates: 32°11′26″N 48°15′28″E / 32.19056°N 48.25778°E / 32.19056; 48.25778
TypeSettlement
Part ofSusa
History
Founded4400 BC
Abandoned1218 AD
EventsBattle of Susa
Site notes
ConditionAbandoned and in ruins
Official nameSusa
CriteriaCultural: i, ii, iii, iv
Reference1455
Inscription2015 (39th Session)

The site currently consists of three archaeological mounds, covering an area of around one square kilometre.[4] The modern Iranian town of Shush is located on the site of ancient Susa. Shush is identified as Shushan, mentioned in the Book of Esther and other Biblical books.

Name

The English name Susa is derived from Ancient Greek Sousa (Σουσα), which is ultimately derived from an original Elamite name, which was written as Šušen (𒀸𒋗𒊺𒂗) in its Middle Elamite form,[1] Šušun (𒋢𒋢𒌦) in its Middle and Neo-Elamite forms,[1]Šušán (𒀸𒋗𒐼𒀭) in its Neo-Elamite and Achaemenid forms,[2] and Šušá (𒀸𒋗𒐼) in its Achaemenid Elamite form.[2]

Literary references

 
Map showing the area of the Elamite kingdom (in orange) and the neighboring areas. The approximate Bronze Age extension of the Persian Gulf is shown.

Susa was one of the most important cities of the Ancient Near East. In historic literature, Susa appears in the very earliest Sumerian records: for example, it is described as one of the places obedient to Inanna, patron deity of Uruk, in Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta.

Biblical texts

Susa is mentioned in the Ketuvim of the Hebrew Bible by the name Shushan, mainly in the Book of Esther, but also once each in the books of Ezra (Ezra 4:9), Nehemiah (Nehemiah 1:1) and Daniel (Daniel 8:2). According to these texts, Nehemiah lived in Susa during the Babylonian captivity of the 6th century BC (Daniel mentions it in a prophetic vision), while Esther became queen there, married to King Ahasuerus, and saved the Jews from genocide. A tomb presumed to be that of Daniel is located in the area, known as Shush-Daniel. However, a large portion of the current structure is actually a much later construction dated to the late nineteenth century, ca. 1871.[5]

Other religious texts

Susa is further mentioned in the Book of Jubilees (8:21 & 9:2) as one of the places within the inheritance of Shem and his eldest son Elam; and in 8:1, "Susan" is also named as the son (or daughter, in some translations) of Elam.

Excavation history

 
Site of Susa
 
Assyria. Ruins of Susa, Brooklyn Museum Archives, Goodyear Archival Collection

The site was examined in 1836 by Henry Rawlinson and then by A. H. Layard.[6]

In 1851, some modest excavation was done by William Loftus, accompanied by Fenwick Williams, who identified it as Susa.[7][8] Among his finds was a jar containing a around 110 coins, the earliest of which was dated to 697-98 AD.[9]

In 1885 and 1886 Marcel-Auguste Dieulafoy and Jane Dieulafoy began the first French excavations, discovering glazed bricks, column bases, and capitals from the palace of the Achaemenid kings.[10] However, they failed to identify mudbrick walls, which were then destroyed in the course of excavation.[11] Almost all of the excavations at Susa, post-1885, were organized and authorized by the French government.[12]

In two treaties in 1894 and 1899, the French gained a monopoly on all archaeological excavations in Iran indefinitely.[11] Jacques de Morgan, after visiting the site in 1891, conducted major excavations from 1897 until 1911.[13] The excavations that were conducted in Susa brought many artistic and historical artifacts back to France. These artifacts filled multiple halls in the Museum of the Louvre throughout the late 1890s and early 1900s.[14][12] De Morgan's most important work was the excavation of the Grande Tranchée in the Acropole mound, where he found the stele of Naram-Sin, a collection of Babylonian kudurrus (boundary stones), the stele bearing the Code of Hammurabi, an ornamented bronze table of snakes, the bronze statue of Queen Napir-Asu, and thousands of inscribed bricks. His finds showed Susa to be the most important center of Elamite civilization, which was effectively discovered by the French mission at Susa.[11]

Excavation efforts continued under Roland De Mecquenem until 1914, at the beginning of World War I. French work at Susa resumed after the war, led by De Mecquenem, continuing until World War II in 1940.[15][16][17][18] To supplement the original publications of De Mecquenem the archives of his excavation have now been put online thanks to a grant from the Shelby White Levy Program.[19]

Roman Ghirshman took over direction of the French efforts in 1946, after the end of the war.[20] Together with his wife Tania Ghirshman, he continued there until 1967. The Ghirshmans concentrated on excavating a single part of the site, the hectare sized Ville Royale, taking it all the way down to bare earth.[21] The pottery found at the various levels enabled a stratigraphy to be developed for Susa.[22][23]

From 1969 until 1979 excavations were conducted under Jean Perrot.[24][25]

In 2019 the Susa salvage project was launched to counter the construction of a transportation underpass in the vicinity of the site.[26]

History

Early settlement

In urban history, Susa is one of the oldest-known settlements of the region. Based on calibrated carbon-14 dating, the foundation of a settlement there occurred as early as 4395 BC.[27] In the region around Susa were a number of towns (with their own platforms) and villages that maintained a trading relationship with the city, especially those along the Zagro frontier.[28]

The founding of Susa corresponded with the abandonment of nearby villages. Potts suggests that the settlement may have been founded to try to reestablish the previously destroyed settlement at Chogha Mish, about 25 km to the west.[29] Previously, Chogha Mish was a very large settlement, and it featured a similar massive platform that was later built at Susa.[citation needed]

Another important settlement in the area is Chogha Bonut, which was discovered in 1976.[citation needed]

Susa I period (4200–3800 BC)

 
Goblet and cup, Iran, Susa I style, 4th millennium BC – Ubaid period; goblet height c. 12 cm; Sèvres – Cité de la céramique, France

Shortly after Susa was first settled over 6000 years ago, its inhabitants erected a monumental platform that rose over the flat surrounding landscape.[30] The exceptional nature of the site is still recognizable today in the artistry of the ceramic vessels that were placed as offerings in a thousand or more graves near the base of the temple platform.[31]

Susa's earliest settlement is known as the Susa I period (c. 4200–3900 BC). Two settlements named by archaeologists the Acropolis (7 ha) and the Apadana (6.3 ha), would later merge to form Susa proper (18 ha).[29] The Apadana was enclosed by 6 metre thick walls of rammed earth (this particular place is named Apadana because it also contains a late Achaemenid structure of this type).

Nearly two thousand pots of Susa I style were recovered from the cemetery, most of them now in the Louvre. The vessels found are eloquent testimony to the artistic and technical achievements of their makers, and they hold clues about the organization of the society that commissioned them.[32] Painted ceramic vessels from Susa in the earliest first style are a late, regional version of the Mesopotamian Ubaid ceramic tradition that spread across the Near East during the fifth millennium BC.[32] Susa I style was very much a product of the past and of influences from contemporary ceramic industries in the mountains of western Iran. The recurrence in close association of vessels of three types—a drinking goblet or beaker, a serving dish, and a small jar—implies the consumption of three types of food, apparently thought to be as necessary for life in the afterworld as it is in this one. Ceramics of these shapes, which were painted, constitute a large proportion of the vessels from the cemetery. Others are coarse cooking-type jars and bowls with simple bands painted on them and were probably the grave goods of the sites of humbler citizens as well as adolescents and, perhaps, children.[33] The pottery is carefully made by hand. Although a slow wheel may have been employed, the asymmetry of the vessels and the irregularity of the drawing of encircling lines and bands indicate that most of the work was done freehand.

Copper metallurgy is also attested during this period, which was contemporary with metalwork at some highland Iranian sites such as Tepe Sialk.

Susa II and Uruk influence (3800–3100 BC)

Susa came within the Uruk cultural sphere during the Uruk period. An imitation of the entire state apparatus of Uruk, proto-writing, cylinder seals with Sumerian motifs, and monumental architecture is found at Susa. According to some scholars, Susa may have been a colony of Uruk.

There is some dispute about the comparative periodization of Susa and Uruk at this time, as well as about the extent of Uruk influence in Susa. Recent research indicates that Early Uruk period corresponds to Susa II period.[34]

Daniel T. Potts, argues that the influence from the highland Iranian Khuzestan area in Susa was more significant at the early period, and also continued later on. Thus, Susa combined the influence of two cultures, from the highland area and from the alluvial plains. Potts also stresses the fact that the writing and numerical systems of Uruk were not simply borrowed in Susa wholesale. Rather, only partial and selective borrowing took place, that was adapted to Susa's needs. Despite the fact that Uruk was far larger than Susa at the time, Susa was not its colony, but still maintained some independence for a long time, according to Potts.[35] An architectural link has also been suggested between Susa, Tal-i Malyan, and Godin Tepe at this time, in support of the idea of the parallel development of the Proto-Cuneiform and proto-elamite scripts.[36]

Some scholars believe that Susa was part of the greater Uruk culture. Holly Pittman, an art historian at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia says, "they Susanians are participating entirely in an Uruk way of life. They are not culturally distinct; the material culture of Susa is a regional variation of that on the Mesopotamian plain". Gilbert Stein, director of the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute, says that "An expansion once thought to have lasted less than 200 years now apparently went on for 700 years. It is hard to think of any colonial system lasting that long. The spread of Uruk material is not evidence of Uruk domination; it could be local choice".[37]

Susa III, or "Proto-Elamite", period (3100–2700 BC)

Susa III (3100–2700 BC) is also known as the 'Proto-Elamite' period.[44] At this time, Banesh period pottery is predominant. This is also when the Proto-Elamite tablets first appear in the record. Subsequently, Susa became the centre of Elam civilization.

