- Abbas, Shah of Persia (1587-1628):
- encourages merchants and travellers; Persian antiquities and inscriptions first became known to Europe in his reign by the voyages of Gouvea and others, 12;
- his relations with Robert Shirley, 32;
- he adorned his palace at Ispahan with marbles from Persepolis, 69
- Abbas II., Shah, 57
- Aberdeen, Lord: his Persian specimens given to British Museum, 86n.
- Achaemenes, 245
- Achaemenian inscriptions:
- first mentioned by Gouvea, 1609, 15;
- described by Don Garcia, 19;
- five letters copied by Della Valle, 28;
- Herbert, 46;
- found at Behistun, Elvend, Persepolis, Susa, Van, written in three languages: see Babylonian, Persian, Susian (Median)
- Akkadian language first discovered by Rawlinson, 410.
- See Sumerian
- Akkadians, their first appearance in modern history, 385
- ‘Alarodian’ family of languages, 336
- Alarodians or Uradhians, 336n.
- Alexander (of Macedon), 2, 18, 75
- Amanus, 385
- Amardians, the, of Strabo, 325
- Anahita, 136
- Andreas, Dr., expedition to Persia (1874), 128
- Angel, M., Dutch artist, 57
- Anquetil de Perron, on Zend and the Zendavesta, 173, 176, 182, 204, 256n.
- Apadana of Susa, 136, 139, 143
- Arabia, 219, 235
- Ararat, Mount, 108
- Araxes, river, 18, 25
- Aria, 219n.
- Ariaramnes, 245
- Aristobulus, 85
- Armenia, 210, 219, 229
- Arran (on Caspian Sea), 219n.
- Arrian, on the tomb of Cyrus, 9
- Arsaces, seal cylinder of, 148
- Arsames, 245, 262
- Artaxerxes I. (Longimanus):
- his defaced inscription at Persepolis, 6n., 136, 262;
- Venice Vase attributed to him, 292
- Artaxerxes II, (Mnemon):
- his inscription at Susa, 136;
- rebuilds the Apadana, ib.;
- invokes Mithra and Anahita, ib., 262, 406
- Artaxerxes III. (Ochus):
- palace and inscriptions at Persepolis, 6, 51;
- inscription copied by Rich, 99, 100;
- by Flandin, 123;
- shows decay of language, 262;
- Venice vase also assigned to him, 292
- Arundel (Lord), 38
- Aryans, the, in Media, 333 sq.
- Asdod or Ashdod, 355, 365, 394
- ‘Aspathines,’ 293 sq.
- Assuerus, 14, 52
- Assyria, 219
- Assyrian inscriptions:
- their discovery, 340-2;
- identification of writing and language with Babylonian, 343-48;
- their Semitic affinity established, 349-52;
- first steps in decipherment by Grotefend (1840), Löwenstern (1845), 342, 353-56;
- Hincks (1846), 343, 357, 369, 375;
- Botta (1847), 343, 362;
- Longpérier (1848), 368;
- Rawlinson (1847), 363, (1850), 379;
- language found to be syllabic:
- Botta, 367;
- Hincks, 374;
- Rawlinson, 380, 387;
- and ideographic, 370-72, 383;
- its homophones, 362-64;
- Longpérier’s suggestion, 366, 367, 374;
- its polyphones, 365, 370, 395;
- determinatives, 371;
- first translations made by Rawlinson, 382, 390;
- De Saulcy’s claims, 397;
- Assyrian opens a new literature and history, 341, 382, 409;
- later works on, 412
- Assur-adan-pal, or Assur-natsir-pal (Nineveh), 383
- Astyages, 47
- Atropatena (= modern Maiana), 54
- Aturia (= Assyria), 210, 219
- Augustinian Friars, 11, 47
- Babylon: the site of, 24, 163
- Babylonian:
- language of third column; similarity of writing and language to the unilingual inscriptions of Babylonia, 185, 338, 343-45, 357;
- name fully justified, 186, 358;
- first deciphered by help of Persian column, 338, 348, 353, 362;
- two styles, Cursive and Lapidary, compared, 186, 337-39;
- Michaux stone and East India House inscriptions, 337;
- substantial identity with Assyrian, 344-49;
- large number of signs, 342, 362;
- their classification, 343.
- See Assyrian inscriptions
- Bactria, 15, 208, 219
- Bagdad, 24
- Bahrein, island, 11, 31
- Bakhtiyari (a Persian tribe), 125n.
- Bambyce, 394
- Barbaro, Giosafat: Venetian ambassador to Persia (1472): gives the first account of Persepolis and Pasargadae, 10
- Bardius, 289
- Barthélemy, Abbé, 162
- Bassora, 54
- Bavian inscription, the, 412
- Beauchamp, Abbé, 162
- Beer, E. F. F. (1805-41):
- his contributions to the ‘Hallische Allgemeine Zeitung,’ 238;
- he finds correct values for two Persian signs, ib., 244
- Behistun, the rock of, 102;
- earliest descriptions of it, 105;
- copied by Rawlinson, 106, 108, 110, 112, 245, 272;
- the failure of Flandin, 119;
- its mutilated condition, 286
- Belikh, river, 385
- Bellino, M., German secretary to C. J. Rich, 95;
- his correspondence with Grotefend, 96, 186, 195
- Bellino cylinder, inscription, 189
- Benfey, Theodore: criticises (1847) Rawlinson’s edition of the Persian column of the Behistun inscriptions, 272, 286, 288;
- his edition of the Persian inscriptions, 294
- Beroea, 394
- Bertin, M., 323, 347, 410n.
- Bezold, Dr. Carl, 7n., 297, 390 sqq., 407
- Birch, Dr. Samuel, 411 and n.
- Black Obelisk (Nineveh), 341, 383, 396, 401 sq.
- ‘Black Stone’ of Susa, 133
- Bode, Baron de: journey to Susa, 125;
- adventure with the Bakhtiyari, 125n.
- Bondamiro (Portuguese form), Bandimico (French), Bindamyr (Barbaro), 9, 14;
- Bradamir (Figueroa), 18
- Bonomi, Joseph, 407
- Bopp, Professor, 221, 257
- Borsippa, 385
- Bosanquet, Mr., 411
- Boscawen, W. St. Chad, 351
- Botta, Paul E. (French consul at Mosul):
- his excavations at Khorsabad described in letters to Mohl (1843-45), 340;
- his ‘Ecriture Assyrienne’ (1848), and ‘Monument de Ninive’ (1849), ib., 366;
- his minute study of the Assyrian signs and their classification, 343;
- he compares them with the Babylonian, 344;
- shows the ‘identity’ of the two languages, 348;
- doubtful as to their Semitic relationship, 350;
- indicates the existence of homophones (1845), 362, 367;
- his list of variants, 366;
- his services to decipherment, 343, 367-68
- Bouchier, George, brought original text of the Vendidad to England, 204
- Bricks, Babylonian: the first brought to Europe, 24, 162;
- Hager’s conjecture as to the legend on them, 165
- Buckingham, J. S., 74n.
- Budge, E. A. Wallis, 348
- Bunder Abbas, 31, 33, 53 sq.
- Burnouf, Eugène (1801-52): his ‘Mémoire’ on the inscriptions at Elvend and Van (1836), 96, 206;
- his great reputation as a Zend scholar, 204;
- he contributes two correct values to the Persian alphabet, 208;
- identifies ‘Ormuzd’ and other proper names and words, 209;
- his alphabet compared with Grotefend and St. Martin, 211;
- his skill as a translator, 216;
- his identification of the provinces of Darius, 218;
- contributions to grammar, 219;
- his translations compared with Lassen’s, 234;
- correspondence with Rawlinson, 247
- Bushire, 76, 108
- Cabul, 111
- Cai Caius, 1
- Caillou Michaux, the, 166;
- a Kudurru, or landmark, 168n.;
- its translation only recently accomplished, ib.;
- style of writing, 337
- Caleh, city, 385
- Camara (‘Comerum’), 9
- Cambyses, 289
- Candahar, 111
- ‘Çapardia’ (‘Çprd,’ Lassen’s cuneiform for the Sapeires of Herodotus), 227 sq.
- Cappadocia, 209, 219
- Capuchins at Ispahan, 47
- Carchemish, 394
- Carmelites, 16;
- at Ispahan, 47
- Cartwright, John (1601), 13, 18
- Catholic missions in Persia, 48
- Caylus, Count: his ‘Recueil d’Antiquités,’ 162
- Caylus Vase, quadrilingual inscription upon, 146, 156, 166, 170n., 175
- Central Edifice, 50, 56, 62, 72
- Champollion, M., 175
- Chardin, Sir John (1643-1713):
- with Thévenot and Tavernier at Persepolis, 54;
- knighted by Charles II., 61;
- his Travels published (1711): the drawings convey the first adequate impression of the ruins, 61;
- his confused description, 64;
- built by Jamshid, 65;
- designed for a temple, 66;
- the cuneiform signs were gilt, 67;
- he thinks the wedges can be turned in any direction, ib.;
- he makes the first complete copy of an inscription, 68;
- he gives the first account of the Tomb Inscriptions at Naksh-i-Rustam, ib.
- Charpentier, M., 61
- Chehel Minar, or Forty Minarets [variant spellings: ‘Cilminar’ (Barbaro), ‘Chelminira’ (Gouvea)]:
- first mentioned by Barbaro, 9;
- traditionally ‘the Old Town’ of Shiraz, 14;
- identified with Persepolis by Figueroa, 18;
- speculations as to its origin, 2, 40, 57.
- See Persepolis
- Chinzirus, the, of Ptolemy, 373
- Choaspes, river, 134
- Citadel Hill (Susa), 133, 137;
- De Morgan’s mines into its side, 145
- Clarendon, Lord, 417
- Columnar Edifice, the, 20, 26, 28, 50 sq., 62, 65 sq., 78, 117, 136
- Columnar origin of writing, 164 sq.
- Conder, Major:
- on the relationship of Akkadian to other languages, 335;
- on Lycian, 336n.;
- on the number of Assyrian signs, 379n.
- Coste, Pascal, and Flandin, Eugène:
- travels in Persia, 118;
- Coste surveys and plans the principal ruins, 122
- Cotton, Sir Dormer: his mission from England to Persia (1626), 33, 38
- Crystal cylinders with inscriptions, 147
- Cufic: Lichtenstein on, 167
- Cuneiform signs compared to Chinese, 60, 70, 156, 165;
- to Cufic, 167;
- some think they were gilt, 67, 70, 139;
- doubts as to whether writing or ornamentation, ix, 60, 154;
- first called cuneiform by Kaempfer (1712), 70
- Cursive writing distinguished from Lapidary by Hincks, 339
- Curzon, Lord, 131
- Cyaxares, 314
- Cylinder seal inscriptions, 354
- Cyropolis, 17
- Cyrus:
- inscription, 9;
- found by Morier at Murgab, 83, 89;
- deciphered by Grotefend, 178;
- tomb at Murgab described by Arrian, 9;
- and Barbaro, 10;
- drawn by Mandelslo, 40, 59;
- identified by Morier, 85;
- the discussion raised concerning it, 87;
- his tomb was thought by Gouvea to be at Persepolis, 14;
- by Figueroa at Shiraz, 17
- Cyrus, river, 25
- Dadarses, 290
- Damascus, 394
- Daniel, architect of Persepolis, 47;
- his tomb at Susa, 133, 140
- D’Anville, M.: on Della Valle’s Babylonian bricks, 162
- Darius I. (Hystaspes): built Terrace and Palace at Persepolis, 2, 4.
- See Persepolis.
- Bas-relief and effigy of, at Behistun, 104;
- built Apadana at Susa, afterwards burnt, 136, 144;
- tomb at Naksh-i-Rustam, 8, 102;
- inscription on South Terrace, Persepolis:
- copied by Kaempfer, 71;
- Niebuhr, 80;
- on Palace:
- copied by Le Bruyn, 73;
- Niebuhr, 79;
- on Window, 6:
- copied by Chardin, 68;
- Kaempfer, 71;
- Le Bruyn, 73;
- inscription at Behistun, 102;
- copied and translated by Rawlinson, 102, 244;
- at Elvend, copied by Schulz, 95;
- translated by Lassen, 206;
- at Naksh-i-Rustam, 8;
- copied by Westergaard, 102;
- at Suez, 146;
- Kermanshah, 147;
- on a seal cylinder, ib.
- Darius II. (Nothus), 262
- Daulier Deslandes: ‘Beautés de la Perse’ (1673), gives improved drawing of Persepolis, 50, 60;
- he estimates number of bas-reliefs at 2,000, 52;
- he shows a short inscription over an arch, 60
- Davies, John, translator of Mandelslo’s ‘Travels,’ 42
- Dejoces, dynasty of, 333
- Delattre, Père A., S.J.: calls language of second column ‘Anzanisch,’ 334
- Delitzsch, M., 336n.
- Democritus, 165
- D’Hancarville, M., 92n.
- Dieulafoy, Marcel:
- his first visit to Persia (1881), 131;
- his excavations at Susa (1885), 138;
- discovery of enamelled tiles:
- frieze of the lions, 139;
- frieze of the archers, 141;
- his restorations of the Acropolis, 142
- Dieulafoy, Mme. Jane:
- her book on Persia, 131;
- describes the excavations at Susa, 139
- Dizful, 109, 132 sq.
- Dorow, M., 192, 195
- Duperron, M., on Zend, 256
- Dutch in Indian Seas (1595), 13
- East India Company, Dutch: resident agents in Persia, 48, 54
- East India Company, English:
- opens trade with Persia (1614), 13;
- has a resident agent in Persia, 48, 54;
- collection of Babylonian bricks in their museum, 163;
- Hager’s discussion of them, 164
- East India Company: efforts of French to found one, 48, 54
- East India House Inscription, 166, 194n., 337, 339, 357, 412
- Ecbatana. See Hamadan
- Egypt, inscriptions found in, 147
- Elamites:
- spoke a Scythic language, 137, 325, 336;
- antiquity of their remains at Susa, 146
- Ellenborough, Lord, 111
- Ellis, Mr.: applies photography to Persian antiquities, 128
- Elvend, Mount: inscription, 94 sq., 206
- Elymaean writing, 23, 346
- Emanuel, Père, 162
- Erech, city, 409
- Eridu, city, 409
- Erythean group (of languages), 411
- Esarhaddon, 356, 361, 385, 393
- Eulaeus, river, 134
- Ewald, Dr.: doubts (1858) Semitic character of the Assyrian grammar, 352
- Fasa, 120, 125, 128
- Fergusson, Sir James, 94, 116, 117, 122, 126, 136, 407
- Ferhouer, the, 161
- Ferrari’s ‘Geographical Epitome,’ 25
- Figueroa, Don Garcia de Silva:
- his embassy from Spain to Persia (1614), 17;
- identifies Chehel Minar with Persepolis, 18;
- his description of the ruins and inscriptions published in ‘Purchas’ Pilgrims’ (1625), and in the ‘Embassy of Don Garcia’ (1667), 19;
- his drawings and copies were not reproduced, 23, 59
- Fisher, Mr., 390
- Flandin, Eugène, 64;
- he admits Porter’s talent in drawing, 93n.;
- his travels in Persia in 1840, 115, 117;
- he fails to reach the inscription at Behistun, 119;
- he visits Murgab and Naksh-i-Rustam, 120;
- his admirable drawings of Persepolis, 121;
- his contributions to our knowledge, 123;
- he fails to reach Susa, 125;
- he returns to the East to sketch the monuments at Khorsabad (1843), 126;
- his ‘Voyage en Perse’ not published till 1851, 126
- Flower, S., 58, 59
- Fotheringham, Mr., 133
- Frederick, Capt., R.N. (1808), 192
- Frederic V. (of Denmark): his expedition (1761) for exploring Arabia, 76
- Fresnal, M.: his exploration (1852-1854) of the ruins of Babylon, 409
- Fryer, J.: his travels (1698), 66
- Gabal, city, 385
- Gardanne, General: his embassy from Napoleon to Persia, 83
- Gaumates (or Gomates), the Magian, 104, 290
- Georgian Christians, 48
- Giacchetti, Abbé, 148
- Goa, College of (Portuguese), 13
- Gobineau, Count de, 335, 415
- Golconda, the mines of, 49
- Gombrun (Bunder Abbas), 11, 23, 31
- Gordon, Mr.: his visit to Susa, 84, 89n., 134
- Gouvea, Antoine de:
- his mission to Ispahan (1602), 13;
- visits Chehel Minar, which he considers to be the tomb of Assuerus and built on the site of the ancient Shiraz, 14;
- describes the double staircase, porch, and tombs, ib.;
- he is the first to mention the bas-reliefs and inscriptions, 15;
- second visit to Persia, 17
- Government grant in aid of publishing third column of Behistun inscription, 386;
- and to the Bagdad excavations (1851), 408
- Grant, Mr., visit to Susa, 133
- Great Mogul, the Court of, 49
- Grélot, M.: drawings of Persepolis made by him for Chardin, 61 sqq.
