New
Trends in Achaemenid History
Noruz
Lecture
Foundation for Iranian
Studies
Washington,
D.C.
March 23,
2001
Collège de France,
Paris[1]
I would like to offer my
heartfelt thanks to the Permanent Committee of the Foundation for Iranian
Studies for having chosen me to deliver the 2001 Noruz Lecture, and to George
Washington University, which co-sponsors these annual lectures. It is an honor
for me--both a great honor and a daunting one--to speak before such a
distinguished audience and at an occasion so dear to the hearts of Iranians. I
am keenly aware that in offering me such a distinction, you also bring honor to
the Collège de France.
-1-
It has become common to
emphasize that the conquests of Cyrus and his successors opened an entirely new
historical phase. For the first time, all the peoples and territories between
the Indus and the Mediterranean, between the Syr Darya and the Western Desert of
Egypt, were joined into a unified political formation, the Achaemenid Persian
empire. Although Achaemenid studies have been persistently undervalued (for
reasons which I have often discussed), they have entered a new, flourishing
period, especially in the last twenty years. In this lecture, I would like to
try to comprehend and to explain how Achaemenid history is structured today, and
what perspectives will determine its development in the
future.
To pose such a question
is an easy task. But how to answer
it in a brief, synthetic fashion?
It is five years since I tried to do so in my Histoire de l’empire
perse[2]. The fifth part of that book is called
“The Fourth Century and the Empire of Darius the Third in Achaemenid longue
durée: an Assessment and Prospect.” I would like to pursue the reflections
which I introduced there. Since then, in fact, I have continued to build up my
files, which I have placed at the disposition of researchers in a periodic
publication called Bulletin d’Histoire Achéménide, “Bulletin of
Achaemenid History.” The first issue
(BHAch I) appeared in 1997, in the form of a very large article[3],
and is also now available on line. The second issue (BHAch II) has just emerged
in the form of the book[4].
The first Bulletin analyzed more than five hundred books and articles
that appeared between Autumn, 1995 and Autumn, 1997. The second deals with about
850 titles that appeared between Autumn, 1997 and Autumn, 2000. The purpose of
this work is plainly not to prepare tedious bibliographic lists. It is rather to
make a structured inventory in a way that tries to present new information and
new results produced not only by new documents recently brought to light and/or
recently published, but produced also by the testing of hypotheses and by truly
innovative lines of research.
When one strives to
follow and evaluate research and
publication on a day-to-day basis and in an exhaustive manner, one unavoidably
develops a permanent habit of painful epistemological questioning of the real
results of the research. This
question is particularly difficult to resolve in the Humanities, where
accumulated erudition and bibliographical tautology sometimes take the place of
evidence that is accepted but misleading for scientific innovation. To speak
bluntly: what is really new in what is published recently? In our
domain, what are the signs that permit us to assert that this or that study
marks progress in the order of knowledge? The answer may seem easy as
long as one is dealing with publications of documents, but it is quite a
different matter when one considers interpretative publications. And even among
publications of documents one has to make distinctions: some of them add only
one unpublished document in a series that is already known, without modifying
the general sense by much; others, on the other hand, call attention to
documentation that in itself may suggest wholly new lines of
interpretation.
I will begin by giving
an overall evaluation, in a very synthetic form. Then, in a second part, I will
try to go more deeply into the analysis, starting with a close-up view of a
regional case: I have chosen Egypt for reasons that I will give presently. As a
conclusion, I will try to explain what seem to me to be the conditions and
methods for an international collaboration in this field.
In order to avoid
diffuseness, and in order to give a conceptual coherence to my topic, I have
chosen to organise the presentation around a theme, “Center and Periphery,”
which I consider of decisive importance even if it is expressed in such a banal
phrase. At this point, I would like
to recall a memory. In May, 1986
the fourth “Achaemenid Workshop” took place at Groningen, convened jointly by
the late Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg and Amélie Kuhrt[5]. The theme was precisely “Centre and
Periphery.” The relationships between the Achaemenid central authority and the
various provinces were actively discussed there. Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg herself
presented a paper with an extremely revealing title, “The Quest for an Elusive
Empire.” Indeed the discussants underscored the apparent weakness of control by
the center over the periphery, so much so that the chairman of one of the
sessions expressed this thought, with a sort of exasperated surprise: “Was there
ever a Persian empire?” (p.XIII) I
myself repeated the thought as the introduction to a very recent article on
method, published in the form of a dialogue with my friend and colleague Matt
Stolper, who had been invited by the editors of the celebrated French journal,
Les Annales, to comment on my book, Histoire de l’empire perse
(Paris, 1996)[6]. As Matt Stolper remarked in his
contribution, the question that I posed--“Did the Persian Empire exist?”--was
rhetorical. I agree: no-one actually doubts the historical reality of the
Achaemenid empire. Nevertheless, beneath its falsely naïve or truly absurd
appearance, the question expresses very neatly one of the major trends of the
research carried out during the last twenty years, a trend which I would
summarize with a series of interconnected questions: What are the various markers of the
Persian presence in the lands of the empire? How can they be identified? What relationship can one establish
between the number of Achaemenid objects found in the provinces and the
intensity of imperial power? Must
one continue to espouse the thesis that has so long been taken as something
obvious, according to which the imperial hold on the territories was limited to
a few closely-controlled enclaves and to the axes of the major royal
routes? Mentioning this sort of
interpretation leads back at once to the question that I have already raised:
obviously not whether the Achaemenid empire existed as such, but what its nature
and organization were.
-2-
I will begin by
considering the imperial territories as a whole, but without trying to be
exhaustive. By way of samples, I
have selected for analysis the results of recent research under four
headings: (i) first, new
archaeological findings; (ii) second, the development of iconographic studies;
(iii) third, the sometimes radical reinterpretation of known documents; (iv)
finally, a re-examination of the “statististical” approach to imperial
control.
(i) It is
essential to recognize first the progress brought about by the growing number of
excavations and surveys. In Iran
proper, excavations are continuing at Tepe Hagmataneh, excavations are carried
out at Susa, and eletromagnetic survey recently carried out at Pasargadae by a
Franco-Iranian team has revealed sub-surface structures even where the available
plans offered no hint of their existence[7].
Nevertheless, for well-known circumstantial reasons, interest has been displaced
from the lands at the center of the empire to the lands on the periphery,
especially the western periphery. Aside from Egypt, of which I will speak at
greater length in a moment, one should mention the Transeuphratian territories;
the team connected with the journal Transeuphratène has just produced a
voluminous general assessment, which accounts of work during the years
1985-2000[8].
New information is also coming from lands which had hitherto been thought of as
lying on the margins of the empire:
excavations in Georgia and Armenia now reveal the intensity of Achaemenid
influence. Several sites in Turkey are especially important for our topic, the
satrapal capitals of Dascylium and Sardis, but also Gordion in Phrygia, as well
as the two cities of Lycia, namely Xanthos and Limyra, which were the centers of
client principalities under imperial rule. As an example, I point to the
particularly interesting direction given to the excavations at Gordion since
1992-93, and the first results that the two directors recently characterized
thus: “Research on the effect of
Achaemenid rule on other aspects of technology and economy at Gordion has just
begun, but significant changes in ceramics, horse gear, and military equipment
are apparent even at this preliminary stage of analysis[9].”
(ii) A second
matter to be acknowledged is an axis of research that has been especially well
developed recently. That is the political analysis of inconography from the
center of the empire, beginning with this question: to what extent does the
presence of images copied or adapted from the imperial court (audience scenes,
the royal hero, and so forth) reflect the Persian presence in the provinces,
and, indeed, the imperial ascendancy[10]?
The question is not new, but the
discussion has taken on a new life, on the one hand, because of the refinement
of new ways of reading the images, and, on the other hand, because of the
publication of very interesting corpora. I am thinking in particular about the
seal impressions and coins from Samaria, published between 1997 and 2000[11];
but I am also thinking about truly extraordinary reliefs of Persepolitan type
discovered at the Cilician site of Meydancikkale (the final publication of these
was very recent [1998][12]);
and again, I am also thinking of an Egyptian stele, which I will discuss in a
moment. Other corpora, already known from examples, will be extensively
published in the next few months:
the seal impressions from Dascylium and part of the impressions on the
Persepolis tablets. The number and
distribution of Persian images in provincial corpora raises interpretive
problems that have been treated in several recent colloquia and
books.
(iii) A third
point: of course, progress does not come only from the publication of new
documentary material; it comes also from the re-examination of documents that
have been known for some time. I will take just one example that I know well,
the epigraphic corpus from Asia Minor, composed of Greek, Aramaic and
multilingual inscriptions. Three of
these documents--the “Letter of Darius to Gadatas” (known since 1889), the
Xanthos trilingual (published in 1974), and the inscription of Droaphernes at
Sardes (published in 1975) belong to the dossier on the bonds between the
imperial authorities and the local sanctuaries and pantheons. The documents have been analyzed
frequently in the general context of Achaemenid royal policies toward the
sanctuaries of Babylonia, Egypt, and even Jerusalem. But the re-examinations that I have
offered recently (between 1998 and 2001)[13],
have led me to the following conclusions:
--in one case (the
“Letter of Darius to Gadatas”), the document is a forgery of the Roman
period.
--in a second case (the
inscription of Droaphernes at Sardis), the text does not illustrate how the
Persian community at Sardis fell back upon its own religious traditions; quite
the contrary, it indicates the intense intercultural exchanges between Persians
of the imperial diaspora the local elites.
--finally, in the third
case (the Xanthos trilingual), the life of the local sanctuaries was not
overseen or controlled by a special office of the satrapal administration; the
local communities managed their sanctuaries and organized their cults
autonomously.
(iv) To bring
this selective tour around the horizon to a close, I come to my fourth point, he
critique of what I am call a pseudo-statistical approach to imperial realities,
an approach which consists of asserting a mechanical relationship between the
number of documents found in a province and the intensity of the control
exercised by the central authorities. On this logic, an apparent sharp
diminution in the number of documents is interpreted as the mark of a decisive
political devolution. One of the
best examples is Babylonia, where it has been observed that some archives are
interrupted in the first years of the reign of Xerxes. It has been usual to
connect this observations with the revolts known from Classical sources, and
with the Babylonian usurpers attested in a few tablets. All these matters are
put in a cause-and-effect relationship with Xerxes’ brutal repressive measures
against the Babylonian temples, and against Babylonia itself, supposing that
Babylonia was separated at this date from the Transeuphratian territories. In recent years, however, publications
of tablets long held in museum reserves have led Assyriologists to question
their ideas about archives and the closing of archives, and to be far more
prudent about the political inferences which one can or cannot draw from
them.
The four areas that I
have just surveyed have a common characteristic. The development of research in them
illustrates a pronounced movement toward better recognition of the Achaemenid
phase in the historical scale of the lands of the Near East during the first
millennium, by archaeologists as well as by historians. The periods called
“late,” long neglected by specialists, now give rise to many
investigations. Babylonia is a good
example. Until the Seventies, the
period of Persian rule had been studied relatively little by Assyriologists. But
the landscape has changed completely because between 1982 and 2000 no less than
fifteen books on this region were published, not to mention corpora and
catalogues of tablets. At present, Babylonia has become one of the best-known
lands of the empire, although a provisional synthesis is still lacking. One can assert the same development for
Egypt, to which I will turn next.
-3-
In fact, as a way of
going more deeply into the practice of research I would like to do a case
study--Egypt, which was under Persian domination first between 525 and about
400, and then again for a short period between 343 and 332. Recent studies have
modified the historian’s point of view remarkably. The view that has long prevailed is of a
land in rebellion against foreign domination--a land which did not hesitate to
go into armed revolt against the Persian authorities on many occasions.