Ambiguous reference to Elam (Cuneiform; 𒉏 NIM) appear also in this period in Sumerian records. Susa enters recorded history in the Early Dynastic period of Sumer. A battle between Kish and Susa is recorded in 2700 BC, when En-me-barage-si is said to have "made the land of Elam submit".[45]

Elamites

 
Puzur-Inshushinak Ensi Shushaki (𒅤𒊭𒀭𒈹𒂞 𒑐𒋼𒋛 𒈹𒂞𒆠), "Puzur-Inshushinak Ensi (Governor) of Susa", in the "Table au Lion", dated 2100 BC, Louvre Museum.[46]

In the Sumerian period, Susa was the capital of a state called Susiana (Šušan), which occupied approximately the same territory of modern Khūzestān Province centered on the Karun River. Control of Susiana shifted between Elam, Sumer, and Akkad.

During the Elamite monarchy, many riches and materials were brought to Susa from the plundering of other cities.[47] This was mainly due to the fact of Susa's location on Iran's South Eastern region, closer to the city of Babylon and cities in Mesopotamia.

The use of the Elamite language as an administrative language was first attested in texts of ancient Ansan, Tall-e Mal-yan, dated 1000 BC.[48] Previous to the era of Elamites, the Akkadian language was responsible for most or all of the text used in ancient documents. Susiana was incorporated by Sargon the Great into his Akkadian Empire in approximately 2330 BC.[49]

 
Silver cup from Marvdasht, Iran, with a linear-Elamite inscription from the time of Kutik-Inshushinak. National Museum of Iran

The main goddess of the city was Nanaya, who had a significant temple in Susa.[50]

Old Elamite period (c. 2700–1500 BC)

 
 
Dynastic list of twelve kings of Awan dynasty and twelve kings of the Shimashki Dynasty, 1800–1600 BC, Susa, Louvre Museum Sb 17729.[51][52]

The Old Elamite period began around 2700 BC. Historical records mention the conquest of Elam by Enmebaragesi, the Sumerian king of Kish in Mesopotamia. Three dynasties ruled during this period. Twelve kings of each of the first two dynasties, those of Awan (or Avan; c. 2400–2100 BC) and Simashki (c. 2100–1970 BC), are known from a list from Susa dating to the Old Babylonian period. Two Elamite dynasties said to have exercised brief control over parts of Sumer in very early times include Awan and Hamazi; and likewise, several of the stronger Sumerian rulers, such as Eannatum of Lagash and Lugal-anne-mundu of Adab, are recorded as temporarily dominating Elam.

Kutik-Inshushinak

Susa was the capital of an Akkadian province until ca. 2100 BC, when its governor, Kutik-Inshushinak, rebelled and made it an independent state and a literary center. Also, he was the last from the Awan dynasty according to the Susa kinglist.[53] He unified the neighbouring territories and became the king of Elam. He encouraged the use of the Linear Elamite script, that remains undeciphered.

The city was subsequently conquered by the neo-Sumerian Third Dynasty of Ur and held until Ur finally collapsed at the hands of the Elamites under Kindattu in ca. 2004 BC. At this time, Susa was ruled by Elam again and became its capital under the Shimashki dynasty.

Indus-Susa relations (2600–1700 BC)

Numerous artifacts of Indus Valley civilization origin have been found in Susa from this period, especially seals and etched carnelian beads, pointing to Indus-Mesopotamia relations during this period.[54][55]

Middle Elamite period (c. 1500–1100 BC)

 
Middle-Elamite basrelief of warrior gods, Susa, 1600-1100 BC

Around 1500 BC, the Middle Elamite period began with the rise of the Anshanite dynasties. Their rule was characterized by an "Elamisation" of Susa, and the kings took the title "king of Anshan and Susa". While, previously, the Akkadian language was frequently used in inscriptions, the succeeding kings, such as the Igihalkid dynasty of c. 1400 BC, tried to use Elamite. Thus, Elamite language and culture grew in importance in Susiana.

This was also the period when the Elamite pantheon was being imposed in Susiana. This policy reached its height with the construction of the political and religious complex at Chogha Zanbil, 30 km (19 mi) south-east of Susa.

In ca. 1175 BC, the Elamites under Shutruk-Nahhunte plundered the original stele bearing the Code of Hammurabi and took it to Susa. Archeologists found it in 1901. Nebuchadnezzar I of the Babylonian empire plundered Susa around fifty years later.

Neo-Elamite period (c. 1100–540 BC)

Neo-Assyrians

In 647 BC, Neo-Assyrian king Ashurbanipal leveled the city during a war in which the people of Susa participated on the other side. A tablet unearthed in 1854 by Austen Henry Layard in Nineveh reveals Ashurbanipal as an "avenger", seeking retribution for the humiliations that the Elamites had inflicted on the Mesopotamians over the centuries:

"Susa, the great holy city, abode of their gods, seat of their mysteries, I conquered. I entered its palaces, I opened their treasuries where silver and gold, goods and wealth were amassed. . . .I destroyed the ziggurat of Susa. I smashed its shining copper horns. I reduced the temples of Elam to naught; their gods and goddesses I scattered to the winds. The tombs of their ancient and recent kings I devastated, I exposed to the sun, and I carried away their bones toward the land of Ashur. I devastated the provinces of Elam and, on their lands, I sowed salt."[65]

Assyrian rule of Susa began in 647 BC and lasted till Median capture of Susa in 617 BC.

Susa after Achaemenid Persian conquest

 
Archers frieze from Darius' palace at Susa. Detail of the beginning of the frieze
 
The 24 countries subject to the Achaemenid Empire at the time of Darius, on the Statue of Darius I.

Susa underwent a major political and ethnocultural transition when it became part of the Persian Achaemenid empire between 540 and 539 BC when it was captured by Cyrus the Great during his conquest of Elam (Susiana), of which Susa was the capital.[66] The Nabonidus Chronicle records that, prior to the battle(s), Nabonidus had ordered cult statues from outlying Babylonian cities to be brought into the capital, suggesting that the conflict over Susa had begun possibly in the winter of 540 BC.[67]

It is probable that Cyrus negotiated with the Babylonian generals to obtain a compromise on their part and therefore avoid an armed confrontation.[68] Nabonidus was staying in the city at the time and soon fled to the capital, Babylon, which he had not visited in years.[69] Cyrus' conquest of Susa and the rest of Babylonia commenced a fundamental shift, bringing Susa under Persian control for the first time. Strabo stated that Cyrus made Susa an imperial capital though there was no new construction in that period so this is in dispute.[70]

Under Cyrus' son Cambyses II, Susa became a center of political power as one of four capitals of the Achaemenid Persian empire, while reducing the significance of Pasargadae as the capital of Persis. Following Cambyses' brief rule, Darius the Great began a major building program in Susa and Persepolis,which included building a large palace.[71] During this time he describes his new capital in an inscription:

"This palace which I built at Susa, from afar its ornamentation was brought. Downward the earth was dug, until I reached rock in the earth. When the excavation had been made, then rubble was packed down, some 40 cubits in depth, another part 20 cubits in depth. On that rubble the palace was constructed."[72]

The city forms the setting of The Persians (472 BC), an Athenian tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus that is the oldest surviving play in the history of theatre.

Events mentioned in the Old Testament book of Esther are said to have occurred in Susa during the Achaemenid period. The King Ahasuerus mentioned in that book may refer to Xerxes I (486-465 BC).

Seleucid period

 
The marriages of Stateira II to Alexander the Great of Macedon and her sister, Drypteis, to Hephaestion at Susa in 324 BC, as depicted in a late-19th-century engraving.

Susa lost much of its importance after the invasion of Alexander the Great of Macedon in 331 BC. In 324 BC he met Nearchus here, who explored the Persian Gulf[citation needed] as he returned from the Indus River by sea. In that same year Alexander celebrated in Susa with a mass wedding between the Persians and Macedonians.[73]

The city retained its importance under the Seleucids for approximately one century after Alexander, however Susa lost its position of imperial capital to Seleucia on the Tigris to become the regional capital of the satrapy of Susiana.[74] Nevertheless, Susa retained its economic importance to the empire with its vast assortment of merchants conducting trade in Susa,[75] using Charax Spasinou as its port.

The city was named Seleucia on the Eulaeus or Seleucia ad Eulaeum.

Seleucus I Nicator minted coins there in substantial quantities.[76] Susa is rich in Greek inscriptions,[citation needed] perhaps indicating a significant number of Greeks living in the city. Especially in the royal city large, well-equipped peristyle houses have been excavated.

Parthian period

Around 147 BC Susa and the adjacent Elymais broke free from the Seleucid Empire. The city was at least temporarily ruled by the rulers of the Elymais with Kamnaskires II Nikephoros minting coins there. The city may again have briefly returned to Seleucid rule, but starting with Phraates II (about 138–127 BC) to Gotarzes II (about 40–51 AD) almost all rulers of the Parthian Empire coined coins in the city, indicating that it was firmly in the hands of the Parthians at least during this period. The city however retained a considerable amount of independence and retained its Greek city-state organization well into the ensuing Parthian period.[77] From second half of the first century it was probably partly governed by rulers of Elymais again, but it became Parthian once again in 215.[78][79]

Susa was a frequent place of refuge for Parthian and later, the Persian Sassanid kings, as the Romans sacked Ctesiphon five different times between 116 and 297 AD. Susa was briefly captured in 116 AD by the Roman emperor Trajan during the course of his Parthian campaign.[80] Never again would the Roman Empire advance so far to the east.[81]

Sassanid period

Suzan was conquered and destroyed in 224 AD by the Sassanid Ardashir I, but rebuilt immediately thereafter, and perhaps even temporarily a royal residence. According to a later tradition, Shapur I is said to have spent his twilight years in the city, although this tradition is uncertain and perhaps refers more to Shapur II.

Under the Sassanids, following the founding of Gundeshapur Susa slowly lost its importance. Archaeologically, the Sassanid city is less dense compared to the Parthian period, but there were still significant buildings, with the settlement extending over 400 hectares. Susa was also still very significant economically and a trading center, especially in gold trading. Coins also continued to be minted in the city. The city had a Christian community in a separate district with a Nestorian bishop, whose last representative is attested to in 1265. Archaeologically a stucco panel with the image of a Christian saint has been found.