- Gromex: fifty-eight alphabets borrowed from, by Purchas, 47
- Grote, George: one of the jury on Fox Talbot’s test translation, 414
- Grotefend, George F. (1775-1853):
- educated at Göttingen—rector of the Lyceum at Hanover, 168;
- his paper on Cuneiform read September 4, 1802: communicated to ‘Göttingen Literary Gazette,’ September 18, 169;
- he deciphers Hystaspes, Darius and Xerxes, 173;
- he thus obtains eight correct values, 175;
- his total contribution being twelve, 179;
- identifies ideogram for ‘king,’ 177;
- reads Cyrus, 178;
- his translations from Old Persian, 179;
- compared with Burnouf, 217;
- his work on the other columns, 183, 189, 338;
- he shows that the different kinds of Babylonian writing were only varieties of the same, 186, 193, 338;
- calls the third Persepolitan ‘the Babylonian column,’ 186;
- directs attention to the geographical names in the I inscription, 187, 207, 223;
- he denies that language of the third column is Semitic, 188;
- recognises ‘Artaxerxes,’ 189;
- criticises Burnouf and Lassen, 188, 237;
- publishes Bellino’s cylinder, 189;
- thought languages of the three columns were closely related, 299;
- his study of the East India House inscription, 339;
- his division of the Babylonian column of the Elvend inscription (1837), 353;
- his attempted translation of a Babylonian brick, 355;
- mistakes the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar for a form of prayer, ib., 359
- Guebres (or Parsees) of Guzerat, 203n.
- Hager, Joseph (1757-1819):
- his ‘Dissertation on the Babylonian Inscriptions,’ 1801, 163;
- suggests that the legend on the bricks records the name of the founder, 165;
- he derives the Persepolitan writing from the Babylonian, and traces the latter to the Chaldæans, ib., 354;
- the origin of horizontal writing, 168
- Halévy, J.:
- disputes the existence of Sumerian, xvi, 336;
- would substitute ‘Amardian’ for ‘Median’ for the second language, 334
- Hall of the Hundred Columns, the, 22, 28, 36, 45 sq., 50 sq., 56, 77 sqq., 121, 129, 132
- Hamadan (Ecbatana), 1, 7, 94, 102, 108, 206
- Hamath, 385, 394
- Hamitian language, 410
- Haridu, city of, 384
- Haroyu (Parsi), or Sarayu (Indian), 219n.
- Hateni or Adini, 284
- Haug, M., 319
- Haupt, Prof.: on Semitic affinities of Babylonian, 351
- Hazael of Damascus, 385
- Heeren, A. H. L.:
- controversy with Herder on origin of ruins of Persepolis, 82, 155;
- introduced Porter’s Travels to German readers, 93 sq.;
- published Grotefend’s paper in his ‘Historical Researches,’ 170n., 176
- Herbelot, M. d’, 53
- Herbert, Sir Thomas:
- early editions of his Travels (1634-1638), 34;
- his grotesque engraving of the ruins of Persepolis, 36;
- his account derived chiefly from Figueroa and Della Valle, 37, 46;
- later editions of the Travels (1663), with Holler’s engraving, 43;
- singular description of the Hall of the Hundred Columns, 45
- Hercules, Mr.:
- assistance rendered to Niebuhr by, 76;
- enters the tombs at Naksh-i-Rustam, 82, 84
- Herder, J. G.: controversy with Heeren on origin of ruins of Persepolis, 82, 155
- Herodotus: his veracity and accuracy confirmed, 114, 136, 223 sq., 334, 407
- Hester, Mr., 111
- Heyne, Professor, 168;
- first called attention to Greek inscription on Rosetta Stone, 169
- Hezekiah, 394
- Hieratic writing, in Babylon, 194n.
- Hieroglyphics, Egyptian: beginning of our knowledge of, 169
- Hillah, the mounds near, 24, 162, 192
- Hincks, Rev. Edward (1792-1866; rector of Killyleagh, co. Down): suggests that Ormuzd is represented by the winged figure in the Persian bas-reliefs, 104;
- is an early student of Assyrian, 113;
- depreciates Lassen’s talent as a decipherer, 258;
- his own contributions devoted chiefly to the Susian and Babylonian columns, 266;
- he reads the names of Babylon, Nineveh (1846), ib., 357,
- and Nebuchadnezzar, 267, 359, 363, 373;
- his paper ‘On the First and Second Kinds of Persepolitan Writing’ (1846), 268;
- he anticipates Rawlinson’s supplementary note, ib.;
- his alphabet compared with Lassen’s, 270;
- he reviews Rawlinson’s Memoirs (1846), 272;
- his three papers on Susian (Median), 1846-47, 308;
- showed (1845) that many Susian signs were found in the Assyrian, 312n.;
- he compares the East India House inscription with a fragment written in the cursive character, 339;
- his table comparing ‘certain cursive and lapidary characters,’ ib.;
- comparison with the third Persepolitan, 343, 347;
- the languages also agree, 348, 357;
- they are Semitic, 350;
- his method and its results, 358;
- his paper of January 1847, 360;
- on the Khorsabad inscription, 369;
- Assyrian signs are wholly syllabic or ideographic, 370;
- of Indo-European origin and originally designed to represent a non-Semitic language, 371 and n.;
- the appendix of January 1850 explains the principle of Assyrian writing, 374;
- influence of this essay upon the study, 375;
- his paper ‘On the Language and Mode of Writing of Assyria’ (August 1850), 376;
- his compound syllables, 389;
- deciphers ‘Menahem’ and ‘Jehu son of Omri,’ 393n.;
- paper on the ‘Assyrio-Babylonian Phonetic Characters’ (1852), 394;
- his contributions compared with those of Rawlinson, 396;
- his genius as a decipherer, 405;
- suggests the name ‘Akkadian,’ 411;
- his translations in Layard’s ‘Nineveh and Babylon,’ ib.;
- works on Assyrian mythology and grammar, and on Akkadian, 412;
- his translation for Fox Talbot’s test inscription, 414;
- his great services ill rewarded, 417
- Hittite language, 336n.
