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NOTES

Оглавление

1 As defined by the patterns manifested in the capital cities of the Achaemenid Empire in Susiana and Persis.

2 See in regard to the problem of the long runtime of this pavement Heinsch and Kuntner (2011: 521–522).

3 For further references about Achaemenid column capitals and bases in Babylonia see Haerinck (1997: 30).

4 The term is used in accordance with Assyriological practices and spans the period of time from the Late Assyrian to Seleucid‐Parthian periods.

5 Bergamini’s reasoning concentrates entirely on the fluviatile sediments found to overlay the river walls south of the Sergami alongside the Euphrates riverbed where floods can naturally be expected to have happened periodically. This fact does not prove, however, that the Euphrates flowed at this point back from the city area in its original riverbed west of Kasr. The quoted work about recent excavations by Iraqi archaeologists does not confirm Bergamini’s reconstruction since it reports that the sand‐and‐earth layers were found below the mudbrick walls.

A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set

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