
          Kings and legends of ancient Persia 
            By Souren Melikian
           International Herald Tribune
          SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2005
            
             
 
          
          
           LONDON - It was a great idea to devote an exhibition 
            to the first classical age of one of the three oldest cultures in 
            the world, Iran. "Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia," 
            at the British Museum, focuses on the Achaemenid period (557-333 B.C.). 
            It should not be missed, but it is marred by curious flaws.
            
            The Achaemenid Empire came into existence when the first Iranian emperor 
            documented in history, Kurush (later known to the Romans as Cyrus), 
            ascended the throne around 557 B.C. For the first time, all Iranian 
            groups, the Medes in the northwest, the Persians in the center and 
            south, the Sogdians in the northeast and the Scythians, right up to 
            the Sir Darya, which flows through present-day Uzbekistan, were united 
            under one rule.
            
            But the empire soon extended far beyond Iranian territory. Assyria, 
            which had waged war against the Medians, was included in it. So were 
            Armenia, which had recently arisen in ancient Urartu (now mostly in 
            eastern Turkey), Lydia and other territories. By the late sixth century 
            B.C. the entire Middle East was under Achaemenid control, up to the 
            Mediterranean shores.
            
            It would take the world-conquering fury of Alexander to break up the 
            empire in 333 and burn down its jewel, the huge royal palace-shrine 
            called by the Greeks Persepolis, "the Persian City."
            
            The mark left by the empire in Iranian culture remained indelible. 
            The memory of Persepolis continued to resonate through time in the 
            collective Iranian psyche long after its ancient name had been forgotten 
            - it is called today Takht-e Jamshid, "The Throne of Jamshid," 
            after a legendary king.
            
            Iranian poets writing in Islamic times lamented its ruins. Solemn 
            visits were made to the site by kings who left calligraphic inscriptions 
            recording their presence down to the late 19th century.
            
            This was not just the result of curiosity. As Sufi mysticism, long 
            confined to closed circles, spread across Iranian society from the 
            13th century on, the visits took a mystical turn. 
            
            The most extraordinary pilgrimage of all was organized in 1476 when 
            Sultan Khalil and his troops, accompanied by religious leaders, went 
            to Persepolis and spent an entire day gazing at the bas-reliefs. The 
            great Sufi master Jalal ad-Din Davani recounts in a work titled Arz 
            Name ("The Military Review Book") the visions experienced 
            by the sultan, who saw the standing figures coming out of the stone 
            walls and going back into place.
            
            The ruler's son Ali, a child prodigy who was a calligrapher, engraved 
            a poem made up from verses by the 12th-century Sufi poet Nezami. The 
            visit and the poem made a lasting impression in Iran. In 1606, the 
            author of a treatise on calligraphy and painting "The Rose Garden 
            of Art" cited it and reproduced it. The verses can be seen to 
            this day. I photographed and published them in 1971 in an essay on 
            Islamic period pilgrimages to Achaemenid sites in the journal Le Monde 
            Iranien et l'Islam.
            
            The entire Achaemenid age continued to evoke echoes, however imprecise, 
            in the collective memory of Iran in a way that has no equivalent in 
            other cultures. Its precise history became lost, but the names of 
            one ruler, Daraya-vahush (Darius I in Latinized form, 522-486 B.C.), 
            shortened to Dara, and of his father, Vishtaspa (Hystaspes in Latin), 
            changed to Goshtasp, are easily recognized in the "Book of Kings" 
            versified in the 10th century.
            
            In the 15th century, Davani still observed that royal gatherings once 
            took place at Persepolis on new year's day.
            
            Mystery surrounds the destination of the huge palatial structure with 
            walls carved with processions of guards and laymen bringing wine vessels 
            or driving animals. Debate still rages among scholars as to the exact 
            nature of the Achaemenid kings' religious beliefs and the meaning 
            of many symbols, including the mythical creatures that loom large 
            at Persepolis, eludes us. Alexander's troops destroyed the palace 
            in 330 B.C., and anything that might have shed light on it.
            
