Persia past and present; a book of travel and research, with more than two hundred illustrations and a map . Goeje, Bibl. that is employed to render OP. didd in Geog. Arab. 1. 150 and 1. 123, of. Bh. 2. 39) is found only in the Elamitic Sohwarz, Iran im Mittelalter nach version of the inscription on the side of den Arabischen Geographen, 1. 13- the rampart, mentioned below, p. 318. 14, Leipzig, 1896 ; and Mokadassi, or 3 gge reference already given to Makdasi ( 984), ed. De Goeje, Blundell, Persepolis, in Ninth Inter- Bibl. Geog. Arab. 3. 420, 435, 446, of. nat. Congress of Orientalists, 2


Persia past and present; a book of travel and research, with more than two hundred illustrations and a map . Goeje, Bibl. that is employed to render OP. didd in Geog. Arab. 1. 150 and 1. 123, of. Bh. 2. 39) is found only in the Elamitic Sohwarz, Iran im Mittelalter nach version of the inscription on the side of den Arabischen Geographen, 1. 13- the rampart, mentioned below, p. 318. 14, Leipzig, 1896 ; and Mokadassi, or 3 gge reference already given to Makdasi ( 984), ed. De Goeje, Blundell, Persepolis, in Ninth Inter- Bibl. Geog. Arab. 3. 420, 435, 446, of. nat. Congress of Orientalists, 2. 547- Noldeke, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 556. As explained above, I am inclined 9th ed., 18. 558, notes land 10. A to explain the threefold wall of Diodo- still earlier description of Istakhr is rus (17. 71) as referring rather to the given by Masudi ( 944), Les Prai- three main elevations, and to under- ries dOr, ed. Barbier de Meynard, 4. stand that the bull-flanked portals may 76 seq. actually have been gilded as implied in ° This statement regarding the fort- the brazen gates and brazen THE GRAND STAIRCASE AND THE PORTAL OF XERXES 313 men, ten abreast, could ride up it.^ As we surmount the top-most step and cast the eye over the surface of the platform, weare struck by a succession of stately portals, broken columns,capitals, pedestals, stone steps, sculptured friezes, and doorways,spread about in confusion or gathered into disordered often have these ruins been described, and so fully havethey been illustrated that I can do little here except point outthe salient features and possibly add a suggestion or tworegarding the historic significance of these relics of the past.^ Directly opposite the Grand Staircase is the Porch ofXerxes (-B). This imposing propylseum is guarded at each en-trance, back and front, by colossal winged bulls of stone, afterthe Assyrian manner. Two of these colossi face westward outover the plain; the other two (a photograph of


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