Egyptians were incapable, it was supposed, of remaining under the imperial yoke
for long. This thesis went in lock-step with another, no less significant, the
thesis that Persian material evidence was absent or insignificant in Egypt--a
thesis that was in turn tied to a conviction that was reaffirmed incessantly,
namely, that Egyptian civilization continued to live and develop, unaffected,
after the Persian conquest just as before. The proof of this was seen in the
maintenance of traditional architecture
and sculpture. In this centrifugal view of the empire, the Egyptian
aristocrats who were known to have worked within the imperial administration
were regularly characterized as “traitors” or “collaborators,” isolated from an
indigenous population that regularly burst into revolts called
“nationalistic.”[14]
Obviously, I do not
intend to review each of the arguments proposed, nor each of the frameworks of
reasoning and interpretation most frequently proposed. No-one would dream
nowadays of denying the vitality of Egyptian cultural traditions, nor the
occurrence of revolts. I would simply observe, first, that the case of Egypt,
specific as it may be, should not be set apart from the other lands of the
empire. As I have insisted, the pseudo-statistical vision of the imperial
presence must be refined, at the very least. The force of the dominant thesis
has sometimes prevented specialists from cataloging objects or artifacts
correctly. This has been recently shown by D.A. Aston in a study devoted to the
funerary archaeology of the Persian period in Egypt[15].
Progress comes from a distinct improvement in the precision of work on the
ceramics of the Achaemenid period. These efforts make it possible to establish
much more finely differentiated chronologies. But progress also comes--and will
come--even more from a modification of the way in which the Egyptologists view
the Persian period in Egypt. Aston observes, somewhat caustically: “It is hard
to believe that, magically, in 525 BC a change in funerary customs suddenly
resulted in nothing being buried with the deceased!” He can thus demonstrate
that some of the funerary material had long been attributed to the Saite period
rather than to the Persian period because of erroneous assumptions. On the level
of method, his article seems to me to exemplify the renewed interest in the
Achaemenid period, but also to exemplify the need for active research in museum
reserves and for revisions of catalogues and inventories.
What is more, Egypt has
not been left out of the renewal of Achaemenid documentation. I do not intend to
present a catalogue of discoveries made during the last fifteen or twenty years,
or even in the last five years. But
before dwelling more specifically on a discovery that I consider to be one of
the most important for the Achaemenid empire as a whole, I will quickly mention
three examples:
First, the discovery of
the tomb of an Egyptian long since known from his inscribed statue,
Udjahorresnet, traditionally listed among the Egyptian “collaborators” with
Persian imperial power under Cambyses and Darius. The recent publication (1999) of his
tomb by our Czech colleagues has put the whole assemblage of archaeological and
epigraphic information at the disposal of researchers[16].
Most important and also
newest is the 1995 publication of funerary stele that is already justly famous[17].
The stele has three registers: on top, a winged disc; in the middle, a
traditional Egyptian scene of the display of the deceased on a bed; and on the
bottom, an extraordinary scene: facing left are two individuals, apparently
Egyptian, each shown standing behind an
offering table; one holds out a sort of crown decorated with a flower to
an individual seated on a Persian-style throne, turned to the right; his feet
rest on a footstool; he is depicted in Persian costume, wearing the long pleated
robe with wide sleeves that is also worn by kings on the reliefs and seals from
Persepolis and elsewhere; he has a lotus flower in his left hand, and he raises
a cup in his right hand; on his hair, worn in a bun, he has a sort of metal
diadem decorated with a flower-bud in the middle, that is, over the man’s
forehead. This iconography, fascinating in itself for the mixture and union
between Egyptian traditions and Persian elements, is accompanied by a double
inscription, in demotic and hieroglyphic. Along with a traditional prayer to
Osiris, the inscription refers to the ka of Djedherbes, son of Artam,
born of the Lady Tanofrether. Thus we have an explicit mention of a mixed
marriage, between a Persian or an Iranian, Artam, and an Egyptian woman,
Tanofrether, and it is very interesting to observe that the son has an Egyptian
personal name. This document gives
rise to thoughts about the intensity of intercultural exchanges in the Egypt of
the Great Kings.
