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A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set


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R. (2001). Der Name Arachosien: Ein Streifzug durch seine Überlieferung in Ost und West. In M.G. Schmidt, W. Bisang (eds.), Philologica et Linguistica: Historia, Pluralitas, Universitas: Festschrift für Helmut Humbach. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, pp. 68–92.

      19 Schmitt, R. (2005). Personal names, Iranian iii. Achaemenid period. In E. Yarshater (ed.), Encyclopaedia Iranica online http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/personal‐names‐iranian‐iii‐achaemenid (accessed online 13 March 2020).

      20 Schmitt, R. (2006). Iranische Anthroponyme in den erhaltenen Resten von Ktesias' Werk. Iranica Graeca Vetustiora 3. Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.

      21 Schmitt, R. (2011). Iranisches Personennamenbuch: Band V/5A: Iranische Personennamen in der griechischen Literatur vor Alexander d. Gr. Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.

      22 Stamm, J.J. (1939). Die akkadische Namengebung. Leipzig: J.C. Hinrichs (repr. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1968).

      23 Tallqvist, K.L. (1905). Neubabylonisches Namenbuch zu den Geschäftsurkunden aus der Zeit des Šamaššumukîn bis Xerxes. Helsingforsiae: Societas Litteraria Fennica.

      24 Tavernier, J. (2007). Iranica in the Achaemenid Period (ca. 550–330 B.C.): Lexicon of Old Iranian Proper Names and Loanwords, Attested in Non‐Iranian Texts. Leuven: Peeters.

      25 Vallat, F. (1993). Répertoire géographique des textes cunéiformes 11: Les noms géographiques des sources suso‐élamites. Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert.

      26 Zadok, R. (1983). A tentative structural analysis of Elamite hypocoristica. Beiträge zur Namenforschung: Neue Folge, 18, pp. 93–120.

      27 Zadok, R. (1984). The Elamite Onomasticon. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.

      28 Zadok, R. (2009). Iranisches Personennamenbuch: Band VII/1B: Iranische Personennamen in der neu‐ und spätbabylonischen Nebenüberlieferung. Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.

      1 Eilers, W. (1982). Geographische Namengebung in und um Iran: Ein Überblick in Beispielen. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Gives a very readable introduction to Iranian geographical names (names of towns, rivers, and mountains).

      2 Schmitt, R. (1982). Achaemenid Throne‐Names. Annali dell’Istituto Orientale di Napoli, 42, pp. 83–95. Provides a survey of the literary and epigraphical evidence of the Achaemenid kings taking a ‘throne‐name’ instead of the birth‐name at the accession.

      3 Schmitt, R. (1995). Iranische Namen. In E. Eichler, G. Hilty, H. Löffler, et al. (eds.), Namenforschung: Ein internationales Handbuch zur Onomastik: 1. Teilband. Berlin/New York: de Gruyter, pp. 678–690. Offers an overall view of Iranian onomastics from prehistoric to modern times.

SECTION III SOURCES
SECTION III.A WRITTEN SOURCES

       Adriano V. Rossi

      The Achaemenid royal inscriptions together with the Elamite administrative tablets from Persepolis are the most important direct sources to reconstruct Achaemenid history. Even if they provide less insight into the Achaemenid state organization than is commonly thought (political and administrative events are generally not recorded in them), they have the advantage of being contemporary to the events. Most of them have been found in Persis (Persepolis, Naqsh‐e Rostam, Pasargadae), Elam (Susa), and Media (Bisotun, Hamadan). From outside the central regions of the state, barring the few inscriptions on objects and clay tablets, we know of three inscriptions by Darius from the Suez Canal, a rock inscription by Xerxes from lake Van in Armenia, and fragments of inscriptions from Babylonia.

      The sequence of the texts (OP>AE>LB) on the inscriptional supports and/or their spatial arrangement generally emphasizes the priority of OP on the other languages, of Elamite on Babylonian, though surely “written language was not part of the inherited sense of identity for Persian speakers” (Tuplin 2011: p. 158; about language and ethnicity, Stolper and Tavernier 2007: p. 22).

      The bulk of the Achaemenid inscriptions, written on behalf of Darius, Xerxes, and the three Artaxerxes (especially the first), have possibly been planned in OP (see Chapter 3 Peoples and Languages), probably the (majority) language of the ethnic élite ruling over Fārs in the first millennium BCE. Although the basis for OP must lie in a southwestern Iranian dialect, ancestor to the Iranian dialects spoken in Fārs, the language attested in the inscriptions is likely to correspond to a literary, artificial form of it (Stolper 2005: p. 19; Jacobs 2012: p. 97); OP as we know it was probably a language “restricted to royal usage” (Schmitt 2004: p. 717).

      The motivation underlying the choice of the three Achaemenid languages is not clear (Briant 1999: p. 94 suggests Darius' intention to appear as “héritier des vieux empires ‘cunéiformes’ assyrien, babylonien et élamite,” cf. also Jacobs 2012: p. 105 fn. 57), and it is probably not by chance that “Elamite was the first language used by the Achaemenids for formal inscriptions” (Stolper 2004: p. 63; also Henkelman 2011: p. 585); perhaps “[t]he unbroken Elamite language tradition of Susa and Elam was continued with the inclusion of Elamite cuneiform in the […] Achaemenid royal inscriptions” (Schmitt 1993: p. 457), even if it is difficult to determine the exact linguistic relationships between OP and AE (on Gershevitch's [1979] hypothesis of an “alloglottography” of OP, never effectively proved and at odds with much AE evidence, cf. Stolper 2004: p. 64; Rossi 2006: pp. 78–84; Henkelman 2011: pp. 614–622; on AE and its contacts with OP cf. particularly Henkelman 2008: pp. 86–88, 2011: pp. 586–595, 614–622).