During the reign of Shapur II after Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire in 312, and the identification of Christians as possible collaborators with the enemy Christians living in the Sasanian Empire were persecuted from 339 onwards.[82] Shapur II also imposed a double tax on the Christians during his war campaign against the Romans. Following a rebellion of Christians living in Susa, the king destroyed the city in 339 using 300 elephants.[83] He later had the city rebuilt and resettled with prisoners of war and weavers, which is believed to have been after his victory over the Romans in Amida in 359. The weaver produced silk brocade.[84] He renamed it Eran-Khwarrah-Shapur ("Iran's glory [built by] Shapur").[85]

Islamic period

During the Muslim conquest of Persia an Arab army invaded Khuzistan under the command of Abu Musa al-Ash'ari. After taking most of the smaller fortified towns the army captured Tustar in 642 before proceeding to besiege Susa. A place of military importance, it also held the tomb of the Jewish prophet Daniel.

 
A group of Western and Iranian archaeologists at a conference held in Susa, Khuzestan, Iran in 1977. Henry Wright, William Sumner, Elizabeth Carter, Genevieve Dolfus, Greg Johnson, Saeid Ganjavi, Yousef Majidzadeh,Vanden Berghe, and others.

Two stories are given in the Muslim sources of how the city fell. In the first, a Persian priest proclaimed from the walls that only a dajjal was fated to capture the city. A dajjal is an Islamic term for an Al-Masih ad-Dajjal, a false messiah, compatible to the Antichrist in Christianity. In everyday use, it also means "deceiver" or "imposter". Siyah, a Persian general who had defected to Muslim side, claimed that by converting to Islam he had turned his back on Zoroastrianism and was thus a dajjal. Abu Musa agreed to Siyah's plan. Soon after as the sun came up one morning, the sentries on the walls saw a man in a Persian officer's uniform covered in blood lying on the ground before the main gate. Thinking it he had been left out overnight after a conflict the previous day, they opened the gate and some came out to collect him. As they approached, Siyah jumped up and killed them. Before the other sentries had time to react, Siyah and a small group of Muslim soldiers hidden nearby charged through the open gate. They held the gate open long enough for Muslim reinforcements to arrive and passing through the gate to take the city.[86]

In the other story, once again the Muslims were taunted from the city wall that only an Al-Masih ad-Dajjal could capture the city, and since there were none in the besieging army then they may as well give up and go home. One of the Muslim commanders was so angry and frustrated at this taunt that he went up to one of the city gates and kicked it. Instantly the chains snapped, the locks broke and it fell open.[87]

Following their entry into the city, the Muslims killed all of the Persian nobles.[87]

Once the city was taken, as Daniel (Arabic: دانيال, romanizedDanyal) was not mentioned in the Qur'an, nor is he regarded as a prophet in Judaism, the initial reaction of the Muslim was to destroy the cult by confiscating the treasure that had stored at the tomb since the time of the Achaemenids. They then broke open the silver coffin and carried off the mummified corpse, removing from the corpse a signet ring, which carried an image of a man between two lions. However, upon hearing what had happened, the caliph Umar ordered the ring to be returned and the body reburied under the riverbed.[87] In time, Daniel became a Muslim cult figure and they as well as Christians began making pilgrimages to the site, despite several other places claiming to be the site of Daniel's grave.[87]

Following the capture of Susa, the Muslims moved on to besiege Gundeshapur.[86]

Susa recovered following its capture and remained a regional center of more than 400 hectares in size.[88] A mosque was built, but also Nestorian bishops are still testifie. In addition, there was a Jewish community with its own synagogue. The city continued to be a manufacturing center of luxury fabrics during this period. Archaeologically, the Islamic period is characterized mainly by its rich ceramics. Beth Huzaye (East Syrian Ecclesiastical Province) had a significant Christian population during the first millennium, and was a diocese of the Church of the East between the 5th and 13th centuries, in the metropolitan province of Beth Huzaye (Elam).

In 1218, the city was razed by invading Mongols and was never able to regain its previous importance. The city further degraded in the 15th century when the majority of its population moved to Dezful.[89]

Today

Today the ancient center of Susa is unoccupied, with the population living in the adjacent modern Iranian town of Shush to the west and north of the historic ruins. Shush is the administrative capital of Shush County in Iran's Khuzestan province. It had a population of 64,960 in 2005.

World Heritage listing

In July 2015, it was inscribed on the list of World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.[90]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Hinz & Koch 1987, p. 1184.
  2. ^ a b c d Hinz & Koch 1987, p. 1183.
  3. ^ Thomas A. Carlson et al., “Susa — ܫܘܫ ” in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified June 30, 2014, http://syriaca.org/place/415.
  4. ^ John Curtis (2013). "Introduction". In Perrot, Jean (ed.). The Palace of Darius at Susa: The Great Royal Residence of Achaemenid Persia. I.B.Tauris. p. xvi. ISBN 9781848856219.
  5. ^ Kriwaczek, Paul, Babylon: Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization, St. Martin's Press, 2012, ISBN 978-1250054166
  6. ^ George Rawlinson, A Memoir of Major-General Sir Henry Creswicke Rawlinson, Nabu Press, 2010, ISBN 1-178-20631-9
  7. ^ [1], William K. Loftus, Travels and Researches in Chaldaea and Susiana, Travels and Researches in Chaldaea and Susiana: With an Account of Excavations at Warka, the "Erech" of Nimrod, and Shush, "Shushan the Palace" of Esther, in 1849–52, Robert Carter & Brothers, 1857
  8. ^ John Curtis, "William Kennett Loftus and his Excavations at Susa", Iranica Antiqua; Leiden, vol. 28, pp. 1-55, (Jan 1, 1993)
  9. ^ Vaux, W. S. W., "ON COINS DISCOVERED, BY W. K. LOFTUS, Esq., AT SUSA", The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Numismatic Society, vol. 20, pp. 25–32, 1857
  10. ^ [2]Jane Dieulafoy, "Perzi?, Chaldea en Susiane : De Aarde en haar Volken, 1885-1887", at Project Gutenbrg (in Dutch)
  11. ^ a b c Mousavi, Ali (21 June 2013). The History of Archaeological Research in Iran. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199733309.013.0003.
  12. ^ a b Peters, John P. (1915). "Excavations in Persia". The Harvard Theological Review. 8 (1): 82–93. doi:10.1017/S0017816000008336. ISSN 0017-8160. JSTOR 1507314. S2CID 163892909.
  13. ^ "M. J. DE MORGAN'S EXCAVATIONS IN THE AKROPOLIS AND PALACES OF SUSA", Scientific American, vol. 82, no. 11, pp. 169–70, 1900
  14. ^ V. Scheil , "Excavations Made by the French in Susa and Babylonia, 1902-1903", The Biblical World, vol. 24, no. 2, pp. 146-152, Aug 1904 JSTOR
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  68. ^ Tolini, Gauthier, Quelques éléments concernant la prise de Babylone par Cyrus, Paris. "Il est probable que des négociations s'engagèrent alors entre Cyrus et les chefs de l'armée babylonienne pour obtenir une reddition sans recourir à l'affrontement armé." p. 10 (PDF)
  69. ^ The Harran Stelae H2 – A, and the Nabonidus Chronicle (Seventeenth year) show that Nabonidus had been in Babylon before 10 October 539, because he had already returned from Harran and had participated in the Akitu of Nissanu 1 [4 April], 539 BC.
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References

  • Potts, Daniel T. (1999). The archaeology of Elam: Formation and transformation of an ancient Iranian state. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56496-0. World Archaeology Series.

Further reading

  • Bosworth, C. E. (1975). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 3 (1): The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian periods. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-20093-6.
  • [8][permanent dead link]Charvát, Petr, "Archaeology and social history: the Susa sealings, ca. 4000-2340 BC.", Paléorient, 57-63, 1988
  • Clawson, H. Phelps, "Pottery of Susa I", Parnassus, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 26–27, 1939
  • Daryaee, Touraj (2014). Sasanian Persia: The Rise and Fall of an Empire. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-0857716668.
  • Jalalipour, Saeid (2014). The Arab Conquest of Persia: The Khūzistān Province before and after the Muslims Triumph (PDF). Sasanika.[permanent dead link]
  • Le Breton, L., "The Early Periods at Susa, Mesopotamian Relations", Iraq, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 79–124, 1957
  • Pelzel, Suzanne M., "Dating the Early Dynastic Votive Plaques from Susa", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 1–15, 1977
  • Jean Perrot, "Le Palais de Darius à Suse. Une résidence royale sur la route de Persépolis à Babylone", SORBONNE PUPS, Paris, 2010 ISBN 978-2840506812
  • Poebel, Arno, "The Acropolis of Susa in the Elamite Inscriptions", The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, vol. 49, no. 2, pp. 125–40, 1933
  • UNVALA, J. M., "Three Panels from Susa", Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie Orientale, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 179–85, 1928
  • Westenholtz, J. G.; Guthartz, L. Taylor (1996). Royal Cities of the Biblical World. Jerusalem: Rubin Mass. ISBN 978-9657027011.</ref>
  • Woolley, C. Leonard, "The Painted Pottery of Susa", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, no. 1, pp. 35–50, 1928

Excavation reports

Although numerous excavation reports have been published so far, many excavations are not or only partially published. Above all, the found architecture was often presented only in short preliminary reports and plans.

