I imagine many here have visited the British Museum. What do you remember of it? What were the stand-outs?
For me, from my first visit 20+ years ago I remembered the Rosetta Stone, the Elgin Marbles, and some weird bas-reliefs from "Mesopotamia and Persia". On return visits, I always went back to those bas-reliefs but I couldn't get my head around which empire they came from. That is, , until my last visit, a couple of years ago when I finally stopped and read the explanations in full and understood where Persepolis was.
Sometime, I would have to visit, I decided. Hmmmm ... Iran -
tricky.
Now is the hour
. We choofed off in our bus for the hour drive from Shiraz to Persepolis. Declared World Heritage in 1979.
OK, you know you are in for a bit of history, right?
Cyrus the Great founded the first Persian Empire - the Archaemenid Empire - from abt 550BC, which brought together numerous disparate empires such as the Babylonian (most of Iraq), Median (Eastern Turkey/northern Iraq) and Lydian (Western Turkey) empires. Its likely he chose the site of Persepolis as the ceremonial capital of his Archaemenid Empire but it was his grandson, Darius I who built Persepolis, after adding extending the empire to Athens, Egypt and the Indus River (Pakistan-India border today).
Persepolis, unlike many cities and monuments we visited, is at the base of a range of hills/mountains (most have been stuck out in the middle of the desert (today). This assisted in its preservation, as in the thousand or two years, it was abandoned, rock and scree were washed down the dry gullies and partially covered the derelict city, preserving especially the bas-reliefs on the up-slope side.
One thing I wasn't expecting was that Persepolis is built on a vast built-up podium/platform, which confronts you when you walk in from the car-park (end of the tourist season so blessedly, only a couple of other groups here!
You ascend to the platform the same was as kings and emperors did in the past, via the Stairs of All Nations, of a pair of double staircases, which you may just be able to make out beginning just to the right of the pair of figures. They go up left and right, then double back so their tops meet at the platform.
At the top of the stairs is the Gate of All Nations. The Stairs and Gate were built by Darius' son and successor Xerxes I, and like much of the city, were designed to receive Kings and Emperors from around the Archaemenid Empire as they paid homage to Xerxes and his successors.
The gate was guarded by two massive Lamassu - body of a bull, head of a man. The gate and some columns have been re-built, so what's standing has been re-erected and only a fraction of what was there originally.
One reconstruction of the stairs and gate: