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E-grāmata: King and Court in Ancient Persia 559 to 331 BCE

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This title explores Achaemenid kingship and argues for the centrality of the royal court in elite Persian society. The first Persian Empire (559-331 BC) was the biggest land empire the world had seen, and seated at the heart of its vast dominions, in the south of modern-day Iran, was the person of the Great King. Hidden behind the walls of his vast palace, and surrounded by the complex rituals of court ceremonial, the Persian monarch was undisputed master of his realm, a god-like figure of awe, majesty, and mystery. Yet the court of the Great King was no simple platform for meaningless theatrical display; at court, presentation mattered: nobles vied for position and prestige, and the royal family attempted to keep a tight grip on dynastic power - in spite of succession struggles, murders, and usurpations, for the court was also the centre of political decision-making and the source of cultural expression. This book explores the representation of Persian monarchy and the court of the Achaemenid Great Kings from the point of view of the ancient Iranians themselves (as well as other Near Eastern peoples) and through the sometimes distorted prism of Classical and Biblical sources. It draws on rich Iranian and Classical sources. It examines key issues such as royal ideology, court structure, ceremony and ritual, royal migrations, gender, hierarchy, architecture and space and cultural achievements. It accesses the rarefied but dangerous world of Persian palace life. It includes guides to further reading and web resources to encourage research.
Series Editors' Preface xi
Preface xiii
A Note on Abbreviations xvii
Timeline xix
Map of the Persian Empire
xxvii
Map of Iran
xxviii
Plan of the Terrace at Persepolis xxix
Part I Debates
Introduction 3(9)
Chapter 1 The Great King and His Men
12(30)
Chapter 2 Pomp and Circumstance: Monarchy on Display
42(32)
Chapter 3 The Great King in His Empire: The Movable Court
74(22)
Chapter 4 Harem: Royal Women and the Court
96(27)
Chapter 5 The Pleasures and Perils of Court Life
123(28)
Part II Documents
A1 The royal investiture
151(1)
A2 Coronation hymn of Ashurbanipal
151(1)
A3 The `vassal treaty' of Esarhaddon
152(1)
A4 Princely education
152(1)
A5 Succession debates
152(1)
A6 Xerxes as co-regent?
153(1)
A7 Co-regency
153(1)
A8 Greek speculations on Persian royal divinity
154(1)
A9 Uncompromising advice to a ruler
154(1)
A10 Achaemenid royal ideology
155(1)
A11 Yahweh and the command for genocide
155(1)
A12 A dream omen of Ashurbanipal
155(1)
A13 Court propaganda: a fighting king
156(1)
A14 Darius III: warrior king
156(1)
A15 The destruction of Sidon
156(1)
A16 A who's who of Israelite courtiers
157(1)
A17 Explaining the nature of the court and Empire
157(1)
A18 King and councillors
158(1)
A19 Darius II issues commands through his satrap Arsama
159(1)
A20 City walls and a plague of locusts
159(1)
B1 Rituals of dining
160(1)
B2 Seating etiquette
160(1)
B3 The invention of inaccessibility
160(1)
B4 Invisible monarchs of the past
161(1)
B5 The invisible king
161(1)
B6 Darius and Xerxes on the building of Persepolis
162(1)
B7 The creation of Darius' palace at Susa
162(1)
B8 The beauty of Darius III and his womenfolk
163(1)
B9 Moulding the bodies of infant royalty
163(1)
B10 Cyrus the Great adopts Median dress, cosmetics, and deportment
163(1)
B11 The dress and good looks of Astyages of Media
164(1)
B12 Court beauticians and body servants
164(1)
B13 Wigs or hair-pieces
165(1)
B14 Breaching the etiquette of sleeves
165(1)
B15 Semiramis wears the king's robe and rules
165(1)
B16 Courtiers' muddy robes
165(1)
B17 Royal punishment and clothing
166(1)
B18 Intaphrenes and his wife
166(1)
B19 The Gate of All Nations
167(1)
B20 Imagining Themistocles' royal audience
167(1)
B21 Esther before the king
168(1)
B22 Overwhelming emotions of a royal audience
168(1)
B23 The royal footsool
169(1)
B24 Alexander's makeshift footstool
169(1)
B25 Carpets and thrones
169(1)
B26 Obeisance to the king
170(1)
B27 Obsequious salutations to the pharaoh of Egypt
170(1)
C1 The king's lands
170(1)
C2 The Empire at large
170(1)
C3 The diverse Empire
171(1)
C4 Criss-crossing the Empire
171(1)
C5 Arsama the satrap of Egypt orders rations for a travelling party
171(1)
C6 Cyrus' search for an uninterrupted springtime
172(1)
C7 The pleasure of relocation
172(1)
C8 Bigger is not better: criticising the king's migrations
172(1)
C9 Relocating across Greece is better than traversing an Empire
172(1)
C10 The luxury of traversing the Empire
173(1)
C11 The spawning of the mackerel - and the Great King
173(1)
C12 The Great King on the toilet
174(1)
C13 An Empire on the move: Darius III and his court journey through Babylonia
174(1)
C14 All the king's horses
175(1)
C15 The Egyptian satrap commissions an equestrian statue
176(1)
C16 King as horseman warrior
176(1)
C17 Horses sacrificed to Cyrus' memory
176(1)
C18 Royal camels
176(1)
C19 Clearing the king's path of scorpions
177(1)
C20 Modest gifts of food and drink
177(1)
C21 The origin of the king's largess towards women
178(1)
C22 Bazis: small livestock
178(1)
C23 Gifts of abundance
179(1)
C24 Figs from Athens
179(1)
C25 Cyrus' camp and tent
180(1)
C26 Tented luxury
180(1)
C27 Alexander commandeers the royal tent
181(1)
C28 Alexander's marriage tent
181(1)
C29 Alexander's royal tent and court
182(1)
C30 The cost of feeding a peripatetic court
182(1)
C31 Expenditure on food
183(1)
C32 Food as tribute
183(1)
C33 The king's dinner
183(1)
C34 The royal table and food distribution
184(1)
C35 Paradeisoi as royal storage units
185(1)
C36 Paradeisoi of the satrap Pharnabazus at Daskyleion
185(1)
C37 A paradeisos near Uruk?