            Even reduced to rubble and bereft of their meaning, the remains profoundly 
            impressed the Iranians. They continued to perceive the Achaemenid 
            period as a golden age. From its very beginnings, the Sasanian dynasty, 
            which ruled Iran from 224 to 651, made attempts at revivalism. At 
            Naqsh-e Rostam, near Persepolis, the Sasanian rock reliefs are carved 
            under the Achaemenid reliefs. Some of the characters have a closely 
            resembling smile, barely suggested. The lips are closed, the eyes 
            stare as if in ecstasy.
            
            The reasons for this admiration are fairly obvious to anyone strolling 
            through Persepolis. The plaster casts that take up much of the exhibition 
            space fail to convey the grandeur of the setting, the mastery of space 
            and the rhythm of the figures. A few sculptural fragments do not re-create 
            the effect of bas-reliefs as a whole. 
            
            The figure of a charioteer who stands holding the reins of the two 
            horses that pull his vehicle is remarkable. But the fragment "obtained 
            at Persepolis by Sir Gore Ouseley" in 1811 would look better 
            if the front part of the two horses, given by him to his son, had 
            not turned up many decades later at auction. The Miho Museum in Japan 
            bought them in 1985. Instead of reuniting the two fragments, the exhibition 
            organizers supplied a plaster cast of the Miho piece, which does not 
            help much.
            
            Another fragment retains the bust of a camel driver ripped off the 
            north staircase of the Apadana. This was purchased by the British 
            Museum in 1894, when the monument was quarried by passing European 
            travelers.
            
            Not a great deal of Achaemenid sculpture in the round survives. A 
            small lapis lazuli head of a king dug up at Persepolis in 1946 is 
            on loan from the National Museum in Tehran. It is one of those rare 
            masterpieces that justify a visit on their own. The smile of certainty 
            that illuminates the face, as serene as it is mysterious, is not easily 
            forgotten.
            
            The foreparts of a lion also carved out of lapis lazuli again gives 
            in miniature size some idea of the greatness of animal sculpture in 
            the round that reached an apex in the sixth century B.C. So do three 
            lions cast in bronze in a larger size to serve as a pedestal.
            
            It would have been desirable to include as an introduction some of 
            the beakers and cups in gold and silver from the 10th and 9th centuries 
            B.C. recovered at Marlik or perhaps some copper vessels worked in 
            repoussé from northern and western Iran in the eighth and seventh 
            centuries B.C. All show examples of low-relief animal sculpture that 
            would help to understand the blossoming of the Achaemenid age.
            
            One of the greatest and most original aspects of Achaemenid art is 
            represented by gold, silver or bronze vessels. The exhibition selection 
            is uneven and disparate. Only one of the so-called rhytons, or vertical 
            beakers linking up at an angle with the foreparts of an animal, real 
            or mythical, to serve as a pouring vessel, rates as a true masterpiece. 
            Said to have surfaced at Erzincan, in Armenia, now part of Turkey, 
            it was acquired by the British Museum in 1897. Another British Museum 
            rhyton, reputedly from Mar'ash in Syria, displays Iranian influence, 
            but is clearly not Iranian.
            
            One wonders why the Louvre bronze rhyton ending with the foreparts 
            of a gazelle is not in the show. It would look better than the heavy 
            gold rhyton with the foreparts of a winged lion bought in France by 
            the shah's regime shortly before the 1961 Paris exhibition "7,000 
            Years of Art in Iran." It bears a troubling similarity in workmanship 
            to other gold pieces now recognized as duds. The same comment applies 
            to a gold bowl from the same source. A beautiful silver bowl reputedly 
            from Erzincan and another from the so-called "Oxus treasure" 
            do not make up for the presence of four other shallow bowls that despite 
            their cuneiform inscriptions again raise questions - as the catalogue 
            admits. 
            
            The display, cramped and clumsy, does little to improve the mixed 
            impression with which one leaves an exhibition probably put together 
            under very difficult conditions. It should have been dazzling, and 
            it is not.
            