  • Pierre Amiet, "Glyptique susienne des origines à l'époque des Perses achéménides: cachets, sceaux-cylindres et empreintes antiques découverts à Suse de 1913 à 1967", Mémoires de la Délégation archéologique en Iran, Paris 1972.
  • Elizabeth Carter, "Suse, Ville Royale", Paléorient, vol. 4, pp. 197–211, 1979 DOI: 10.3406/paleo.1978.4222
  • Elizabeth Carter, "The Susa Sequence – 3000–2000 B. C. Susa, Ville Royale I", American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 83, no. 2, pp. 451–454, 1979
  • Elizabeth Carter, "Excavations in Ville-Royale-I at Susa: The third Millennium B.C.", Cahiers de la DAFI, vol. 11, pp. 11–139, 1980
  • Roman Ghirshman, "Cinq campagnes de fouilles a Suse (1946–1951)", In: Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie Orientale 46, pp 1–18, 1952
  • Ghirshman, Roman, and M. J. STEVE, "SUSE CAMPAGNE DE L'HIVER 1964-1965: Rapport Préliminaire", Arts Asiatiques, vol. 13, pp. 3–32, 1966
  • GHIRSHMAN, R., "SUSE CAMPAGNE DE L'HIVER 1965-1966 Rapport Préliminaire", Arts Asiatiques, vol. 15, pp. 3–27, 1967
  • Florence Malbran-Labat, "Les inscriptions royales de Suse: briques de l'époque paléo-élamite à l 'empire néo-élamite", Paris 1995.
  • Laurianne Martinez-Sève, "Les figurines de Suse", Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris 2002, ISBN 2-7118-4324-6.
  • de Mecquenem, R., "LES DERNIERS RÉSULTATS DES FOUILLES DE SUSE", Revue Des Arts Asiatiques, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 73–88, 1929
  • de MECQUENEM, R., "FOUILLES DE SUSE: CAMPAGNES DES ANNÉES 1914-1921-1922", Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie Orientale, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 109–40, 1922
  • [9]Jacques de Morgan, "Histoire et travaux de la Délégation en Perse du Ministère de l'instruction publique, 1897-1905", E. Leroux, 1905
  • Jacques de Morgan, G. Jéquier, G. Lampre, "Fouilles à Suse, 1897–1898 et 1898–1899", Paris 1900
  • Perrot, Jean, et al., "Recherches Archéologiques a Suse et En Susiane En 1969 et En 1970", Syria, vol. 48, no. 1/2, pp. 21–51, 1971
  • Georges Le Rider, "Suse sous les Séleucides et les Parthes: les trouvailles monétaires et l'histoire de la ville", Mémoires de la Délégation Archéologique en Iran, Paris 1965.
  • Vincent Scheil, "Inscriptions of Achéménides à Suse. Actes juridiques susiens", Mémoires de la Mission Archéologique de Perse, vol. 21–24, Paris 1929–1933.
  • Agnes Spycket, "Les figurines de Suse", Paris 1992.
  • Marie-Joseph Steve, Hermann Gasche, "L'Acropole de Suse. Nouvelles fouilles (rapport préliminaire)", Mémoires de la Mission Archéologique de Perse vol. 46, Leiden 1971.

External links

  • Hinz, Walther [in German]; Koch, Heidemarie (1987). Elamisches Wörterbuch [Elamite Wordbook] (in German). Vol. 2. Berlin, Germany: Dietrich Reimer Verlag.
  • "Early Works on the Acropolis at Susa" Expedition Magazine 10.4 1968
  • Royal City of Susa: Ancient Near Eastern Treasures in the Louvre - Metropolitan Museum - 1992
  • Aerial views of Susa at the Oriental Institute
  • Digital Images of Cuneiform Tablets from Susa – CDLI
  • Hamid-Reza Hosseini, Shush at the foot of Louvre (Shush dar dāman-e Louvre), in Persian, Jadid Online, 10 March 2009.
  • Archaeological findings may push back Susa's history by millennia - Tehran Times - August 21, 2022