185(1)
C38 Cyrus generates a storm
185(1)
C39 Artaxerxes II controls the weather
186(1)
D1 Greek speculations on Persian moral and cultural decline and the idea of harem upbringing
186(1)
D2 The honour of the king's wife
187(1)
D3 `Oriental' seclusion
187(1)
D4 Breaching etiquette
188(1)
D5 Keeping a distance from the royal concubines
188(1)
D6 Concubines show deference to royal wives
188(1)
D7 Prestige of royal ladies
188(1)
D8 Dynastic politics and the king's mother
188(1)
D9 Sexual shenanigans and punishment
189(1)
D10 A ration of sheep to Queen Irtasduna
190(1)
D11 The king commands that virgins be brought to the royal harem at Susa
190(1)
D12 The `second harem': concubinage as a royal `finishing school'
190(1)
D13 Captive Sidonian women enter the Babylonian palace of Artaxerxes III
191(1)
D14 The capture of concubines as part of the royal household
191(1)
D15 The lower status of concubines
191(1)
D16 Concubines as mothers of kings
191(1)
D17 The 360 concubines of Artaxerxes II
192(1)
D18 The 360 concubines of Darius III
192(1)
D19 The Persian concubines of Alexander the Great
192(1)
E1 A concubine's song
192(1)
E2 Songs about Cyrus
193(1)
E3 Angares, a Persian bard
193(1)
E4 A Persian love story
193(2)
E5 Professional wrestlers at the court of Darius II
195(1)
E6 Etiquette of the king's dinner
195(1)
E7 The pleasure of a royal banquet
195(1)
E8 Frustrations of hunting in a paradeisos
196(1)
E9 The splendour of the royal chase
196(1)
E10 Royal Egyptian lion hunts
197(1)
E11 Royal Assyrian lion hunts
197(1)
E12 Alexander kills a lion
198(1)
E13 Artaxerxes I's new hunting etiquette
198(1)
E14 Rivalry and revenge: Xerxes' women
198(2)
E15 Bad feelings among the royal ladies
200(1)
E16 Poisoning the king's wife
200(1)
E17 Poison at the Persian court
201(1)
E18 Cup-bearer and taster
201(1)
E19 Exclusive Indian poison at the Persian court
201(1)
E20 Poison and the death of Alexander
202(1)
E21 A eunuch king-maker
202(1)
E22 Succession struggles: the `Dynastic Prophecy'
202(1)
E23 A Babylonian account of Xerxes' assassination
203(1)
E24 Accounts of the death of Xerxes
203(1)
E25 Patricide and regicide: the death of Artaxerxes II
203(1)
E26 Court conspiracy: the plot and execution of Prince Darius
204(3)
E27 Fratricide at court
207(1)
F1 Doorjamb from the Tripylon (Council Hall) at Persepolis depicting the Great King and two courtiers (represented on a smaller scale than the king) in procession
208(1)
F2 Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, Iran's last monarch, crowns himself with a Sasanian-style crown
209(1)
F3 Re-creation of the Treasury relief, Persepolis
210(1)
F4 A tiny lapis lazuli head of an Achaemenid courtier from Persepolis
211(1)
F5 Darius I's relief and inscription at Bisitun
212(1)
F6 The Elamite king Anubanini, from a rock relief at Sar-i Pol, Luristan
213(1)
F7 An Achaemenid king (possibly Xerxes or Artaxerxes I) in his role as `Persian hero' kills an Asiatic lion
214(1)
F8 Detail of a glazed brick wall depicting an Immortal guard with a quiver and bow slung over his shoulder
215(1)
F9 A eunuch or beardless courtier from the palace of Darius, Persepolis
216(1)
F10 Egyptianising monumental statue of Darius I from Susa
217(1)
F11 Reconstructed details of the Apadana north staircase, Persepolis, depicting tribute-bearers from across the Empire
218(1)
F12 The peoples of the Empire support the king's throne
219(1)
F13 Achaemenid courtier in the `riding habit'
220(1)
F14 Line drawing of an Achaemenid king wearing the court robe
221(1)
F15 Reconstruction of Xerxes' Gate of All Nations
222(1)
F16 Reconstructed views of the north elevation and north staircase and portico of the Apadana at Persepolis
223(1)
F17 Throne-bearers from across the Empire support Darius I as he worships Ahuramazda
224(1)
F18 Darius I's name seal
225(1)
F19 A small part of the extensive L-shaped harem block at the southern end of the Persepolis platform as seen from Xerxes' palace
226(1)
F20 A female audience scene
227(1)
F21 The cruciform-shaped tombs of several successive Achaemenid Great Kings are carved high into a rock face at Naqs-i Rustam (ancient Nupistas), near Persepolis
228(1)
Further Reading 229(4)
Internet Resources 233(1)
Bibliography 234(20)
Index 254
Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones is Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Edinburgh