            LONDON It was a great idea to devote an exhibition to the first classical 
            age of one of the three oldest cultures in the world, Iran. "Forgotten 
            Empire: The World of Ancient Persia," at the British Museum, 
            focuses on the Achaemenid period (557-333 B.C.). It should not be 
            missed, but it is marred by curious flaws.
            
            The Achaemenid Empire came into existence when the first Iranian emperor 
            documented in history, Kurush (later known to the Romans as Cyrus), 
            ascended the throne around 557 B.C. For the first time, all Iranian 
            groups, the Medes in the northwest, the Persians in the center and 
            south, the Sogdians in the northeast and the Scythians, right up to 
            the Sir Darya, which flows through present-day Uzbekistan, were united 
            under one rule.
            
            But the empire soon extended far beyond Iranian territory. Assyria, 
            which had waged war against the Medians, was included in it. So were 
            Armenia, which had recently arisen in ancient Urartu (now mostly in 
            eastern Turkey), Lydia and other territories. By the late sixth century 
            B.C. the entire Middle East was under Achaemenid control, up to the 
            Mediterranean shores.
            
            It would take the world-conquering fury of Alexander to break up the 
            empire in 333 and burn down its jewel, the huge royal palace-shrine 
            called by the Greeks Persepolis, "the Persian City."
            
            The mark left by the empire in Iranian culture remained indelible. 
            The memory of Persepolis continued to resonate through time in the 
            collective Iranian psyche long after its ancient name had been forgotten 
            - it is called today Takht-e Jamshid, "The Throne of Jamshid," 
            after a legendary king.
            
            Iranian poets writing in Islamic times lamented its ruins. Solemn 
            visits were made to the site by kings who left calligraphic inscriptions 
            recording their presence down to the late 19th century.
            
            This was not just the result of curiosity. As Sufi mysticism, long 
            confined to closed circles, spread across Iranian society from the 
            13th century on, the visits took a mystical turn. 
            
            The most extraordinary pilgrimage of all was organized in 1476 when 
            Sultan Khalil and his troops, accompanied by religious leaders, went 
            to Persepolis and spent an entire day gazing at the bas-reliefs. The 
            great Sufi master Jalal ad-Din Davani recounts in a work titled Arz 
            Name ("The Military Review Book") the visions experienced 
            by the sultan, who saw the standing figures coming out of the stone 
            walls and going back into place.
            
            The ruler's son Ali, a child prodigy who was a calligrapher, engraved 
            a poem made up from verses by the 12th-century Sufi poet Nezami. The 
            visit and the poem made a lasting impression in Iran. In 1606, the 
            author of a treatise on calligraphy and painting "The Rose Garden 
            of Art" cited it and reproduced it. The verses can be seen to 
            this day. I photographed and published them in 1971 in an essay on 
            Islamic period pilgrimages to Achaemenid sites in the journal Le Monde 
            Iranien et l'Islam.
            
            The entire Achaemenid age continued to evoke echoes, however imprecise, 
            in the collective memory of Iran in a way that has no equivalent in 
            other cultures. Its precise history became lost, but the names of 
            one ruler, Daraya-vahush (Darius I in Latinized form, 522-486 B.C.), 
            shortened to Dara, and of his father, Vishtaspa (Hystaspes in Latin), 
            changed to Goshtasp, are easily recognized in the "Book of Kings" 
            versified in the 10th century.
            
            In the 15th century, Davani still observed that royal gatherings once 
            took place at Persepolis on new year's day.
            
            Mystery surrounds the destination of the huge palatial structure with 
            walls carved with processions of guards and laymen bringing wine vessels 
            or driving animals. Debate still rages among scholars as to the exact 
            nature of the Achaemenid kings' religious beliefs and the meaning 
            of many symbols, including the mythical creatures that loom large 
            at Persepolis, eludes us. Alexander's troops destroyed the palace 
            in 330 B.C., and anything that might have shed light on it.
            