A third example: in 1993
Bezalel Porten and Ada Yardeni brought out the third volume of their corpus of
Aramaic documents from Egypt. (The
fourth volume appeared in 1999.) It included a fascinating document, recovered
from a palimpsest under the famous text of the “Wisdom of Ahiqar.” It is an administrative text, dated in a
regnal year of one of the Achaemenid kings, either Xerxes or Artaxerxes I, with
a summary of ships entering and leaving Egypt[18]. Some of these ships are described as
Ionian, and the names of their captains sound Greek; the ethnicity of the second
category is not explicitly recorded, but it is practically certain that these
boats come from Syria-Phoenicia. This is clearly a partial register from a
customs post located at the entry of the Canopic mouth of the Nile, probably in
the town of Thônis. It mentions the
nature and rate of the taxes levied
on the ships and on the goods. The
Ionian ships pay in gold or silver, the other ships pay ten percent of each
item--which tells us what the cargos contained (wine, oil, wood, metals,
pottery, etc.). I need not insist on the exceptional character of a document
like this, absolutely unique in Antiquity.
Its contents show not only a continuity with practices attested in Egypt
both during the Saite period and during the period of independence in the fourth
century, but also adaptations introduced by the Achaemenid imperial
administration. The document renewed two hitherto little-known chapters of
Achaemenid history, one on customs levies, the other on commercial exchanges in
the Mediterranean basin.
I come now to what is in
my view one of the most important discoveries of recent years. It took place
less than ten years ago in the Western Desert, south of the Khargeh Oasis, more
precisely in the region of Dush. The Achaemenid period at the oasis was long
known, since the temple of Hibis built by Darius I was identified long ago.
Qanats had also been discovered there, but there was debate about their
dating and the possible introduction of an Iranian technique into Egypt. In
1992-93 a new site was discovered, 3 km west of Dush, the site of Ayn Manâwîr,
located at the foot of an isolated hill.
Since then the site has been excavated by a mission of the Institut
Français d’Archéologie Orientale under the direction of Michel Wuttmann.
Voluminous reports have been published every year, so I will not review in
detail the results to date[19].
I merely want to draw attention to the new elements that these discoveries have
introduced into discussion of the history and structure of the Achaemenid
empire, both at the level of regional history and at the level of imperial
history.
In brief, the
archaeologists have discovered an entire ancient village buried in the sand,
with houses, fields, orchards, irrigation channels and even the hoofprints of
bovines in the dried mud of a pond where the animals were watered. The
establishment and survival of the community were secured by a novel means of
access to the subsurface water trapped in the sandstone hill: more than ten
qanats have been discovered there. And in an almost miraculous
coincidence, a temple of Osiris has been discovered, and, in an attached house, hundreds of archival texts
written in demotic on large ostraca. That is, the archaeologists were able to
work in nearly ideal conditions, since they could use archaeological and written
sources in combination. The presence of precisely dated texts on the ostraca
made it immediately possible to date the pottery with great precision and
complete certainty, and so to make a new and decisive contribution to the
general framework of Persian-period archaeology in Egypt. Furthermore, the
contents of the documents themselves are very illuminating. They are private
contracts of purely Egyptian type, drawn up among Egyptians. Not a single
Iranian or Persian personal name has yet been found in them. At the same time,
the contracts are dated by the regnal years of Achaemenid kings, Artaxerxes and
Darius. The consensus is that they are Artaxerxes the First and Darius the
Second. But during the last
campaign (Autumn, 2000), an ostracon dated by Xerxes was discovered[20],
so it is possible that some ostraca dated by Darius could be attributed to the
reign of Darius the First: on this plausible hypothesis, the documentation of
Ayn Manâwîr covers the entire Fifth Century.