- Hitzig, Dr. Ferdinand:
- on the Persian text of the Tomb inscription of Darius (1847), 294;
- he denies that Assyrian is Semitic, 352
- Holler’s engraving of Persepolis for Sir T. Herbert’s work, 43, 50, 60
- Holstein-Gottorp, Duke of: sends a trading mission to Persia, 39
- Holtzmann, Adolf:
- his charge of plagiarism against Lassen, 222;
- his contributions to the decipherment of the Persian column (1845), 262, 271;
- he suggests that the language of second column was spoken at Susa, perhaps mother of Pehlevi, 313;
- he attempts to refute the Finnic-Tartar hypothesis, 319;
- he considers Assyrian a Persian dialect mingled with Semitic elements, 352
- Hommel, Dr. Fritz:
- calls second column language ‘Susian-Median’ and ‘Susian,’ 334;
- relation of Median with Akkadian, 335;
- his fifty words of Kassite, 336n.
- Humboldt, G. von: his appreciation of Jacquet’s work, 239
- Husseinabad, 121
- Hyde, Dr. Thomas, 59 sq.
- Hystaspes, 136;
- name deciphered, 178, 245, 262
- India, 229
- Inscriptions. See Achaemenian
- Ionia, 210, 219
- Iskander (= Alexander), 41
- Ispahan, 12;
- British Resident established at (1614), 13
- Istakhr: seat of a Viceroy of the Khalifs, 2, 69
- Jacquet, Eugène (1811-38):
- his remarkable precocity, 239;
- his essay on Cuneiform Decipherment (1838), 241;
- his correspondence with Lassen, 240, 243;
- adds six correct values to the Persian alphabet, 244;
- his admiration for Lassen’s diphthongs, 255;
- his results arrived at independently, 275
- Jamshid, the legendary builder of Persepolis, 2, 30;
- the fourth king of Persia, 65, 75;
- his claims supported by Herder and opposed by Heeren, 82, 155;
- possibly identical with Shem, 93;
- Grotefend reads his name into the inscriptions, 180
- Jask (on Persian Gulf), 32
- Jaubert: his embassy from France to Persia (1805), 83
- Jehu the son of Omri, 385, 393n., 407
- Jenkinson, Antonie: visit to Persia (1561), 13
- Jerusalem, 394
- Jesuits, the: mission at Tauriz, 48
- Jones, Captain, R.N., 111;
- his drawings of the figures at Behistun published in Rawlinson’s Memoir (1846), 272
- Jones, Sir Harford:
- his embassy to Persia, 83;
- presented the celebrated inscription to India House, 166
- Jones, Sir William: on Anquetil’s Zend-Avesta, 205
- Kaempfer, Engelbert (1651-1716):
- his ground plan of Persepolis, 70, 77;
- confers the name of ‘cuneiform’ upon the inscriptions, ib.;
- he copies a twenty-four line inscription, 71;
- gives the earliest description of the Central Edifice, 72
- Kaleh Sherghat, the Tiglath Peleser inscription from, 413
- Kassite language, 336n.
- ‘Katpatuk’ (Burnouf and Lassen’s reading for ‘Cappadocia’), 229
- Kermanshah, 102, 108, 110, 119
- Kesem (island in Persian Gulf), 11, 31
- Khaneh-i-Dara (Mansion of Darius), Persepolis, 2
- ‘Khapirti’ (in Median text = Amardians of Strabo), 325
- Khorassan (or Bactria), 15
- Khorsabad, date of the dynasty of, 385n.
- King, Mr. L. W.:
- on Semitic affinities of Babylonian, 351;
- his list of 329 Assyrian signs, 379n.
- Kinneir, Sir J. Macdonald:
- on inscription at Mount Elvend, 94;
- on figures at Behistun, 105;
- description of Susa (1810), 133;
- visits Hillah and Mosul (1808), 192;
- his ‘Geographical Memoir,’ ib.
- Kish, obelisk of a King of, found at Susa, 145
- Klaproth, M., his ‘Aperçu de l’Origine des diverses Ecritures,’ 196;
- contains the latest development of St. Martin’s alphabet, 196, 200
- Kossaean language, 336
- Kouyunjik, 189, 341
- Kur, river (= the ‘Cyrus’ of the ancients), 25
- Kurdistan, 108
- Lapidary characters compared with their equivalents in the cursive style, 339
- Larsa, city, 409 sq.
- Lassen, Christian (1800-76), 189, 204;
- his fame as a Sanscrit scholar, 231;
- his essay on cuneiform accidentally synchronous with that of Burnouf (1836), 222;
- Holtzmann’s unfounded charge of plagiarism, ib.:
- Lassen’s account of his study of Inscr. I, 223;
- he deciphers correctly six to ten additional signs, 224;
- analysis of his alphabet, 225;
- his identification of words and proper names, 229;
- his translation compared with Burnouf, 233;
- on the provinces of Darius, 235;
- influence on Jacquet, 240, 243;
- on Rawlinson, 247;
- his second Memoir (1845), 253;
- his amended alphabet, ib.;
- his achievements disparaged by Rawlinson and Hincks, 258;
- his complete translation of all the Persian inscriptions then known to him, 259;
- comparison with Rawlinson, 261
- Laval, M., 412
- Layard, Sir A. H.:
- entered the Tomb of Daniel at Susa, 134;
- copied two inscriptions and made drawings of bas-relief at Malamir, 185, 323;
- his excavations at Nimrud and Kouyunjik (1845), 341;
- discovery of the black obelisk at Nimrud, with first purely Assyrian inscription ever deciphered, ib.;
- published ‘Nineveh and its Remains,’ and ‘Monuments of Nineveh’ (1849), 342;
- his excavations at Nineveh (1849-50), 408;
- popularity of his book, ib.;
- his eulogy of Dr. Hincks, 417n.
- Le Bruyn, Corneille:
- visited Persepolis 1704: he copies five inscriptions, 73;
- his criticism and measurements, 74;
- he rejects Chardin’s theory of the Jamshid origin of the ruins, 73
- Lenormant, François:
- his ‘Lettres Assyriennes’ (1871), and ‘Choix de Textes’ (1873), 323;
- shows the resemblance of the Old Susian and Old Babylonian scripts, ib.;
- the writing of Malamir an earlier form of Susian (Median), ib.;
- both belong to the Scythic family, 324;
- he adheres to name of ‘Median,’ 325;
- opinion as to the Alarodian languages, 336
- Lepsius, Professor, 349
- Lewis, Sir George Cornewall: contended that neither Egyptian nor Assyrian could be restored, 416
- Library of Assurbanipal, the, xii
- Lichtenstein, M.: considers Babylonian bricks date from seventh century A.D.: that the writing resembles Cufic and the language Arabic, 167
- Löwenstern, Isidore, 313;
- his ‘Essai de Déchiffrement’ (1845), 343;
- points out the resemblance of Assyrian writing to the third Persepolitan, ib.;
- maintained that it is a Semitic speech, 349;
- his attempt to decipher a Khorsabad inscription, 355;
- only twenty proper names then available, 362;
- he treats the signs as simple consonants, 364, 377;
- the variants as homophones, 364;
- he was among the first to observe polyphones, 365;
- his theory of the mechanical union of consonant and vowel, 376.
- Loftus, W. Kennett:
- on a drawing by Porter, 93n.;
- his excavations at Susa (1851-2), 125, 135;
- discovered the Apadana of Artaxerxes Mnemon with his inscription, 136;
- translated by Norris, 318;
- found some Old Susian inscriptions which Rawlinson attempted to decipher, 322;
- Loftus’s explorations of South Babylonia, 409;
- found a tablet at Larsa from which Rawlinson inferred the existence of the Akkadian language, 410
- Longpérier, Adrian de:
- made known the Venice Vase, 148, 292;
- criticism of Löwenstern’s identification of Esarhaddon, 357;
- treatment of Assyrian homophones, 366;
- identifies Sargon and Assur, 368, 393;
- his aptitude for cuneiform studies, 367, 368, 405
- Luristan, 109, 125
- Luzzato, M.:
- showed (1850) that twenty-four of the Median signs corresponded to the Babylonian, 314;
- maintained that Assyrian was an Indo-European language, 352
- Macaulay, Lord: disbelieved in cuneiform interpretation, 416
- Machad, capital of Khorassan, 15
- McNeill, Sir J., 110
- Madagascar: French effort to found a trading colony in (1643), 48
- Maiana (ancient Atropatena), 54, 137
- Malamir: inscription found by Layard at (1841), 135, 137.