            Even reduced to rubble and bereft of their meaning, the remains profoundly 
            impressed the Iranians. They continued to perceive the Achaemenid 
            period as a golden age. From its very beginnings, the Sasanian dynasty, 
            which ruled Iran from 224 to 651, made attempts at revivalism. At 
            Naqsh-e Rostam, near Persepolis, the Sasanian rock reliefs are carved 
            under the Achaemenid reliefs. Some of the characters have a closely 
            resembling smile, barely suggested. The lips are closed, the eyes 
            stare as if in ecstasy.
            
            The reasons for this admiration are fairly obvious to anyone strolling 
            through Persepolis. The plaster casts that take up much of the exhibition 
            space fail to convey the grandeur of the setting, the mastery of space 
            and the rhythm of the figures. A few sculptural fragments do not re-create 
            the effect of bas-reliefs as a whole. 
            
            The figure of a charioteer who stands holding the reins of the two 
            horses that pull his vehicle is remarkable. But the fragment "obtained 
            at Persepolis by Sir Gore Ouseley" in 1811 would look better 
            if the front part of the two horses, given by him to his son, had 
            not turned up many decades later at auction. The Miho Museum in Japan 
            bought them in 1985. Instead of reuniting the two fragments, the exhibition 
            organizers supplied a plaster cast of the Miho piece, which does not 
            help much.
            
            Another fragment retains the bust of a camel driver ripped off the 
            north staircase of the Apadana. This was purchased by the British 
            Museum in 1894, when the monument was quarried by passing European 
            travelers.
            
            Not a great deal of Achaemenid sculpture in the round survives. A 
            small lapis lazuli head of a king dug up at Persepolis in 1946 is 
            on loan from the National Museum in Tehran. It is one of those rare 
            masterpieces that justify a visit on their own. The smile of certainty 
            that illuminates the face, as serene as it is mysterious, is not easily 
            forgotten.
            
            The foreparts of a lion also carved out of lapis lazuli again gives 
            in miniature size some idea of the greatness of animal sculpture in 
            the round that reached an apex in the sixth century B.C. So do three 
            lions cast in bronze in a larger size to serve as a pedestal.
            
            It would have been desirable to include as an introduction some of 
            the beakers and cups in gold and silver from the 10th and 9th centuries 
            B.C. recovered at Marlik or perhaps some copper vessels worked in 
            repoussé from northern and western Iran in the eighth and seventh 
            centuries B.C. All show examples of low-relief animal sculpture that 
            would help to understand the blossoming of the Achaemenid age.
            
            One of the greatest and most original aspects of Achaemenid art is 
            represented by gold, silver or bronze vessels. The exhibition selection 
            is uneven and disparate. Only one of the so-called rhytons, or vertical 
            beakers linking up at an angle with the foreparts of an animal, real 
            or mythical, to serve as a pouring vessel, rates as a true masterpiece. 
            Said to have surfaced at Erzincan, in Armenia, now part of Turkey, 
            it was acquired by the British Museum in 1897. Another British Museum 
            rhyton, reputedly from Mar'ash in Syria, displays Iranian influence, 
            but is clearly not Iranian.
            
            One wonders why the Louvre bronze rhyton ending with the foreparts 
            of a gazelle is not in the show. It would look better than the heavy 
            gold rhyton with the foreparts of a winged lion bought in France by 
            the shah's regime shortly before the 1961 Paris exhibition "7,000 
            Years of Art in Iran." It bears a troubling similarity in workmanship 
            to other gold pieces now recognized as duds. The same comment applies 
            to a gold bowl from the same source. A beautiful silver bowl reputedly 
            from Erzincan and another from the so-called "Oxus treasure" 
            do not make up for the presence of four other shallow bowls that despite 
            their cuneiform inscriptions again raise questions - as the catalogue 
            admits. 
            
            The display, cramped and clumsy, does little to improve the mixed 
            impression with which one leaves an exhibition probably put together 
            under very difficult conditions. It should have been dazzling, and 
            it is not.
            
