The inscriptions of Cyrus the Great in Pasargad not only show that the site belonged to him, but their text also has the status of a "certificate" of the founding Achaemenid dynasty, in which he called himself a king of that dynasty. This a ...
The inscriptions of Cyrus the Great in Pasargad not only show that the site belonged to him, but their text also has the status of a "certificate" of the founding Achaemenid dynasty, in which he called himself a king of that dynasty. This article, by examining all three narratives of the inscriptions and comparing their words and symbols with other inscriptions, including Assyrian and Achaemenid, the authenticity and quality of them by Cyrus himself, and further by examining other Babylonian texts, in which for the first time It is mentioned the appearance of Cyrus and his confrontation with Medes and Lodi.
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