- See Susian (Old)
- Malcolm, Sir John, 83, 107, 110, 133, 166
- Mandelslo, J. A.:
- visits Murgab (1638);
- gives the earliest known view of the Tomb of Cyrus, 40;
- thought cuneiform signs were inlaid with gold, 41;
- his engraving of Persepolis, ib.;
- his book translated into English (1662), 42
- Mans, Père Raphael du (Superior of the Capuchins at Ispahan, 1644-96), 47, 52 sq.
- Median language. See Susian (Median)
- Medo-Assyrian (Vannic) writing, 346
- Medus, river (of Strabo), 25
- Menant, Joachim:
- on the Venice Vase, 292;
- his edition of the Persian inscriptions, 297;
- his table of Susian (Median) signs, 308n., 328, 442;
- on the only Assyrian word correctly read in 1847, 351;
- estimate of ‘the necessary simple syllables’ in Assyrian, 388n.;
- on De Saulcy’s contribution to cuneiform decipherment, 398;
- his work on the ‘Ecritures Cunéiformes’ (1860), 413
- Mervdasht, plain of, 2
- ‘Meshed i Mader i Suliman,’ 98
- Mesopotamia, 24
- Messeth Suleimen, 10
- Michaux, M., 166
- Mildenhall, John (1601), 13
- Millin, M., 183
- Milman, Dean: one of the jury on Fox Talbot’s test translation, 414
- Mina (on Persian Gulf), 31
- Mithra, 136, 262
- Mohl, M. (Secretary to French Asiatic Society):
- his visit to Grotefend, 190;
- sent the Yaçna to Rawlinson, 247;
- protested against the Scythic hypothesis about Median, 335;
- introduced Hincks’s writings to Continental students (1848), 361;
- decries a language which puzzles translators by polyphones and ideographs, 416
- Monteith, Captain: visited Susa (1810), 133
- Morales, Father Symon de (Augustinian Friar): his mission to Persia by Philip II. (1583), 12
- Mordtmann, M.:
- his papers (1862, 1870) on the second column, 322;
- his reasons for calling the language Susian, ib.;
- his endeavours to prove the ‘identity’ of the Median and Babylonian characters, 323;
- he shows that both the newly discovered languages belonged to the Scythic family, 324
- Morgan, J. de:
- excavations at Susa (1898), 143;
- great discovery of bricks with old Susian inscriptions, 144;
- his investigations into the antiquity of the mounds, 145
- Morier, James:
- identifies the tomb of Cyrus, 9, 85, 88;
- his comparison of the drawings of Le Bruyn, Chardin and Niebuhr with the original sculptures, 77n., 78n.;
- publication of his Travels (1812 and 1818), 86;
- his copy of the Cyrus inscription, 89n., 93;
- its influence on Grotefend, 178
- ‘Moro, the constellation of’ (Grotefend), 179, 216, 257, 354
- Mosul, 192, 340
- Mudray, name for Egypt, 212, 235;
- deciphered by Rawlinson, 249
- Müller, Max, 295
- Münter, F. C. (Bishop of Seeland):
- his paper on the Cuneiform Inscriptions (1800), 155;
- proves that they belong to the Achaemenian dynasty, ib., 170;
- shows the use of the diagonal wedge in Old Persian, 157;
- deciphers two signs correctly, 159;
- his opinion as to meaning of the legend on Babylonian bricks, 165;
- on the writing of the second and third columns, 156, 299;
- compares the latter to Old Babylonian, 337
- Murgab, 1, 59, 83, 85 sqq.
- Museo Kircheriano: some of Della Valle’s collection of antiquities there, 24, 74
- Nakharmi, 384
- Naksh-i-Rejeb, 82, 91
- Naksh-i-Rustam, inscriptions found at, 1;
- Sassanian bas-reliefs and Achaemenian tombs there, 7 sq.;
- inscriptions described, 8;
- referred to, 19, 29, 57, 67 sq., 91
- Naram Sin, 145
- Nebuchadnezzar, 47, 359, 363, 373;
- ‘Standard Inscription’ of, 166
- Niebuhr, Carsten (1733-1815):
- his ‘Voyage en Arabie’ (1780), 77;
- his valuable copies of the inscriptions at Persepolis, 79, 149;
- he is the first to observe that each column is written in a different character, 80, 299;
- he is the first to make an alphabet of Old Persian, 81, 149;
- he shows the direction in which the writing is to be read, ib.;
- he admits eight defective signs into his alphabet, 150, 183;
- the general accuracy of his results, 150;
- he makes one unfortunate mistake, 160
- Nimrod, 66
- Nimrud: Layard’s excavations at, 341
- Nimrud: date of the dynasty of, 385n.
- Nineveh, 384
- Ninni, city of, 384
- Nippur, city, 409
- Noeldeke, Theodor: on the results of the photographic process applied to inscriptions, 129
- Norris, Edwin:
- Secretary of Royal Asiatic Society, 269;
- saw Rawlinson’s Memoir (1846) through the press, 273;
- undertakes the translation of the Susian (Median) column of the Behistun inscription, 307;
- reads a paper on the results of his study (1852: published 1855), 314;
- thinks the syllabarium originally devised to express a Scythic tongue, 317;
- its nearest modern relationship is to Volga-Finnish, ib.;
- his translation of a unilingual inscription, 319;
- translation of a defective inscription at Behistun, 330;
- his work on Assyrian weights, 412;
- author of the first Assyrian dictionary, ib.
- Ochus. See Artaxerxes III.
- Odoricus, Friar: his visit to Persia (1325), 9n.