            LONDON It was a great idea to devote an exhibition to the first classical 
            age of one of the three oldest cultures in the world, Iran. "Forgotten 
            Empire: The World of Ancient Persia," at the British Museum, 
            focuses on the Achaemenid period (557-333 B.C.). It should not be 
            missed, but it is marred by curious flaws.
            
            The Achaemenid Empire came into existence when the first Iranian emperor 
            documented in history, Kurush (later known to the Romans as Cyrus), 
            ascended the throne around 557 B.C. For the first time, all Iranian 
            groups, the Medes in the northwest, the Persians in the center and 
            south, the Sogdians in the northeast and the Scythians, right up to 
            the Sir Darya, which flows through present-day Uzbekistan, were united 
            under one rule.
            
            But the empire soon extended far beyond Iranian territory. Assyria, 
            which had waged war against the Medians, was included in it. So were 
            Armenia, which had recently arisen in ancient Urartu (now mostly in 
            eastern Turkey), Lydia and other territories. By the late sixth century 
            B.C. the entire Middle East was under Achaemenid control, up to the 
            Mediterranean shores.
            
            It would take the world-conquering fury of Alexander to break up the 
            empire in 333 and burn down its jewel, the huge royal palace-shrine 
            called by the Greeks Persepolis, "the Persian City."
            
            The mark left by the empire in Iranian culture remained indelible. 
            The memory of Persepolis continued to resonate through time in the 
            collective Iranian psyche long after its ancient name had been forgotten 
            - it is called today Takht-e Jamshid, "The Throne of Jamshid," 
            after a legendary king.
            
            Iranian poets writing in Islamic times lamented its ruins. Solemn 
            visits were made to the site by kings who left calligraphic inscriptions 
            recording their presence down to the late 19th century.
            
            This was not just the result of curiosity. As Sufi mysticism, long 
            confined to closed circles, spread across Iranian society from the 
            13th century on, the visits took a mystical turn. 
            
            The most extraordinary pilgrimage of all was organized in 1476 when 
            Sultan Khalil and his troops, accompanied by religious leaders, went 
            to Persepolis and spent an entire day gazing at the bas-reliefs. The 
            great Sufi master Jalal ad-Din Davani recounts in a work titled Arz 
            Name ("The Military Review Book") the visions experienced 
            by the sultan, who saw the standing figures coming out of the stone 
            walls and going back into place.
            
            The ruler's son Ali, a child prodigy who was a calligrapher, engraved 
            a poem made up from verses by the 12th-century Sufi poet Nezami. The 
            visit and the poem made a lasting impression in Iran. In 1606, the 
            author of a treatise on calligraphy and painting "The Rose Garden 
            of Art" cited it and reproduced it. The verses can be seen to 
            this day. I photographed and published them in 1971 in an essay on 
            Islamic period pilgrimages to Achaemenid sites in the journal Le Monde 
            Iranien et l'Islam.
            
            The entire Achaemenid age continued to evoke echoes, however imprecise, 
            in the collective memory of Iran in a way that has no equivalent in 
            other cultures. Its precise history became lost, but the names of 
            one ruler, Daraya-vahush (Darius I in Latinized form, 522-486 B.C.), 
            shortened to Dara, and of his father, Vishtaspa (Hystaspes in Latin), 
            changed to Goshtasp, are easily recognized in the "Book of Kings" 
            versified in the 10th century.
            
            In the 15th century, Davani still observed that royal gatherings once 
            took place at Persepolis on new year's day.
            
            Mystery surrounds the destination of the huge palatial structure with 
            walls carved with processions of guards and laymen bringing wine vessels 
            or driving animals. Debate still rages among scholars as to the exact 
            nature of the Achaemenid kings' religious beliefs and the meaning 
            of many symbols, including the mythical creatures that loom large 
            at Persepolis, eludes us. Alexander's troops destroyed the palace 
            in 330 B.C., and anything that might have shed light on it.
            