susa, shushan, redirects, here, other, uses, shushan, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, shusha, middle, elamite, 𒀸𒋗𒊺𒂗, romanized, Šušen, middle, elamite, 𒋢𒋢𒌦, romanized, Šušun, elamite, achaemenid, elamite, 𒀸𒋗, 𒀭, romanized, Šušán, a. Shushan redirects here For other uses see Shushan disambiguation For other uses see Susa disambiguation Not to be confused with Shusha Susa ˈ s uː s e SOO se Middle Elamite 𒀸𒋗𒊺𒂗 romanized Susen 1 Middle and Neo Elamite 𒋢𒋢𒌦 romanized Susun 1 Neo Elamite and Achaemenid Elamite 𒀸𒋗 𒀭 romanized Susan 2 Achaemenid Elamite 𒀸𒋗 romanized Susa 2 Persian شوش Sus ʃuʃ Hebrew ש ו ש ן Susan Greek Soῦsa Sousa Syriac ܫܘܫ Sus 3 Middle Persian 𐭮𐭥𐭱𐭩 Sus or 𐭱𐭥𐭮 Sus Old Persian 𐏂𐎢𐏁𐎠 Cusa was an ancient city in the lower Zagros Mountains about 250 km 160 mi east of the Tigris between the Karkheh and Dez Rivers in Iran One of the most important cities of the Ancient Near East Susa served as the capital of Elam and the Achaemenid Empire and remained a strategic centre during the Parthian and Sasanian periods SusaشوشThe Palace of Darius I in SusaSusaShown within IranShow map of IranSusaSusa West and Central Asia Show map of West and Central AsiaLocationShush Khuzestan Province IranRegionZagros MountainsCoordinates32 11 26 N 48 15 28 E 32 19056 N 48 25778 E 32 19056 48 25778 Coordinates 32 11 26 N 48 15 28 E 32 19056 N 48 25778 E 32 19056 48 25778TypeSettlementPart ofSusaHistoryFounded4400 BCAbandoned1218 ADEventsBattle of SusaSite notesConditionAbandoned and in ruinsUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameSusaCriteriaCultural i ii iii ivReference1455Inscription2015 39th Session The site currently consists of three archaeological mounds covering an area of around one square kilometre 4 The modern Iranian town of Shush is located on the site of ancient Susa Shush is identified as Shushan mentioned in the Book of Esther and other Biblical books Contents 1 Name 2 Literary references 2 1 Biblical texts 2 2 Other religious texts 3 Excavation history 4 History 4 1 Early settlement 4 2 Susa I period 4200 3800 BC 4 3 Susa II and Uruk influence 3800 3100 BC 4 4 Susa III or Proto Elamite period 3100 2700 BC 4 5 Elamites 4 5 1 Old Elamite period c 2700 1500 BC 4 5 2 Kutik Inshushinak 4 6 Indus Susa relations 2600 1700 BC 4 6 1 Middle Elamite period c 1500 1100 BC 4 6 2 Neo Elamite period c 1100 540 BC 4 6 2 1 Neo Assyrians 4 7 Susa after Achaemenid Persian conquest 4 8 Seleucid period 4 9 Parthian period 4 10 Sassanid period 4 11 Islamic period 4 12 Today 5 World Heritage listing 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 Excavation reports 11 External linksName EditThe English name Susa is derived from Ancient Greek Sousa Soysa which is ultimately derived from an original Elamite name which was written as Susen 𒀸𒋗𒊺𒂗 in its Middle Elamite form 1 Susun 𒋢𒋢𒌦 in its Middle and Neo Elamite forms 1 Susan 𒀸𒋗 𒀭 in its Neo Elamite and Achaemenid forms 2 and Susa 𒀸𒋗 in its Achaemenid Elamite form 2 Literary references Edit Map showing the area of the Elamite kingdom in orange and the neighboring areas The approximate Bronze Age extension of the Persian Gulf is shown Susa was one of the most important cities of the Ancient Near East In historic literature Susa appears in the very earliest Sumerian records for example it is described as one of the places obedient to Inanna patron deity of Uruk in Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta Biblical texts Edit Susa is mentioned in the Ketuvim of the Hebrew Bible by the name Shushan mainly in the Book of Esther but also once each in the books of Ezra Ezra 4 9 Nehemiah Nehemiah 1 1 and Daniel Daniel 8 2 According to these texts Nehemiah lived in Susa during the Babylonian captivity of the 6th century BC Daniel mentions it in a prophetic vision while Esther became queen there married to King Ahasuerus and saved the Jews from genocide A tomb presumed to be that of Daniel is located in the area known as Shush Daniel However a large portion of the current structure is actually a much later construction dated to the late nineteenth century ca 1871 5 Other religious texts Edit Susa is further mentioned in the Book of Jubilees 8 21 amp 9 2 as one of the places within the inheritance of Shem and his eldest son Elam and in 8 1 Susan is also named as the son or daughter in some translations of Elam Excavation history Edit Site of Susa Assyria Ruins of Susa Brooklyn Museum Archives Goodyear Archival Collection The site was examined in 1836 by Henry Rawlinson and then by A H Layard 6 In 1851 some modest excavation was done by William Loftus accompanied by Fenwick Williams who identified it as Susa 7 8 Among his finds was a jar containing a around 110 coins the earliest of which was dated to 697 98 AD 9 In 1885 and 1886 Marcel Auguste Dieulafoy and Jane Dieulafoy began the first French excavations discovering glazed bricks column bases and capitals from the palace of the Achaemenid kings 10 However they failed to identify mudbrick walls which were then destroyed in the course of excavation 11 Almost all of the excavations at Susa post 1885 were organized and authorized by the French government 12 In two treaties in 1894 and 1899 the French gained a monopoly on all archaeological excavations in Iran indefinitely 11 Jacques de Morgan after visiting the site in 1891 conducted major excavations from 1897 until 1911 13 The excavations that were conducted in Susa brought many artistic and historical artifacts back to France These artifacts filled multiple halls in the Museum of the Louvre throughout the late 1890s and early 1900s 14 12 De Morgan s most important work was the excavation of the Grande Tranchee in the Acropole mound where he found the stele of Naram Sin a collection of Babylonian kudurrus boundary stones the stele bearing the Code of Hammurabi an ornamented bronze table of snakes the bronze statue of Queen Napir Asu and thousands of inscribed bricks His finds showed Susa to be the most important center of Elamite civilization which was effectively discovered by the French mission at Susa 11 Excavation efforts continued under Roland De Mecquenem until 1914 at the beginning of World War I French work at Susa resumed after the war led by De Mecquenem continuing until World War II in 1940 15 16 17 18 To supplement the original publications of De Mecquenem the archives of his excavation have now been put online thanks to a grant from the Shelby White Levy Program 19 Roman Ghirshman took over direction of the French efforts in 1946 after the end of the war 20 Together with his wife Tania Ghirshman he continued there until 1967 The Ghirshmans concentrated on excavating a single part of the site the hectare sized Ville Royale taking it all the way down to bare earth 21 The pottery found at the various levels enabled a stratigraphy to be developed for Susa 22 23 From 1969 until 1979 excavations were conducted under Jean Perrot 24 25 In 2019 the Susa salvage project was launched to counter the construction of a transportation underpass in the vicinity of the site 26 History EditEarly settlement Edit In urban history Susa is one of the oldest known settlements of the region Based on calibrated carbon 14 dating the foundation of a settlement there occurred as early as 4395 BC 27 In the region around Susa were a number of towns with their own platforms and villages that maintained a trading relationship with the city especially those along the Zagro frontier 28 The founding of Susa corresponded with the abandonment of nearby villages Potts suggests that the settlement may have been founded to try to reestablish the previously destroyed settlement at Chogha Mish about 25 km to the west 29 Previously Chogha Mish was a very large settlement and it featured a similar massive platform that was later built at Susa citation needed Another important settlement in the area is Chogha Bonut which was discovered in 1976 citation needed Susa I period 4200 3800 BC Edit Goblet and cup Iran Susa I style 4th millennium BC Ubaid period goblet height c 12 cm Sevres Cite de la ceramique France See also Ubaid period Shortly after Susa was first settled over 6000 years ago its inhabitants erected a monumental platform that rose over the flat surrounding landscape 30 The exceptional nature of the site is still recognizable today in the artistry of the ceramic vessels that were placed as offerings in a thousand or more graves near the base of the temple platform 31 Susa s earliest settlement is known as the Susa I period c 4200 3900 BC Two settlements named by archaeologists the Acropolis 7 ha and the Apadana 6 3 ha would later merge to form Susa proper 18 ha 29 The Apadana was enclosed by 6 metre thick walls of rammed earth this particular place is named Apadana because it also contains a late Achaemenid structure of this type Nearly two thousand pots of Susa I style were recovered from the cemetery most of them now in the Louvre The vessels found are eloquent testimony to the artistic and technical achievements of their makers and they hold clues about the organization of the society that commissioned them 32 Painted ceramic vessels from Susa in the earliest first style are a late regional version of the Mesopotamian Ubaid ceramic tradition that spread across the Near East during the fifth millennium BC 32 Susa I style was very much a product of the past and of influences from contemporary ceramic industries in the mountains of western Iran The recurrence in close association of vessels of three types a drinking goblet or beaker a serving dish and a small jar implies the consumption of three types of food apparently thought to be as necessary for life in the afterworld as it is in this one Ceramics of these shapes which were painted constitute a large proportion of the vessels from the cemetery Others are coarse cooking type jars and bowls with simple bands painted on them and were probably the grave goods of the sites of humbler citizens as well as adolescents and perhaps children 33 The pottery is carefully made by hand Although a slow wheel may have been employed the asymmetry of the vessels and the irregularity of the drawing of encircling lines and bands indicate that most of the work was done freehand Copper metallurgy is also attested during this period which was contemporary with metalwork at some highland Iranian sites such as Tepe Sialk Master of animals Susa I Louvre Sb 2246 Sun and deities Susa I LouvreSusa II and Uruk influence 3800 3100 BC Edit Susa came within the Uruk cultural sphere during the Uruk period An imitation of the entire state apparatus of Uruk proto writing cylinder seals with Sumerian motifs and monumental architecture is found at Susa According to some scholars Susa may have been a colony of Uruk There is some dispute about the comparative periodization of Susa and Uruk at this time as well as about the extent of Uruk influence in Susa Recent research indicates that Early Uruk period corresponds to Susa II period 34 Daniel T Potts argues that the influence from the highland Iranian Khuzestan area in Susa was more significant at the early period and also continued later on Thus Susa combined the influence of two cultures from the highland area and from the alluvial plains Potts also stresses the fact that the writing and numerical systems of Uruk were not simply borrowed in Susa wholesale Rather only partial and selective borrowing took place that was adapted to Susa s needs Despite the fact that Uruk was far larger than Susa at the time Susa was not its colony but still maintained some independence for a long time according to Potts 35 An architectural link has also been suggested between Susa Tal i Malyan and Godin Tepe at this time in support of the idea of the parallel development of the Proto Cuneiform and proto elamite scripts 36 Some scholars believe that Susa was part of the greater Uruk culture Holly Pittman an art historian at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia says they Susanians are participating entirely in an Uruk way of life They are not culturally distinct the material culture of Susa is a regional variation of that on the Mesopotamian plain Gilbert Stein director of the University of Chicago s Oriental Institute