- Olearus (Oelschloeger):
- account of his mission to Persia (1637), 39;
- his edition of the Travels of Mandelslo (a member of the mission), 40, 42
- Olivier, M.: on Behistun, 105
- Oppert, Jules:
- on the Behistun inscription, 104;
- his translations of Old Susian inscriptions (1873, 1876), 137, 324;
- on death of Cambyses, 289;
- on the Venice Vase, 292;
- his restorations of mutilated texts, 292, 331;
- his ‘Lautsystem des Altpersischen’ (1847), 295;
- his tribute to Rawlinson, 296;
- his edition of the Achaemenian inscriptions (1852, 1877), 296, 406;
- claims to have suggested the Turanian origin of cuneiform writing, 317n.;
- and the ‘Finno-ouralienne’ origin of Median (1847), 318n.;
- his translation of the Susian (Median) unilingual inscriptions (1879), 319;
- his ‘Expédition scientifique’ (1859), 320;
- his Susian (Median) syllabarium: the comparison with Babylonian signs, ib.;
- his ‘Peuple des Mèdes’ (1879), 326;
- completes the knowledge of language of second column, ib.;
- comparison with Weisbach, 328;
- his treatment of the grammar, 330;
- different views as to the people who spoke the language and the name it should bear:
- Scythic, 314, 318n.;
- Medo-Scythic, 321, 332;
- Median, 333;
- transcribes cuneiform into Hebrew characters, 407;
- his ‘Etudes Assyriennes’ (1857), 412;
- his translation for Fox Talbot’s test, 414;
- receives the prize from the Institut (1860), 415
- Ormuz (island in Persian Gulf):
- its importance in 16th century, 11, 18, 24;
- taken by Persians from Portuguese (1621), 31
- Ormuzd (Auramazda), 5, 7 sq., 104, 136, 182, 219
- Orontes, the, 94
- Otiara, 317
- Otter, M. (French traveller): first to call attention to Behistun, 105
- Ouseley, Sir Gore:
- his embassy from England to Persia (1810), 84;
- ‘specimens’ of ruins in his possession, afterwards given to British Museum, 86
- Ouseley, Sir William:
- his estimate of Jean Struys, 58;
- his copies of the inscriptions, 73;
- he visits Fasa, then thought to be the site of Pasargadae, 84;
- he opposes Morier’s claim on behalf of Murgab, 87;
- his visit to Persepolis, ib.;
- his views of Murgab, 88;
- his copy of the Cyrus inscription came to the notice of Grotefend, 89, 178;
- his collection of Persian antiquities, 156
- Pacifique, Father, 47
- Parthia, 210, 219
- Pasargadae (the city of Cyrus), Achaemenian ruins at, 8;
- referred to, 120, 125, 130, 178
- Pehlevi (language), 82
- Persepolis, supposed to be Shiraz, 14, 18, 25;
- identified with ruins at Chehel Minar by Figueroa, 18, 92;
- various opinions as to their origin, 1, 2, 14, 34, 40, 41, 52, 65;
- and design:
- a tomb, 13;
- temple, 26, 47, 52, 57, 66, 78, 92;
- palace, 18, 34, 75;
- importance of question to decipherment, 82, 155;
- details of ruins, 2-7;
- described by Gouvea, 14;
- Figueroa, 18;
- Della Valle, 25;
- Herbert, 34;
- Mandelslo, 41;
- Herbert’s second account, 43;
- Daulier, 50;
- Thévenot, 55;
- Chardin, 60;
- earliest engravings:
- by Herbert, 36;
- Mandelslo, 41;
- Herbert, second view, 43;
- later views by Daulier, 50, 59;
- Chardin, 61;
- Kaempfer, 69;
- Niebuhr, 77;
- Texier, 115;
- Flandin, 121;
- Stolze, 128;
- ground plan by Chardin, 63;
- Kaempfer, 70;
- inscriptions found of Darius, Xerxes, Artaxerxes I. and Artaxerxes III., 6
- Persia: its relations with Europe in 15th and 16th centuries, 9, 11;
- missions to, 12 sq.;
- European commerce with, 13;
- suspension of diplomatic relations with European countries, 83;
- English officers sent to train the Shah’s army (1833), 108;
- withdrawal of the British Mission (1838), 110;
- recent concessions to France to carry on archæological excavations throughout Persia, 143
- Persian (Old), language of first column:
- the earliest alphabet of signs formed by Niebuhr, 149;
- their decipherment first attempted by Tychsen (1798), 151;
- and Münter (1800), 155;
- Grotefend deciphers names of the Achaemenian kings (1802), 173;
- the contributions made by St. Martin (1823), 195;
- and Rask (1826), 202;
- the task accomplished by Burnouf (1836), 206;
- and Lassen (1836), 221, and (1844), 259;
- contributions of Jacquet and Beer, 238;
- Rawlinson, 245, 272, 295;
- Holtzmann, 262;
- Hincks, 266;
- the criticisms of Benfey, 288;
- it afforded the key to decipher the other columns, xi;
- conjectures as to its linguistic affinities, x, 152, 156, 167, 184, 204, 220, 257.—See Appendix A and B.
- Peters, Dr.: results of his excavations at Nippur, xv
- Pharnuches, unilingual seal cylinder of, 148
- Philip II. (of Spain and Portugal):
- his embassy to Persia (1583), 12;
- another mission (1601), 13
- Pictorial representations of cuneiform inscriptions, summary of, to end of 17th century, 59
- Pinches, Theo. G.:
- on differences between Assyrian and Semitic languages, 351;
- on the publication of Layard’s inscriptions, 411n.
- Place, M. (1851-54), 409
- Platform, the, 56 sq.
- Polvar, river, 2, 7, 25
- Polyhistor, 394
- Porch, the, 20, 50 sq., 55, 65, 71, 78, 122, 124, 130
- Porter, Sir Robert Ker:
- his drawings of Persepolis, 64, 78n.;
- his visit to Murgab and Persepolis, (1818), 90;
- importance of his drawings, ib.;
- suggests that the tomb at Naksh-i-Rustam was that of Darius, 92;
- he was long ‘the oracle of the archæologists,’ 93n.;
- his visit to Mount Elvend, 95;
- he sketches the figures at Behistun, 105
- Portugal:
- desire of trade with Persia, 23;
- contest with Persia (1620), 30;
- result, 31;
- finally driven from Persian Gulf, 32
- Postellus, the alphabets in, 47
- Proto-Chaldean (later called Akkadian), 410
- Prinsep, Mr. James (Secretary of Asiatic Society of Calcutta): in correspondence with Jacquet, 240
- Puli Neu (New Bridge) over the ‘Kur’ (= ‘Cyrus’ of the ancients), 25
- Purchas: alphabets borrowed from Gromex, 47
- ‘Purchas, his Pilgrims,’ letters of Figueroa in, 18n., 19
- Rask, R. (1782-1832), 183, 200;
- an early founder of Comparative Philology, 202;
- suggests correct termination of genitive plural in Old Persian, which adds two correct values to the alphabet, 203;
- he leads to the decipherment of ‘Achaemenian,’ ib.
- Rassam, Mr. Hormuzd:
- had practical direction of excavations at Bagdad (1851), 408;
- discovered the inscription of Tiglath Peleser, ib.
- Rawlinson, Canon: his Memoir of his brother, Sir Henry, 106n., 295
- Rawlinson, Sir Henry Creswicke (1810-95):
- on the Behistun inscription, 106;
- officer in Indian army, 107;
- sent to Persia on military duty (1833), 108;
- copies inscriptions at Mount Elvend and Behistun (1835-7), ib.;
- ordered to Candahar (1840), 111;
- appointed Political Agent at Bagdad (1844), ib.;
- resumes work at Behistun, ib.;
- Memoir on Persian Column (1846), 112, 272;
- Second Memoir on Babylonian Column (1849), 114, 386;
- visited Susa (1836), 134
- Rawlinson: Sir Henry, decipherment of Persian Column:
- identifies eighteen cuneiform characters, 245;
- independently of Grotefend, 246;
- completes alphabet, having borrowed only two letters, 248;
- deciphers two signs wrongly valued, 249;
- chief merit in translation, 249;
- compared with Lassen, 261;
- the Supplementary Note (1846), 268;
- claims to originality of discovery examined, 275;
- his alphabet in 1846, 279;
- notes on the grammar, 284;
- his conjectural restorations, 286;
- complete translation of all the inscriptions in Old Persian, 291-3;
- revises the Behistun inscription for George Rawlinson’s ‘Herodotus’ (1858), and again for ‘Records of the Past’ (1873), 297
- Rawlinson, Sir Henry: on the Susian (Median) Column:
- first scholar to make a long translation from it, 287, 306;
- recognises its Scythic affinities, 306;
- abandoned its further study and presented his notes to Mr. Norris, 307
- Rawlinson, Sir Henry: decipherment of the Babylonian Column:
- on the varieties of writing, 345, 349;
- he definitely settles its Semitic affinity, 351;
- his progress down to 1847, 363;
- recognises ‘Nebuchadnezzar,’ 363;
- his difficulty with proper names, 369, 383;
- his delay in publication wrongly censured, 377;
- his papers on the ‘Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylon’ (January and February 1850), 379;
- results compared with Hincks, 380, 387, 396;
- Black Obelisk inscription, 383;
- large numbers of historical names brought to light, 385, 393, 407;
- publication of the Behistun inscription (1851), 386;
- treatment of syllables, 380, 387n.;
- his translations compared with De Saulcy and Bezold, 390;
- he and Hincks share between them the honour of accomplishing the task of deciphering the Babylonian signs, 397;
- their exceptional genius, 405
- Rawlinson, Sir H.: subsequent career:
- returned to Bagdad to supervise excavations (1851), 408;
- detected the existence of Sumerian or Akkadian (1855), 410;
- Director of E. India Company, member of Parliament, British envoy to Persia, 416;
- undertook supervision of ‘Inscriptions of Western Asia’ (1859-84), ib.;
- at the India Office (1868), 417;
- his death (1895), ib.;
- overwhelmed with honours from learned Societies, ib.;
- K.C.B. in 1856: subsequent honours due to political services, ib.
