Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tehran: Ancient seal corroborates Bistun Inscription text

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tehran: Ancient seal corroborates Bistun Inscription text

    Mehr News Agency, Iran
    Jan 12 2005

    Ancient seal corroborates Bistun Inscription text

    TEHRAN, Jan. 12 (MNA) -- An ancient seal has been discovered by
    chance which confirms the information recorded in the text of the
    Bistun Inscription in Kermanshah Province, an expert of the Hamedan
    Cultural Heritage and Tourism Department announced on Wednesday.

    Fariba Sharifian explained that the Iranian police recently
    confiscated the seal from smugglers in the town of Asadabad in
    Hamedan Province, adding, `It is not clear when and where the seal
    was unearthed, but the information and reliefs carved on it narrate
    significant and interesting material.'

    The seal is made of green jasper, she said.

    A cuneiform inscription in ancient Persian on one side of the
    cylindrical seal reads `Dadar Shish, Satrap of Bactria'.

    Dadar Shish was an ancient Iranian proper name which meant brave. It
    is said that the English word `dare' is derived from this word.

    According to the Bistun Inscription, in ancient Iran two persons were
    known by this name: the Armenian Dadar Shish, who had been tasked by
    the Achaemenid king Darius I to suppress the army of Armenia sent to
    the region; and a satrap of Bactria (modern Balkh in Afghanistan).

    The Bistun Inscription is a cuneiform text written on the precipitous
    limestone rock of a mountain above the village of Bistun, in western
    Iran. The inscription was carved in parallel columns, repeating the
    same text in the Old Persian, Assyrian, and Elamite languages, by
    order of the Persian king Darius I. It recounts his genealogy and
    conquests.

    The other side of the recently discovered seal bears a relief
    depicting a horseman who is hunting a lion with his bow and arrow,
    with the symbol of Ahura Mazda above this scene.

    `This relief illustrates a story of Darius the Great hunting lions,'
    Sharifian said.

    According to archaeologists, cylindrical seals were common in
    economically and politically developed societies of the time.

    Seals have been employed in Iran since the Neolithic era. The
    Achaemenids used them for administrative purposes.
Working...
X