says that An expansion once thought to have lasted less than 200 years now apparently went on for 700 years It is hard to think of any colonial system lasting that long The spread of Uruk material is not evidence of Uruk domination it could be local choice 37 King priest with bow fighting enemies with horned temple in the center Susa II or Uruk period 3800 3100 BC found in excavations at Susa Louvre Museum 38 39 Globular envelope with the accounting tokens Clay Uruk period c 3500 BC From the Tell of the Acropolis in Susa The Louvre Work in the granaries Susa II Louvre 40 Priest King with bow and arrows Susa II Louvre 41 Prisoners Susa II Louvre 42 Orant statuette Susa II Louvre 43 Susa III or Proto Elamite period 3100 2700 BC Edit Main article Proto Elamite Susa III 3100 2700 BC is also known as the Proto Elamite period 44 At this time Banesh period pottery is predominant This is also when the Proto Elamite tablets first appear in the record Subsequently Susa became the centre of Elam civilization Ambiguous reference to Elam Cuneiform 𒉏 NIM appear also in this period in Sumerian records Susa enters recorded history in the Early Dynastic period of Sumer A battle between Kish and Susa is recorded in 2700 BC when En me barage si is said to have made the land of Elam submit 45 Susa III Proto Elamite cylinder seal 3150 2800 BC Louvre Museum reference Sb 1484 Susa III Proto Elamite cylinder seal 3150 2800 BC Mythological being on a boat Louvre Museum Sb 6379 Susa III Proto Elamite cylinder seal 3150 2800 BC Louvre Museum Sb 6166 Economical tablet in Proto Elamite script Suse III Louvre Museum reference Sb 15200 circa 3100 2850 BCElamites Edit Puzur Inshushinak Ensi Shushaki 𒅤𒊭𒀭𒈹𒂞 𒋼𒋛 𒈹𒂞𒆠 Puzur Inshushinak Ensi Governor of Susa in the Table au Lion dated 2100 BC Louvre Museum 46 In the Sumerian period Susa was the capital of a state called Susiana Susan which occupied approximately the same territory of modern Khuzestan Province centered on the Karun River Control of Susiana shifted between Elam Sumer and Akkad During the Elamite monarchy many riches and materials were brought to Susa from the plundering of other cities 47 This was mainly due to the fact of Susa s location on Iran s South Eastern region closer to the city of Babylon and cities in Mesopotamia The use of the Elamite language as an administrative language was first attested in texts of ancient Ansan Tall e Mal yan dated 1000 BC 48 Previous to the era of Elamites the Akkadian language was responsible for most or all of the text used in ancient documents Susiana was incorporated by Sargon the Great into his Akkadian Empire in approximately 2330 BC 49 Silver cup from Marvdasht Iran with a linear Elamite inscription from the time of Kutik Inshushinak National Museum of Iran The main goddess of the city was Nanaya who had a significant temple in Susa 50 Old Elamite period c 2700 1500 BC Edit Dynastic list of twelve kings of Awan dynasty and twelve kings of the Shimashki Dynasty 1800 1600 BC Susa Louvre Museum Sb 17729 51 52 The Old Elamite period began around 2700 BC Historical records mention the conquest of Elam by Enmebaragesi the Sumerian king of Kish in Mesopotamia Three dynasties ruled during this period Twelve kings of each of the first two dynasties those of Awan or Avan c 2400 2100 BC and Simashki c 2100 1970 BC are known from a list from Susa dating to the Old Babylonian period Two Elamite dynasties said to have exercised brief control over parts of Sumer in very early times include Awan and Hamazi and likewise several of the stronger Sumerian rulers such as Eannatum of Lagash and Lugal anne mundu of Adab are recorded as temporarily dominating Elam Kutik Inshushinak Edit Susa was the capital of an Akkadian province until ca 2100 BC when its governor Kutik Inshushinak rebelled and made it an independent state and a literary center Also he was the last from the Awan dynasty according to the Susa kinglist 53 He unified the neighbouring territories and became the king of Elam He encouraged the use of the Linear Elamite script that remains undeciphered The city was subsequently conquered by the neo Sumerian Third Dynasty of Ur and held until Ur finally collapsed at the hands of the Elamites under Kindattu in ca 2004 BC At this time Susa was ruled by Elam again and became its capital under the Shimashki dynasty Indus Susa relations 2600 1700 BC Edit Numerous artifacts of Indus Valley civilization origin have been found in Susa from this period especially seals and etched carnelian beads pointing to Indus Mesopotamia relations during this period 54 55 Impression of an Indus cylinder seal discovered in Susa in strata dated to 2600 1700 BC Elongated buffalo with line of standard Indus script signs Tell of the Susa acropolis Louvre Museum reference Sb 2425 54 56 Indus script numbering convention per Asko Parpola 57 58 Indus round seal with impression Elongated buffalo with Harappan script imported to Susa in 2600 1700 BC Found in the tell of the Susa acropolis Louvre Museum reference Sb 5614 Indian carnelian beads with white design etched in white with an alkali through a heat process imported to Susa in 2600 1700 BC Found in the tell of the Susa acropolis Louvre Museum reference Sb 17751 59 60 These beads are identical with beads found in the Indus Civilization site of Dholavira 61 Indus bracelet front and back made of Pleuroploca trapezium or Turbinella pyrum imported to Susa in 2600 1700 BC Found in the tell of the Susa acropolis Louvre Museum reference Sb 14473 62 This type of bracelet was manufactured in Mohenjo daro Lothal and Balakot 63 The back is engraved with an oblong chevron design which is typical of shell bangles of the Indus Civilization 64 Indus Valley Civilization carnelian beads excavated in Susa Jewelry with components from the Indus Central Asia and Northern eastern Iran found in Susa dated to 2600 1700 BC Middle Elamite period c 1500 1100 BC Edit Middle Elamite basrelief of warrior gods Susa 1600 1100 BC Around 1500 BC the Middle Elamite period began with the rise of the Anshanite dynasties Their rule was characterized by an Elamisation of Susa and the kings took the title king of Anshan and Susa While previously the Akkadian language was frequently used in inscriptions the succeeding kings such as the Igihalkid dynasty of c 1400 BC tried to use Elamite Thus Elamite language and culture grew in importance in Susiana This was also the period when the Elamite pantheon was being imposed in Susiana This policy reached its height with the construction of the political and religious complex at Chogha Zanbil 30 km 19 mi south east of Susa In ca 1175 BC the Elamites under Shutruk Nahhunte plundered the original stele bearing the Code of Hammurabi and took it to Susa Archeologists found it in 1901 Nebuchadnezzar I of the Babylonian empire plundered Susa around fifty years later An ornate design on this limestone ritual vat from the Middle Elamite period depicts creatures with the heads of goats and the tails of fish Susa 1500 1110 BC The Ziggurat at Chogha Zanbil was built by Elamite king Untash Napirisha circa 1300 BC Susa Middle Elamite model of a sun ritual circa 1150 BCNeo Elamite period c 1100 540 BC Edit Neo Assyrians Edit Main article Battle of Susa In 647 BC Neo Assyrian king Ashurbanipal leveled the city during a war in which the people of Susa participated on the other side A tablet unearthed in 1854 by Austen Henry Layard in Nineveh reveals Ashurbanipal as an avenger seeking retribution for the humiliations that the Elamites had inflicted on the Mesopotamians over the centuries Susa the great holy city abode of their gods seat of their mysteries I conquered I entered its palaces I opened their treasuries where silver and gold goods and wealth were amassed I destroyed the ziggurat of Susa I smashed its shining copper horns I reduced the temples of Elam to naught their gods and goddesses I scattered to the winds The tombs of their ancient and recent kings I devastated I exposed to the sun and I carried away their bones toward the land of Ashur I devastated the provinces of Elam and on their lands I sowed salt 65 Assyrian rule of Susa began in 647 BC and lasted till Median capture of Susa in 617 BC Susa after Achaemenid Persian conquest Edit Statue of Darius the Great National Museum of Iran Archers frieze from Darius palace at Susa Detail of the beginning of the frieze The 24 countries subject to the Achaemenid Empire at the time of Darius on the Statue of Darius I Susa underwent a major political and ethnocultural transition when it became part of the Persian Achaemenid empire between 540 and 539 BC when it was captured by Cyrus the Great during his conquest of Elam Susiana of which Susa was the capital 66 The Nabonidus Chronicle records that prior to the battle s Nabonidus had ordered cult statues from outlying Babylonian cities to be brought into the capital suggesting that the conflict over Susa had begun possibly in the winter of 540 BC 67 It is probable that Cyrus negotiated with the Babylonian generals to obtain a compromise on their part and therefore avoid an armed confrontation 68 Nabonidus was staying in the city at the time and soon fled to the capital Babylon which he had not visited in years 69 Cyrus conquest of Susa and the rest of Babylonia commenced a fundamental shift bringing Susa under Persian control for the first time Strabo stated that Cyrus made Susa an imperial capital though there was no new construction in that period so this is in dispute 70 Under Cyrus son Cambyses II Susa became a center of political power as one of four capitals of the Achaemenid Persian empire while reducing the significance of Pasargadae as the capital of Persis Following Cambyses brief rule Darius the Great began a major building program in Susa and Persepolis which included building a large palace 71 During this time he describes his new capital in an inscription This palace which I built at Susa from afar its ornamentation was brought Downward the earth was dug until I reached rock in the earth When the excavation had been made then rubble was packed down some 40 cubits in depth another part 20 cubits in depth On that rubble the palace was constructed 72 The city forms the setting of The Persians 472 BC an Athenian tragedy by the ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus that is the oldest surviving play in the history of theatre Events mentioned in the Old Testament book of Esther are said to have occurred in Susa during the Achaemenid period The King Ahasuerus mentioned in that book may refer to Xerxes I 486 465 BC Seleucid period Edit The marriages of Stateira II to Alexander the Great of Macedon and her sister Drypteis to Hephaestion at Susa in 324 BC as depicted in a late 19th century engraving Susa lost much of its importance after the invasion of Alexander the Great of Macedon in 331 BC In 324 BC he met Nearchus here who explored the Persian Gulf citation needed as he returned from the Indus River by sea In that same year Alexander celebrated in Susa with a mass wedding between the Persians and Macedonians 73 The city retained its importance under the Seleucids for approximately one century after Alexander however Susa lost its position of imperial capital to Seleucia on the Tigris to become the regional capital of the satrapy of Susiana 74 Nevertheless Susa retained its economic importance to the empire with its vast assortment of merchants conducting trade in Susa 75 using Charax Spasinou as its port The city was named Seleucia on the Eulaeus or Seleucia ad Eulaeum Seleucus I Nicator minted coins there in substantial quantities 76 Susa is rich in Greek inscriptions citation needed perhaps indicating a significant number of Greeks living in the city Especially in the royal city large well equipped peristyle houses have been excavated Parthian period Edit Around 147 BC Susa and the adjacent Elymais broke free from the Seleucid Empire The city was at least temporarily ruled by the rulers of the Elymais with Kamnaskires II Nikephoros minting coins there The city may again have briefly returned to Seleucid rule but starting with Phraates II about 138 127 BC to Gotarzes II about 40 51 AD almost all rulers of the Parthian Empire