- Rémusat, Abel (French Orientalist), 239
- Renan, Ernest, xvi, 352
- Rennell, Major: identified Susa with Shus, 132
- Resident agents of Dutch and English East India Companies settled in Persia, 48, 54
- Rhages, 317
- Rich, Claudius J., British Resident at Bagdad (1808-21):
- visits Murgab and Persepolis (1821), 98;
- copies the inscriptions, 99;
- he collects examples of Assyrian writing, 187, 195, 340;
- visits Babylon, and makes a collection of antiquities, now in the British Museum, 193;
- his Memoir on Babylonian inscriptions (1817), ib.;
- suggests that the second Persepolitan was the language of Susa, 194;
- he accepts Grotefend’s conclusions, 195;
- his correspondence with him, ib.;
- publication of his book delayed until 1839, 251, 338, 340
- Rochette, Raoul, 240
- Roe, Sir Thomas, 43
- Rosetta Stone, the, 169
- Ross, Dr., 109
- Russell, Lord John:
- suggested Government grant (1851) in aid of Rawlinson’s work, 386;
- personal gift towards the Bagdad excavations, 408
- Rustam, bas-relief of, 10, 29
- Sacy, Silvestre de, his suggestion to Münter, 161;
- confutation of Lichtenstein’s theories, 167;
- his account of Grotefend’s discovery (1803), 169, 173, 175, 179;
- his reading of the Pehlevi inscription at Naksh-i-Rustam, 171;
- his suggestion with regard to Ormuzd, 181;
- on the varieties of cuneiform character, 183;
- he doubts the validity of Grotefend’s discovery, 191
- St. Martin, M., 96, 109;
- his paper on the inscriptions (1823), 196;
- criticises Grotefend’s method, 197;
- his successful treatment of ‘Goshtasp,’ 199;
- he introduces Grotefend to France, 202;
- example of his transliteration, 208n.
- Salbancke, Joseph (1609), 13
- Salmaneser (or Shalmaneser) II. (Nineveh: Rawlinson’s ‘Temenbar II.’), 383, 394
- Samaria, capture of, by Sargon, 393
- Samson, alleged figure of, at Chehel Minar, 9 sq.
- Sapeires, the (of Herodotus): Lassen’s supposed identification of, 227 sq.
- Sarangia, 219
- Sarayu (or Haroyu), 219n.
- Sarcey, Count de:
- his political and exploring mission from France to Persia, 117 sqq.
- Sargon, 356, 361, 365, 369, 373, 385, 393
- Sar-i-Pul-i-Zohab, 119
- Sarzec, M. de: his inscriptions from Tello, xiv
- Sassanian period, bas-reliefs of, at Naksh-i-Rustam, 7, 10
- Saulcy, F. de:
- an early student of Assyrian, 113, 302, 342;
- essays on Susian (Median) in ‘Journal Asiatique’ (1849-50), 309;
- his erroneous treatment of the syllabary, 311;
- his useful indication of the resemblance of the signs to the Persian, 312;
- its Scythic origin confirmed by his studies, 314;
- his treatment of a Vannic inscription, 349;
- his essays on Assyrian (1847), 362;
- his insistance on the Semitic mode of writing, 377;
- his transliterations and translations compared with Rawlinson, 390;
- his criticisms of Hincks’s syllabarium, 395;
- examination of his claims as a decipherer, 397;
- he afforded no assistance to Rawlinson, 400;
- his work on the Khorsabad Bull inscription (1850), 401;
- his essay in ‘Journal Asiatique’ (1854), 402;
- his comparative failure as a decipherer, 403
- Sayce, A. H., 81n.;
- his translation of Old Susian inscriptions, 137, 324;
- relation of the language of Malamir to Susian (Median), ib.;
- prefers to call the latter ‘Elamite’ or else ‘Amardian,’ 325;
- his ‘revised list of the syllabarium,’ ib.;
- its linguistic relationship to Akkadian, 335;
- his decipherment of Vannic (1893-94), 336n.;
- on the Semitic ‘affinities’ of Babylonian, 351
- Scheil, Father, 146, 384
- Schlegel, Professor, 203n., 221
- Schulz, Professor:
- copies inscriptions at Van and Mount Elvend, 95-96;
- his papers published by Burnouf, 96, 340
- Scythic of ancient Elamites and that of Southern Babylonia: relation not yet determined, 137
- Seal cylinders, 148
- Sefy, Shah, 39
- Semiramis and the rock of Behistun, 102
- Sennacherib:
- inscription of, on a cylinder at Kouyunjik, translated by Fox Talbot, 189;
- Grotefend’s copperplate of it, ib.;
- referred to, 361, 369, 373, 385, 393;
- Annals of, at Kouyunjik, 394
- Serlio, Sebastiano (Bolognese architect, 1534): incorrectly supposed to have drawn the Chehel Minar, 10
- Shapoor, 108
- Shiraz, 2;
- believed by Gouvea to be the ancient Persepolis, 14;
- by Figueroa, to be Cyropolis, 17;
- by Ferrari, to be Persepolis, 25;
- English merchants at, 76
- Shirley, Robert:
- his relations with Gouvea, and conversion to the Catholic faith, 15, 32;
- employed by Shah Abbas as Envoy to European Courts, 32;
- mission from England to Persia to test validity of his credentials, 33 sqq.;
- result of mission: death of Shirley, 38
- Shuster, 109, 134
- Sidon, 385
- Sippara, 145
- Skinner, Mr., 43
- Smith, George:
- his mission to the East by the ‘Daily Telegraph,’ 394;
- resumed Rawlinson’s excavations in 1873, 411;
- his working assistant on the ‘Inscriptions of Western Asia,’ 416;
- Smith’s intimate knowledge of Assyrian, ib.
- Sogdiana, 219
- Solomon, supposed Palace of, at Persepolis, 1;
- tomb of his Mother (so-called) at Pasargadae, 8, 10;
- bridge said to have been built by him, 9
- Southern Babylonia, exploration of, by Mr. Loftus, 409
- Spiegel, M.:
- his transliteration and translation of Le Bruyn No. 131, 233;
- his translation of the Gomates passage in Behistun inscription, 291 and n.;
- on Venice Vase, 292;
- his edition (1862) of all the Persian inscriptions, 297
- Staircase, the, 51, 55, 62 sq., 72 sq., 130;
- differing accounts of the number of its steps, 60
- Standard Inscription of Nebuchadnezzar (also called East India House Inscription), 166
- Stern, M. (of Göttingen), 413
- Stewart, Mr.: obtains copies of Mount Elvend inscriptions, 95, 206
- Stolze, Herr:
- his photographs of Persian antiquities, 128;
- his photogrammetric plan of Persepolis, ib.;
- general estimate of the plates, 130
- Struys, Jean (‘the lying traveller’): his ‘Tomb of Persepolis,’ 58
- Subterraneous passages at Chehel Minar and Naksh-i-Rustam, 67 sq.