            Even reduced to rubble and bereft of their meaning, the remains profoundly 
            impressed the Iranians. They continued to perceive the Achaemenid 
            period as a golden age. From its very beginnings, the Sasanian dynasty, 
            which ruled Iran from 224 to 651, made attempts at revivalism. At 
            Naqsh-e Rostam, near Persepolis, the Sasanian rock reliefs are carved 
            under the Achaemenid reliefs. Some of the characters have a closely 
            resembling smile, barely suggested. The lips are closed, the eyes 
            stare as if in ecstasy.
            
            The reasons for this admiration are fairly obvious to anyone strolling 
            through Persepolis. The plaster casts that take up much of the exhibition 
            space fail to convey the grandeur of the setting, the mastery of space 
            and the rhythm of the figures. A few sculptural fragments do not re-create 
            the effect of bas-reliefs as a whole. 
            
            The figure of a charioteer who stands holding the reins of the two 
            horses that pull his vehicle is remarkable. But the fragment "obtained 
            at Persepolis by Sir Gore Ouseley" in 1811 would look better 
            if the front part of the two horses, given by him to his son, had 
            not turned up many decades later at auction. The Miho Museum in Japan 
            bought them in 1985. Instead of reuniting the two fragments, the exhibition 
            organizers supplied a plaster cast of the Miho piece, which does not 
            help much.
            
            Another fragment retains the bust of a camel driver ripped off the 
            north staircase of the Apadana. This was purchased by the British 
            Museum in 1894, when the monument was quarried by passing European 
            travelers.
            
            Not a great deal of Achaemenid sculpture in the round survives. A 
            small lapis lazuli head of a king dug up at Persepolis in 1946 is 
            on loan from the National Museum in Tehran. It is one of those rare 
            masterpieces that justify a visit on their own. The smile of certainty 
            that illuminates the face, as serene as it is mysterious, is not easily 
            forgotten.
            
            The foreparts of a lion also carved out of lapis lazuli again gives 
            in miniature size some idea of the greatness of animal sculpture in 
            the round that reached an apex in the sixth century B.C. So do three 
            lions cast in bronze in a larger size to serve as a pedestal.
            
            It would have been desirable to include as an introduction some of 
            the beakers and cups in gold and silver from the 10th and 9th centuries 
            B.C. recovered at Marlik or perhaps some copper vessels worked in 
            repoussé from northern and western Iran in the eighth and seventh 
            centuries B.C. All show examples of low-relief animal sculpture that 
            would help to understand the blossoming of the Achaemenid age.
            
            One of the greatest and most original aspects of Achaemenid art is 
            represented by gold, silver or bronze vessels. The exhibition selection 
            is uneven and disparate. Only one of the so-called rhytons, or vertical 
            beakers linking up at an angle with the foreparts of an animal, real 
            or mythical, to serve as a pouring vessel, rates as a true masterpiece. 
            Said to have surfaced at Erzincan, in Armenia, now part of Turkey, 
            it was acquired by the British Museum in 1897. Another British Museum 
            rhyton, reputedly from Mar'ash in Syria, displays Iranian influence, 
            but is clearly not Iranian.
            
            One wonders why the Louvre bronze rhyton ending with the foreparts 
            of a gazelle is not in the show. It would look better than the heavy 
            gold rhyton with the foreparts of a winged lion bought in France by 
            the shah's regime shortly before the 1961 Paris exhibition "7,000 
            Years of Art in Iran." It bears a troubling similarity in workmanship 
            to other gold pieces now recognized as duds. The same comment applies 
            to a gold bowl from the same source. A beautiful silver bowl reputedly 
            from Erzincan and another from the so-called "Oxus treasure" 
            do not make up for the presence of four other shallow bowls that despite 
            their cuneiform inscriptions again raise questions - as the catalogue 
            admits. 
            
            The display, cramped and clumsy, does little to improve the mixed 
            impression with which one leaves an exhibition probably put together 
            under very difficult conditions. It should have been dazzling, and 
            it is not.