What does this
documentation afford us? I would
say: a certainty, and a new
lead.
(i) First of all, a certainty: It has
long been a matter of agreement, even in recent publications, that after the
reign of Xerxes the imperial authorities were largely uninterested in Egypt. The
main thing offered in support of this view was the supposedly sudden drop in the
quantity of Achaemenid documentation, according to the pseudo-statistical view
whose foundations I have been challenging since a study published in 1987[21].
The documentation from Ayn Manâwîr has destroyed this vision once and for all:
now, the second half of the Fifth Century is especially well
documented.
(ii) In the second place, a new
lead: It has been opened by the
firm Achaemenid dating of the qanats. This discovery has contributed to
two important, interconnected, topical areas, the qanats themselves on
the one hand, and the possible policy of regional development on the other.
These new discoveries plainly invite us to resume the discussion on the origin
and dating of qanats. For
the first time, on can date qanats to the Achaemenid period with
near-certainty. What should we deduce from this? I organized a conference last year at
the Collège de France, precisely in order to deal with this point; the papers of
the meeting will be published next June, in the series that I recently
inaugurated, Persika[22].
During the conference, archaeologists compared evidence from Ayn Manâwîr, Iran,
the Persian Gulf, and Urartu. The
participants included specialists in Greek epigraphic and literary sources. I
will briefly review the discussion.
The only ancient mention
of qanats, as has been well known, is a passage of the Hellenistic
historian Polybius (Histories, X.28), describing an expedition conducted
by Antiochos the Third against the Parthian king Arsaces the Third, in Parthia
itself, between Rhagai (just next to Tehran) and Hekatompylos (at modern Shahr-i
Qumis). The information in the text is both technical and political. Here is what it says (for convenience, I
quote the translation by Paton, in the Loeb Classical Library, even though it is
debatable in places[23]):
“In
this region of which I speak, there is no water visible on the surface, but even
in the desert there are a number of underground channels communicating with
wells unknown to those not acquainted with the country”.
(X.28.2-3)
Polybius also provides
information on the origin of these qanats:
“At
the time when the Persians were the rulers of Asia they gave to those who
conveyed a supply of water to places previously unirrigated the right of
cultivating the land for five generations … [so that] people incurred great
expense and trouble making underground channels reaching a long
distance …”
On the technical level,
the passage is quite imprecise. Polybius clearly did not understand the logic
and function of a qanat. Indeed, I am certain that if one were not
familiar with the qanat from experience, one could never reconstruct it
from this passage. On the other hand, the passage has great interest for the
historian because it mentions privileges granted to the diggers of the
qanats. In exchange for
their investment of money and labor, local communities obtained usufruct of the
land brought under cultivation for a very long period, five generations, about a
century and a half. Even more decisive, Polybius explicitly credits the
Achaemenid Great Kings with this policy, and he draws a direct connection
between the spread of a technology and a political initiative. He thus opens for
the modern historian a familiar problem, that of the relationships between
technology, state and society. The information that Polybius communicates
clearly refers to a plan of regional development under the initiative of the
central government. This observation in itself contributes to the debate on the
rationality of the imperial economic system.
So what can we glimpse
at Ayn Manâwîr? The excavations to date show that the village as it has been
found was a new creation of the Achaemenid period. It is also plain to see that
this creation ex nihilo could only have happened with recourse to a new
technology, the qanat, very probably a technology that came from the
Iranian Plateau. We may add that the site of Ayn Manâwîr is not unique, for
surveys have shown that other nearby sites were supplied with water during the
same period. If we add the construction of the temple of Hibis during the time
of Darius I, all these elements combined suggest the existence of a plan of
regional development, comparable to the one we can infer as the background to
Polybius. To be sure, problems remain, including the reasons for such
plans. Two hypotheses are
possible: an economic hypothesis,
which stresses a desire on the part of the political power to exploit previously
unproductive land and to draw tribute from it; or else a political hypothesis,
which instead gives greater emphasis to the desire of the same imperial power to
control the main conduits of movement, the Great Khorasan road in the one case,
and the oasis route in the other. At bottom, these two hypotheses are not
necessarily mutually exclusive.