coined coins in the city indicating that it was firmly in the hands of the Parthians at least during this period The city however retained a considerable amount of independence and retained its Greek city state organization well into the ensuing Parthian period 77 From second half of the first century it was probably partly governed by rulers of Elymais again but it became Parthian once again in 215 78 79 Susa was a frequent place of refuge for Parthian and later the Persian Sassanid kings as the Romans sacked Ctesiphon five different times between 116 and 297 AD Susa was briefly captured in 116 AD by the Roman emperor Trajan during the course of his Parthian campaign 80 Never again would the Roman Empire advance so far to the east 81 Sassanid period Edit Suzan was conquered and destroyed in 224 AD by the Sassanid Ardashir I but rebuilt immediately thereafter and perhaps even temporarily a royal residence According to a later tradition Shapur I is said to have spent his twilight years in the city although this tradition is uncertain and perhaps refers more to Shapur II Under the Sassanids following the founding of Gundeshapur Susa slowly lost its importance Archaeologically the Sassanid city is less dense compared to the Parthian period but there were still significant buildings with the settlement extending over 400 hectares Susa was also still very significant economically and a trading center especially in gold trading Coins also continued to be minted in the city The city had a Christian community in a separate district with a Nestorian bishop whose last representative is attested to in 1265 Archaeologically a stucco panel with the image of a Christian saint has been found During the reign of Shapur II after Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire in 312 and the identification of Christians as possible collaborators with the enemy Christians living in the Sasanian Empire were persecuted from 339 onwards 82 Shapur II also imposed a double tax on the Christians during his war campaign against the Romans Following a rebellion of Christians living in Susa the king destroyed the city in 339 using 300 elephants 83 He later had the city rebuilt and resettled with prisoners of war and weavers which is believed to have been after his victory over the Romans in Amida in 359 The weaver produced silk brocade 84 He renamed it Eran Khwarrah Shapur Iran s glory built by Shapur 85 Islamic period Edit During the Muslim conquest of Persia an Arab army invaded Khuzistan under the command of Abu Musa al Ash ari After taking most of the smaller fortified towns the army captured Tustar in 642 before proceeding to besiege Susa A place of military importance it also held the tomb of the Jewish prophet Daniel A group of Western and Iranian archaeologists at a conference held in Susa Khuzestan Iran in 1977 Henry Wright William Sumner Elizabeth Carter Genevieve Dolfus Greg Johnson Saeid Ganjavi Yousef Majidzadeh Vanden Berghe and others Two stories are given in the Muslim sources of how the city fell In the first a Persian priest proclaimed from the walls that only a dajjal was fated to capture the city A dajjal is an Islamic term for an Al Masih ad Dajjal a false messiah compatible to the Antichrist in Christianity In everyday use it also means deceiver or imposter Siyah a Persian general who had defected to Muslim side claimed that by converting to Islam he had turned his back on Zoroastrianism and was thus a dajjal Abu Musa agreed to Siyah s plan Soon after as the sun came up one morning the sentries on the walls saw a man in a Persian officer s uniform covered in blood lying on the ground before the main gate Thinking it he had been left out overnight after a conflict the previous day they opened the gate and some came out to collect him As they approached Siyah jumped up and killed them Before the other sentries had time to react Siyah and a small group of Muslim soldiers hidden nearby charged through the open gate They held the gate open long enough for Muslim reinforcements to arrive and passing through the gate to take the city 86 In the other story once again the Muslims were taunted from the city wall that only an Al Masih ad Dajjal could capture the city and since there were none in the besieging army then they may as well give up and go home One of the Muslim commanders was so angry and frustrated at this taunt that he went up to one of the city gates and kicked it Instantly the chains snapped the locks broke and it fell open 87 Following their entry into the city the Muslims killed all of the Persian nobles 87 Once the city was taken as Daniel Arabic دانيال romanized Danyal was not mentioned in the Qur an nor is he regarded as a prophet in Judaism the initial reaction of the Muslim was to destroy the cult by confiscating the treasure that had stored at the tomb since the time of the Achaemenids They then broke open the silver coffin and carried off the mummified corpse removing from the corpse a signet ring which carried an image of a man between two lions However upon hearing what had happened the caliph Umar ordered the ring to be returned and the body reburied under the riverbed 87 In time Daniel became a Muslim cult figure and they as well as Christians began making pilgrimages to the site despite several other places claiming to be the site of Daniel s grave 87 Following the capture of Susa the Muslims moved on to besiege Gundeshapur 86 Susa recovered following its capture and remained a regional center of more than 400 hectares in size 88 A mosque was built but also Nestorian bishops are still testifie In addition there was a Jewish community with its own synagogue The city continued to be a manufacturing center of luxury fabrics during this period Archaeologically the Islamic period is characterized mainly by its rich ceramics Beth Huzaye East Syrian Ecclesiastical Province had a significant Christian population during the first millennium and was a diocese of the Church of the East between the 5th and 13th centuries in the metropolitan province of Beth Huzaye Elam In 1218 the city was razed by invading Mongols and was never able to regain its previous importance The city further degraded in the 15th century when the majority of its population moved to Dezful 89 Today Edit Today the ancient center of Susa is unoccupied with the population living in the adjacent modern Iranian town of Shush to the west and north of the historic ruins Shush is the administrative capital of Shush County in Iran s Khuzestan province It had a population of 64 960 in 2005 World Heritage listing EditIn July 2015 it was inscribed on the list of World Heritage Sites by UNESCO 90 Gallery Edit Letter in Greek of the Parthian king Artabanus II to the inhabitants of Susa in the 1st century AD the city retained Greek institutions since the time of the Seleucid empire Louvre Museum 91 Glazed clay cup Cup with rose petals 8th 9th centuries Anthropoid sarcophagus Lion on a decorative panel from Darius I the Great s palace Marble head representing Seleucid King Antiochus III who was born near Susa around 242 BC 92 Glazed clay vase Vase with palmtrees 8th 9th centuries Winged sphinx from the palace of Darius the Great at Susa Tomb of Daniel Ninhursag with the spirit of the forests next to the seven spiked cosmic tree of life Relief from Susa 19th century engraving of Daniel s tomb in Susa from Voyage en Perse Moderne by Flandin and Coste Archers frieze from Darius palace at Susa Detail of the beginning of the frieze left Louvre Museum Ribbed torc with lion heads Achaemenid artwork excavated by Jacques de Morgan 1901 found in the Acropole Tomb Shush Castle 2011 Children in Susa Herm pillar with Hermes from the well of the Dungeon in Susa See also Edit Iran portalAbulites Achaemenid architecture Choqa Zanbil Cities of the Ancient Near East Elam History of Iran List of cities of the ancient Near East List of oldest continuously inhabited cities Monsieur Chouchani Muslim conquest of Khuzestan Short chronology timelineNotes Edit a b c d Hinz amp Koch 1987 p 1184 a b c d Hinz amp Koch 1987 p 1183 Thomas A Carlson et al Susa ܫܘܫ in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified June 30 2014 http syriaca org place 415 John Curtis 2013 Introduction In Perrot Jean ed The Palace of Darius at Susa The Great Royal Residence of Achaemenid Persia I B Tauris p xvi ISBN 9781848856219 Kriwaczek Paul Babylon Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization St Martin s Press 2012 ISBN 978 1250054166 George Rawlinson A Memoir of Major General Sir Henry Creswicke Rawlinson Nabu Press 2010 ISBN 1 178 20631 9 1 William K Loftus Travels and Researches in Chaldaea and Susiana Travels and Researches in Chaldaea and Susiana With an Account of Excavations at Warka the Erech of Nimrod and Shush Shushan the Palace of Esther in 1849 52 Robert Carter amp Brothers 1857 John Curtis William Kennett Loftus and his Excavations at Susa Iranica Antiqua Leiden vol 28 pp 1 55 Jan 1 1993 Vaux W S W ON COINS DISCOVERED BY W K LOFTUS Esq AT SUSA The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Numismatic Society vol 20 pp 25 32 1857 2 Jane Dieulafoy Perzi Chaldea en Susiane De Aarde en haar Volken 1885 1887 at Project Gutenbrg in Dutch a b c Mousavi Ali 21 June 2013 The History of Archaeological Research in Iran Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199733309 013 0003 a b Peters John P 1915 Excavations in Persia The Harvard Theological Review 8 1 82 93 doi 10 1017 S0017816000008336 ISSN 0017 8160 JSTOR 1507314 S2CID 163892909 M J DE MORGAN S EXCAVATIONS IN THE AKROPOLIS AND PALACES OF SUSA Scientific American vol 82 no 11 pp 169 70 1900 V Scheil Excavations Made by the French in Susa and Babylonia 1902 1903 The Biblical World vol 24 no 2 pp 146 152 Aug 1904 JSTOR R de Mecquenem Excavations at Susa Persia 1930 1931 Antiquity vol 5 iss 19 September 1931 3 Jacques de Morgan Fouilles a Suse en 1897 1898 et 1898 1899 Mission archeologique en Iran Memoires I 1990 4 Jacques de Morgan Fouilles a Suse en 1899 1902 Mission archeologique en Iran Memoires VII 1905 Robert H Dyson Early Work on the Acropolis at Susa The Beginning of Prehistory in Iraq and Iran Expedition vol 10 no 4 pp 21 34 1968 5 Roland de Mecquenem Archives de Suse 1912 1939 Unpublished excavation archive French Ghirshman Roman The Elamite Levels at Susa and Their Chronological Significance American Journal of Archaeology vol 74 no 3 pp 223 25 1970 Roman Ghirshman Suse au tournant du III au II millenaire avant notre ere Arts Asiatiques vol 17 pp 3 44 1968 Hermann Gasche Ville Royale de Suse vol I La poterie elamite du deuxieme millenaire A C Mission archeologique en Iran Memoires 47 Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner 1973 ISBN 978 9004038264 M Steve and Hermann H Gasche L Acropole de Suse Nouvelles fouilles rapport preliminaire Memoires de la Delegation archeologique en Iran vol 46 Geuthner 1971 Jean Perrot Les fouilles de Sus en 1975 Annual Symposium on Archaeological Research in Iran 4 pp 224 231 1975 D Canal La haute terrase de l Acropole de Suse Paleorient vol 4 pp 169 176 1978 SORAGHI S amp ZEYNIVAND M The Susa salvage project in 2019 southwestern Iran Historia I Swiat 11 pp 71 79 2022 https doi org 10 34739 his 2022 11 04 Potts Elam pp 46 Wright Henry T The Zagros Frontiers of Susa during the Late 5th Millennium Paleorient vol 36 no 1 pp 11 21 2010 a b Potts Elam 6 Hole Frank A Monumental Failure The Collapse of Susa In Robin A Carter and Graham Philip eds Beyond the Ubaid Transformation and Integration of Late Prehistoric Societies of the Middle East pp 221 226 Studies in Oriental Civilization no 63 Chicago Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago 2010 Hole Frank The Organization of Ceramic Production during the Susa I Period Paleorient vol 36 no 1 pp 23 36 2010 a b Aruz Joan 1992 The Royal City of Susa Ancient Near Eastern Treasures in the Louvre New York Abrams p 26 Aruz Joan 1992 The Royal City of Susa Ancient Near Eastern Treasures in the Louvre New York Abrams p 29 D T Potts The Archaeology of Elam Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge University Press 2015 ISBN 1107094690 p58 Daniel T Potts The Archaeology of