- Suez Stone inscription, a quadrilingual found in 1800, 146, 166
- Sumerian, the ancient Scythic language of Irak, xiv;
- the inscriptions found at Susa, 144;
- importance of the discovery, 324, 335;
- called Akkadian by Hincks, 410
- Sumerians, the founders of civilisation in Western Asia, xiii, 410
- Susa, discovery of Achaemenian ruins and inscriptions at, 109, 125, 132-45;
- described by Loftus (1850), 135;
- Dieulafoy (1885), 138;
- De Morgan (1899), 143;
- cuneiform name of, 235
- Susian [Median] language of second column:
- the decipherment accomplished by Westergaard (1844-5), 300;
- Hincks (1846-7), 308;
- De Saulcy (1850), 309;
- Norris (1852-5), 307, 314;
- Oppert (1859), 320;
- Sayce (1874), 325;
- Oppert (1879), 326;
- number of signs, 302, 321, 328;
- their resemblance to Persian and Assyrian, 312, 316, 320, 321, 323;
- language syllabic, 299, 300, 302, 327;
- the ideograms, 328;
- the determinatives, 298, 303;
- supposed to be Aryan, 299, 309;
- Semitic, 313;
- half Semitic, half Aryan, 339;
- shown to belong to the Altaic branch of Turanian, 305, 314, 317, 319, 321, 335;
- variously called Median, 304, 325, 333;
- Scythic, 307, 314;
- Medo-Scythic, 321, 333;
- Susian, 306, 322, 334;
- Elamite or Amardian, 325, 334;
- ‘Anzanisch,’ 334;
- Susian-Median, 334;
- New Susian, 334;
- supposed to be language of Susa, 313;
- of pastoral tribes of Persia, 317;
- of northern Media, 321;
- of the Scythic hordes, 314;
- of the lower classes of Persia, or Medians, 325;
- of Median dynasty of Dejoces, 333.
- See Appendix C.
- Susian [Old]:
- long inscription discovered by Rawlinson (1836), 134, 137, 322;
- others by Dieulafoy (1885), 139;
- and De Morgan (1899), 144;
- a dialect of it found at Malamir, 135;
- their relations to Susian (Median) and Sumerian, 137, 323;
- translated by Oppert and Sayce, ib.
- ‘Susra Inscription,’ the, 134n.
- Sutherland, Captain, 84
- Tabriz, 108
- Tak Kasra (near Bagdad), stone found at (the Caillou Michaux), 166
- Takht-i-Bostan, Sassanian inscriptions at, copied by Flandin, 119
- Takht-i-Cai Khusrau (Throne of Cyrus), Persepolis, 2
- Takht-i-Jamshid (Throne of Jamshid), Persepolis, 2
- Talbot, H. Fox:
- he translates the Annals of Sennacherib, 189;
- and other important inscriptions, 412;
- he proposes to subject the knowledge of Assyrian to a test translation, 413;
- names of the translators, ib.;
- verdict of the jury of examiners, 414
- Tasker, Mr. (English traveller): his three inscriptions from Naksh-i-Rustam tomb, 293
- Tauris, 54
- Tavernier, J. B. (1605-89):
- his travels, 49;
- in Persia with Daulier Deslandes and Thévenot, ib.;
- at Persepolis: finds nothing worth admiring in the ruins, 57
- Taylor, Colonel (British Resident at Bagdad), 109, 111;
- his prism from Nineveh (1830), 340;
- assisted Mr. Loftus in the exploration of Southern Babylonia, 409
- Teispes, 245
- Tello, xiv
- ‘Temenbar II.’ (Nineveh: Rawlinson’s reading for Salmaneser II.), 383
- Texier, Charles F. M., 94:
- his travels in Persia (1840), 115;
- he excels in measurements, but his work superseded by that of Flandin, 117
- Thévenot, J. de (1633-67):
- his Oriental travels suggested by d’Herbelot, 53;
- joins Daulier Deslandes and Chardin at Persepolis, 54;
- his description of the ruins: he gives first adequate account of the bas-reliefs, 56;
- describes the interior of a tomb, 57
- Thimar, 9
- Tiglath Peleser, 408, 412 sq.
- Tombs:
- at Chehel Minar, 22, 51, 56, 68;
- of Naksh-i-Rustam, 2;
- ‘Tomb of the Mother of Solomon’ at Pasargadae, 8, 10;
- ‘Tomb of Daniel’ (Susa), 133 sq.
- Townley, Mr., his private collection of antiquities, 156
- Trilingual inscriptions. See Achaemenian inscriptions
- Turanian origin of the cuneiform writing, 220
- Two Headlands, Port of the (Persian Gulf), 31
- Tychsen, O. G., of Rostock: makes the earliest attempt to decipher the inscriptions (1798), 151
- Tyre, 385
- Unilingual inscriptions, 148
- Upper Karun, valley of the, 135
- Ur, city, 409
- Uradhians (people of Ararat), 336n.
- Urmia, 126
- Valle, Pietro della:
- visits Persia (1617): identifies the mounds at Hillah with site of Babylon, 24;
- made the first collection of Babylonian bricks brought to Europe, 24, 162;
- his description of Persepolis, 26;
- copies five cuneiform signs, 28, 32;
- considers the ruins the remains of a temple, 29;
- gives the earliest account of the tombs of Naksh-i-Rustam, 29;
- his letters not published till 1658, 32
- Van, inscriptions found at, 1, 206
- Vannic language, 336n.;
- writing, 346
- Variants: Assyrian scribes made use of Tables of, 348
- Vases, ‘holy’: import of inscriptions on, 354
- Vases with identical inscriptions, 148
- Vasti, Queen (wife of Artaxerxes), 14
- Vaux, W. S. W.:
- his work on ‘Nineveh and Persepolis,’ 94;
- endeavours to popularise cuneiform study, 407
- Vendidad, original text of, brought to England, 204;
- Anquetil’s work on it, 204 sq.
- ‘Venice Vase,’ the, 148
- Vidal, M. (dragoman at Aleppo): sends Prof. Schulz copies of Mount Elvend inscriptions, 95
- Weisbach, F. H.:
- on the inscriptions of the second column (1890), 297;
- treatment of vowels in his syllabary, 312;
- translation of the unilingual inscription at Persepolis, 319;
- his results compared with Oppert, 326-32;
- calls the language New Susian, 334
- Weissbach, F. H., and W. Bang: on the old Persian inscriptions (1893), 297
- Westergaard, N. L.:
- copies the inscriptions in the Porch at Persepolis, and on Tomb of Darius at Naksh-i-Rustam (1843), 102, 121, 123, 130;
- his exceptional qualifications, 252;
- he undertakes the translation of the Susian (Median) column, 253, 255, 301;
- found a farther list of proper names on tomb inscriptions, 300;
- summary of his results, 302;
- establishes the affinity of the Susian (Median) with the Scythic family of languages, 305
- Whewell, Professor: one of the jury on Fox Talbot’s test translation, 414
- Wilkinson, Sir Gardner, 148;
- one of the jury on Fox Talbot’s test translation, 414
- Williams, Sir W. F., 135
- Wilson, Professor (President of Royal Asiatic Society, 1852):
- regarded the Assyrian inscriptions as still ‘merely dumb memorials of antiquity,’ 413;
- one of the jury on Fox Talbot’s test translation, 414
- Witte, of Rostock, 162
- Yaçna, Burnouf’s Commentary on the, 206, 247
- Yehuda (Judah), in a Khorsabad inscription, 385, 394
- Xerxes:
- buildings at Persepolis, 2, 6, 28, 50, 55, 62;
- drawn by Niebuhr, 77, 117;
- by Flandin, 121, 124;
- photographed by Stolze, 129;
- his bricks found at Susa, 136;
- name deciphered by Grotefend, 173;
- inscriptions at Persepolis on Porch, 6, 100, 102;
- on stairs and palaces, 6, 73, 79, 99;
- at Van and Elvend, 95, 206;
- on Caylus Vase, 146, 148
- Zend-Avesta, the, 173, 203n., 204 sq., 256n.
- Zohab, 134
- Zoroaster, 203