It is apparent here to what extent
the discoveries still in progress at Ayn Manâwîr have confirmed and amplified
our knowledge of Egypt under the Great Kings, in a spectacular and decisive
manner. If we consider the totality
of new published documents, we must conclude that, in a few years, the whole of
the traditional interpretative framework has been put on trial, on the basis of
evidence whose reality is incontrovertible. To be sure, I must repeat, no-one
can doubt the vitality of Egyptian social structures and ideology, nor the
existence of revolts against the conquerors. But at the same time, one should not
doubt the solidity of the imperial hold on the Nile valley, and one should not
reduce the Persian presence in Egypt to a kind of epiphenomenon without any real
consequence. In this respect, the discoveries and publications on Achaemenid
Egypt that I have presented in brief are not just recent, they are really
new, and they open prospects of fundamental new growth in the near
future.
-4-
In conclusion, I would
like to say a few words about Achaemenid research in the foreseeable future. It
must be admitted that Achaemenid research still suffers from persistent
marginalization in the academic world. Nowhere is there a research team
specifically devoted to this field, and to my knowledge there is only one
solitary chair of Achaemenid history, the one that the Collège de France
recently created for me. In these conditions, future vitality is by no means
assured, for presenting a doctoral dissertation on Achaemenid history is not a
viable way of obtaining a university post.
The teaching of antiquity is still organized around the Parthenon and the
Forum, and (in a less hegemonic fashion) around the more ancient Near East of
the third and second millennia B.C[24].
This situation is all the more
unfortunate because, paradoxically, archaeologists, numismatists and art
historians are showing a renewed interest in this period. The problem is that the research is
extremely compartmentalized, conducted within a community which has had neither
a common location for a common strategy since the end of the Achaemenid
Workshops in 1990.
It was for this reason that about a year
ago, bearing in mind the experiences and pioneering results of the Oriental
Institute at Chicago, I decided to plan an Internet site devoted exclusively to
Achaemenid history. This site, achemenet.com, was presented for the
first time at the Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale that took place at the
Collège de France in July 2000. And in last December, an international
colloquium at the Collège de France gathered many researchers who were
interested or already involved in the project, and an International Steering
Committee was formed[25].
Perhaps some of you have visited the web-site. If not, you will find a
presentation of its strategy and its aims in a brochure which I will present to
you, and which is also available on the website. The basic aim is to make
accessible and downloadable all documents pertinent to Achaemenid history: texts and inscriptions in every language
and script, seals and seal impressions, coins, reliefs, results of excavations
and surveys, etc. All this will take time, but the process has been
launched.
One final word. It is often remarked that
the Internet permits the development of “virtual communities.” In the case of
Achaemenid research, the situation is a little different. I think that a site
like achemenet.com will rather permit the transformation of a virtual
scientific community into a real scientific community--that, at least, is the
hope that inspires us.
I thank you very much for your patient
attention.
[1] I express my warmest thanks to Matt Stolper (Oriental Institute, Chicago) who has kindky accepted to translate my text into English.
[2] Histoire de l’empire perse. De Cyrus à Alexandre, Paris, Fayard, 1996.
[3] In Topoi [Lyon], Supp. 1 (1997): 5-127
[4] P.Briant, Bulletin d’Histoire Achéménide II (BHAch II), Paris, Éditions Thotm, Paris [http://www.thotm-editions.fr].
[5] Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg and Amélie Kuhrt (edd.), Achaemenid History IV, Leiden, 1990.
[6] M.W. Stolper, “Une ‘vision dure’ de l’histoire achéménide. (Note critique)”, Annales HHS, septembre-octobre, N°5 (1999) : 1109-1126; P. Briant, “L’histoire de l’empire achéménide aujourd’hui : l’historien et ses documents. (Commentaire de l’auteur)”, ibid. 1127-1136.