Elam Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge University Press 2015 ISBN 1107094690 pp 58 61 F Desset An Architectural Pattern in Late Fourth Millennium BC Western Iran A New Link Between Susa Tal I Malyan and Godin Tepe Iran vol 52 iss 1 pp 1 18 2014 Lawler Andrew 2003 Uruk Spreading Fashion or Empire Science Volume 302 pp 977 978 Alvarez Mon Javier 2020 The Art of Elam CA 4200 525 BC Routledge p 101 ISBN 978 1 000 03485 1 Cheng Jack Feldman Marian 2007 Ancient Near Eastern Art in Context Studies in Honor of Irene J Winter by her Students BRILL p 48 ISBN 978 90 474 2085 9 Alvarez Mon Javier 2020 The Art of Elam CA 4200 525 BC Routledge p 93 ISBN 978 1 000 03485 1 Alvarez Mon Javier 2020 The Art of Elam CA 4200 525 BC Routledge p 101 ISBN 978 1 000 03485 1 Alvarez Mon Javier 2020 The Art of Elam CA 4200 525 BC Routledge p 97 ISBN 978 1 000 03485 1 Alvarez Mon Javier 2020 The Art of Elam CA 4200 525 BC Routledge p 110 ISBN 978 1 000 03485 1 D T Potts A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East Volume 94 of Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World John Wiley amp Sons 2012 ISBN 1405189886 p 743 Per Sumerian King List Translation of the Akkadian portion into French in Memoires Paris P Geuthner 1899 pp 4 7 Aruz Joan Fino Elisabetta Valtz 2001 Ancient near Eastern Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 59 1 8 doi 10 2307 3269163 ISSN 0026 1521 JSTOR 3269163 Mikolajczak Tytus K 2011 Elam and Persia Edited by Javier Alvarez Mon and Mark B Garrison Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns 2011 pp xviii 493 89 50 cloth Journal of Near Eastern Studies 72 2 284 289 doi 10 1086 671453 ISSN 0022 2968 FOSTER BENJAMIN R International Trade at Sargonic Susa Susa in the Sargonic Period III Altorientalische Forschungen vol 20 no 1 pp 59 68 1993 Potts Elam pp 364 Awan King List SCHEIL V 1931 Dynasties Elamites d Awan et de Simas Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 28 1 1 46 ISSN 0373 6032 JSTOR 23283945 Potts Elam pp 122 a b Site officiel du musee du Louvre cartelfr louvre fr Marshall John 1996 Mohenjo Daro and the Indus Civilization Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927 Asian Educational Services p 425 ISBN 9788120611795 Marshall John 1996 Mohenjo Daro and the Indus Civilization Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927 Asian Educational Services p 425 ISBN 9788120611795 Corpus by Asko Parpola Mohenjodaro Also for another numbering scheme Mahadevan Iravatham 1987 The Indus Script Text Concordance And Tables Iravathan Mahadevan Archaeological Survey of India pp 32 36 Guimet Musee 2016 Les Cites oubliees de l Indus Archeologie du Pakistan in French FeniXX reedition numerique pp 354 355 ISBN 9782402052467 Art of the first cities the third millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus p 395 Nandagopal Prabhakar 13 August 2018 Decorated Carnelian Beads from the Indus Civilization Site of Dholavira Great Rann of Kachchha Gujarat Archaeopress Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 78491 917 7 Louvre Museum Official Website cartelen louvre fr Guimet Musee 2016 Les Cites oubliees de l Indus Archeologie du Pakistan in French FeniXX reedition numerique p 355 ISBN 9782402052467 Art of the first cities the third millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus p 398 Persians Masters of Empire ISBN 0 8094 9104 4 p 7 8 Tavernier Jan Some Thoughts in Neo Elamite Chronology PDF p 27 Kuhrt Amelie Babylonia from Cyrus to Xerxes in The Cambridge Ancient History Vol IV Persia Greece and the Western Mediterranean pp 112 138 Ed John Boardman Cambridge University Press 1982 ISBN 0 521 22804 2 Tolini Gauthier Quelques elements concernant la prise de Babylone par Cyrus Paris Il est probable que des negociations s engagerent alors entre Cyrus et les chefs de l armee babylonienne pour obtenir une reddition sans recourir a l affrontement arme p 10 PDF The Harran Stelae H2 A and the Nabonidus Chronicle Seventeenth year show that Nabonidus had been in Babylon before 10 October 539 because he had already returned from Harran and had participated in the Akitu of Nissanu 1 4 April 539 BC Waters Matt CYRUS AND SUSA Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale vol 102 pp 115 18 2008 Unvala J M The Palace of Darius the Great and the Apadana of Artaxerxes II in Susa Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies University of London vol 5 no 2 pp 229 32 1929 Kent Roland G The Record of Darius s Palace at Susa Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 53 no 1 pp 1 23 1933 van Oppen de Rutter Branko F THE SUSA MARRIAGES A HISTORIOGRAPHICAL NOTE Ancient Society vol 44 pp 25 41 2014 Capdetrey Laurent 2007 Le Pouvoir Seleucide Rennes Presses universitaires de Rennes p 252 ISBN 978 2 753505 24 7 Boyce Mary Grenet Frantz 1 January 1991 On the Western Edge of the Iranian Plateau Susa and Elymais A History of Zoroastrianism Zoroastrianism under Macedonian and Roman Rule Brill pp 35 48 doi 10 1163 9789004293915 004 ISBN 9789004293915 Marest Caffey Laure 2016 Seleukos I s Victory Coinage of Susa Revisited A Die Study and Commentary American Journal of Numismatics 28 1 63 Hill John E 2009 Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty First to Second Centuries CE Charleston BookSurge ISBN 978 1 4392 2134 1 Potts Elam pp 354 409 Le Rider Georges 1965 Memoires de la Delegation archeologique en Iran XXXVIII Suse sous les Seleucides et les Parthes Paris pp 349 430 Rawlinson George 2007 Parthia New York Cosimo p 310 ISBN 978 1 60206 136 1 Robert J Wenke Elymeans Parthians and the Evolution of Empires in Southwestern Iran Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 101 no 3 pp 303 315 1981 Neusner Jacob 1972 Babylonian Jewry And Shapur Ii s Persecution of Christianity From 339 to 379 CE Hebrew Union College Annual Hebrew Union College Press 43 77 102 Harper Prudence Aruz Joan Tallon Frangoise 1993 The Royal City of Susa Ancient Near Eastern Treasures in the Louvre New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art p 162 Potts Elam pp 429 Daryaee Touraj 2009 SHAPUR II Encyclopaedia Iranica a b Crawford Peter 2013 The War of the Three Gods Romans Persians and the Rise of Islam Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military pp 183 184 ISBN 978 1 84884 612 8 a b c d Kennedy Hugh 2007 The Great Arab Conquests How the Spread of Islam Changed the World We Live In London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson pp 128 129 ISBN 978 0 297 84657 4 Amiet Pierre 1972 Memoires de la Delegation archeologique en Iran Glyptique susienne des origines a l epoque des Perses achemenides cachets sceaux cylindres et empreintes antiques decouverts a Suse de 1913 a 1967 Paris P Geuthner M Streck Clifford Edmund Bosworth 1997 Encyclopaedia of Islam San Sze Vol IX Leiden Brill pp 898 899 ISBN 9789004104228 Susa UNESCO 2015 Retrieved 15 April 2019 Epigraphy of Later Parthia Voprosy Epigrafiki Sbornik statei 7 2013 pp 276 284 7 Jonsson David J 2005 The Clash of Ideologies Xulon Press p 566 ISBN 978 1 59781 039 5 Antiochus III was born in 242 BC the son of Seleucus II near Susa Iran References EditPotts Daniel T 1999 The archaeology of Elam Formation and transformation of an ancient Iranian state Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56496 0 World Archaeology Series Further reading EditBosworth C E 1975 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 3 1 The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian periods Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20093 6 8 permanent dead link Charvat Petr Archaeology and social history the Susa sealings ca 4000 2340 BC Paleorient 57 63 1988 Clawson H Phelps Pottery of Susa I Parnassus vol 11 no 4 pp 26 27 1939 Daryaee Touraj 2014 Sasanian Persia The Rise and Fall of an Empire I B Tauris ISBN 978 0857716668 Jalalipour Saeid 2014 The Arab Conquest of Persia The Khuzistan Province before and after the Muslims Triumph PDF Sasanika permanent dead link Le Breton L The Early Periods at Susa Mesopotamian Relations Iraq vol 19 no 2 pp 79 124 1957 Pelzel Suzanne M Dating the Early Dynastic Votive Plaques from Susa Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 36 no 1 pp 1 15 1977 Jean Perrot Le Palais de Darius a Suse Une residence royale sur la route de Persepolis a Babylone SORBONNE PUPS Paris 2010 ISBN 978 2840506812 Poebel Arno The Acropolis of Susa in the Elamite Inscriptions The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures vol 49 no 2 pp 125 40 1933 UNVALA J M Three Panels from Susa Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale vol 25 no 4 pp 179 85 1928 Westenholtz J G Guthartz L Taylor 1996 Royal Cities of the Biblical World Jerusalem Rubin Mass ISBN 978 9657027011 lt ref gt Woolley C Leonard The Painted Pottery of Susa Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland no 1 pp 35 50 1928Excavation reports Edit Although numerous excavation reports have been published so far many excavations are not or only partially published Above all the found architecture was often presented only in short preliminary reports and plans Pierre Amiet Glyptique susienne des origines a l epoque des Perses achemenides cachets sceaux cylindres et empreintes antiques decouverts a Suse de 1913 a 1967 Memoires de la Delegation archeologique en Iran Paris 1972 Elizabeth Carter Suse Ville Royale Paleorient vol 4 pp 197 211 1979 DOI 10 3406 paleo 1978 4222 Elizabeth Carter The Susa Sequence 3000 2000 B C Susa Ville Royale I American Journal of Archaeology vol 83 no 2 pp 451 454 1979 Elizabeth Carter Excavations in Ville Royale I at Susa The third Millennium B C Cahiers de la DAFI vol 11 pp 11 139 1980 Roman Ghirshman Cinq campagnes de fouilles a Suse 1946 1951 In Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale 46 pp 1 18 1952 Ghirshman Roman and M J STEVE SUSE CAMPAGNE DE L HIVER 1964 1965 Rapport Preliminaire Arts Asiatiques vol 13 pp 3 32 1966 GHIRSHMAN R SUSE CAMPAGNE DE L HIVER 1965 1966 Rapport Preliminaire Arts Asiatiques vol 15 pp 3 27 1967 Florence Malbran Labat Les inscriptions royales de Suse briques de l epoque paleo elamite a l empire neo elamite Paris 1995 Laurianne Martinez Seve Les figurines de Suse Reunion des Musees Nationaux Paris 2002 ISBN 2 7118 4324 6 de Mecquenem R LES DERNIERS RESULTATS DES FOUILLES DE SUSE Revue Des Arts Asiatiques vol 6 no 2 pp 73 88 1929 de MECQUENEM R FOUILLES DE SUSE CAMPAGNES DES ANNEES 1914 1921 1922 Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale vol 19 no 3 pp 109 40 1922 9 Jacques de Morgan Histoire et travaux de la Delegation en Perse du Ministere de l instruction publique 1897 1905 E Leroux 1905 Jacques de Morgan G Jequier G Lampre Fouilles a Suse 1897 1898 et 1898 1899 Paris 1900 Perrot Jean et al Recherches Archeologiques a Suse et En Susiane En 1969 et En 1970 Syria vol 48 no 1 2 pp 21 51 1971 Georges Le Rider Suse sous les Seleucides et les Parthes les trouvailles monetaires et l histoire de la ville Memoires de la Delegation Archeologique en Iran Paris 1965 Vincent Scheil Inscriptions of Achemenides a Suse Actes juridiques susiens Memoires de la Mission Archeologique de Perse vol 21 24 Paris 1929 1933 Agnes Spycket Les figurines de Suse Paris 1992 Marie Joseph Steve Hermann Gasche L Acropole de Suse Nouvelles fouilles rapport preliminaire Memoires de la Mission Archeologique de Perse vol 46 Leiden 1971 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Susa External links EditHinz Walther in German Koch Heidemarie 1987 Elamisches Worterbuch Elamite Wordbook in German Vol 2 Berlin Germany Dietrich Reimer Verlag Early Works on the Acropolis at Susa Expedition Magazine 10 4 1968 Royal City of Susa Ancient Near Eastern Treasures in the Louvre Metropolitan Museum 1992 Aerial views of Susa at the Oriental Institute Digital Images of Cuneiform Tablets from Susa CDLI Hamid Reza Hosseini Shush at the foot of Louvre Shush dar daman e Louvre in Persian Jadid Online 10 March 2009 Archaeological findings may push back Susa s history by millennia Tehran Times August 21 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Susa amp oldid 1152766079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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