[7] See bibliography and analysis in my BHAch I (1997): 42-43 and BHAch II (2001): 71-73.
[8] J.Elayi-J. Sapin, Quinze ans de recherche (1985-2000) sur la Transeuphratène à l’époque perse (Transeuphratène, Supp.8), Gabalda, Paris, 2000.
[9] M.Voigt-T. Cuyler Young Jr, “From Phrygian capital to Achaemenid entrepot : middle and late Phrygian Gordion”, IA XXXIV (=Neo-Assyrian, Median, Achaemenian and other Studies in honor of David Stronach II), 1999 : 191-242 (p.236); également BHAch I: 22-24.
[10] See the discussions in BHAch I: 98-194 and BHAch II: 191-206.
[11] BHAch I: 29-30; II: 55-56, 197-199.
[12] BHAch II: 51, 199-200.
[13] “Droaphernès et la statue de Sardes”, in : M.Brosius-A.Kuhrt (edd.), Studies in Persian History : Essays in Memory of David M.Lewis (AchHist XI), Leiden (1998) : 205-226; “Cités et satrapes dans l’Empire achéménide: Pixôdaros et Xanthos”, CRAI (1998) : 305-340; “Histoire et archéologie d’un texte : la Lettre de Darius à Gadatas entre Perses, Grecs et Romains”, in M.Salvini-R. Gusmani (edd.), Licia e Lidia prima dell’ellenizzazione (Convegno Internazionale, Roma, ISMEA, 11-12 ottobre 1999), Roma, 2001.
[14] See my contribution to Achaemenid History III (1988): 131-173.
[15] “Dynasty 26, Dynasty 30, or Dynasty 27 ? In search of the funerary archeology of the Persian period”, in : A.Leahy-J.Tait (ed.), Studies on Ancient Egypt in honour of H.S. Smith, The Egypt Exploration Society (Occasional Publications 13) : London : 17-22
[16] L. Bare§, L., Abusir IV. The shaf tomb of Udjahorresnet at Abusir, Universitas Carolina Pragensis, The Karolinum Press, 1999.
[17] I. Mathieson. et al., “A stela of the Persian period from Saqqa¢ra”, JEA 81 (1995) : 23-41; cf. BHAch I, 34-35, 98-99; also my “Inscriptions multilingues d’époque achéménide : le texte et l’image”, in : D. Valbelle-J.Leclant (éd.), Le décret de Memphis (Actes du Colloque de la Fondation Singer-Polignac, Paris 1er juin 1999), Paris, Ed. de Boccard (2000) : 91-115 (p.101-105).
[18] See our commentary: P.Briant-R.Descat, “Un registre douanier de la satrapie d’Égypte à l’époque achéménide”, dans N.Grimal-B.Menu (edd.), Le commerce en Égypte ancienne (IFAO, Bibliothèque d’Études 121), Le Caire (1998): 59-104.
[19] See the annual reports in BIFAO, and an overview with plans and photographs at http://www.achemenet.com/
[20] Personal communication Michel Wuttmann.
[21] See Achaemenid History I (1987): 1-31; for Egypt, see my critical remarks on such a assumption in Histoire de l’empire perse (1996): 620, 1007-1008.
[22] P. Briant (ed.), Irrigation et drainage dans l’Antiquité. Qanats et canalisations souterraines en Iran, en Égypte et en Grèce (Ier millénaire av.n.è.), Persika 2, Paris, Éditions Thotm, 2001 (in press).
[23] Voir Id. “Polybe et les qanats: le témoignage et ses limites”, ibid.
[24] Cf. P. Briant, International Network of Achaemenid Studies and Resarches. Call for collaboration. (achemenet.com), Paris, Collège de France, 2000; see also BHAch II: 13-14.
[25] The Proceedings are available on line.