Shushan in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Named from its abundant lilies. Capital of Elam, Cissia, or
Susiana. Asshur-bani-pal, Esarhaddon's successor, in
inscriptions says he took Shur and gives its ground plan
sculptured (Layard Nin. 452), 600 B.C. In Belshazzar's last
year Daniel was at Shushan in the palace (not actually, but
transported in spirit) when he saw the vision (Daniel 8:2).
Cyrus' conquest transferred Shushan to Persia. Darius
Hystaspes and the Achaemenian princes made it the capital.
He founded the grand palace described in Esther 1:5-6. Near
Persia, cooler than Babylon, and having excellent water,
Shushan was a suitable metropolis of the Persian empire. The
kings left it for Ecbatana or Persepolis only in the height
of summer, and for Babylon in the depth of winter; here
Alexander found twelve million and the regalia of the great
king. After this it declined. Shushan lay between the two
streams of the Eulaeus and the Shapur. Canals joined the two
and so surrounded the citadel of Shushan. The Coprates or
"river of Dizful" and the right branch of the Choaspes
("Kerkhah") flowed a few miles E. and W. of the city. Hence
arose its famed fertility.
The Kerkhah water was so excellent that it was
carried about with the great king on his journeys. The ruins
cover a space 6,000 ft. E. to W. by 4,500 from N. to S.; the
circumference is about three miles. Spacious artificial
mounds or platforms stand separated from one another. The
western one, of earth, gravel, and sundried bricks, is
smallest but loftiest, 119 ft. above the Shapur, an obtuse
angled triangle, with corners rounded off and base facing E.
The sides are so steep as to be unapproachable to horsemen
except at three points; round the top is a space of 2,850
ft. This is probably the famous citadel (Herodot. 3:68;
Polyb. 5:48, 14; Strabo 15:3, section 2; Arrian Exp. Al.
3:16). S.E. of this western platform is the great platform
of 60 acres, the eastern face 3,000 ft. long. The third
platform is N. of the other two, a square of 1,000 ft. each
way. The three together form a lozenge pointing almost due
N., 4,500 ft. long by 3,000 broad. E. of these is an
irregular extensive but lower platform, as large as all the
rest put together. Low mounds extend beyond to the Dizful
river.
Sir F. Williams of Kars discovered the bases of
three columns of the palace in the E. of the lozenge, 27 ft.
6 in. from center to center, similar to the "great hall"
(Chel Minar) at Persepolis. "Loftus" (Chaldaea Susiana)
ascertained next the position of all the 72 pillars of the
original palace. On the bases of four columns were found
trilingual inscriptions in the three languages used by the
Achaemenian kings at Behistun. E. Norris deciphered the
first part: "says Artaxerxes, the great king, king of kings,
king of the country, king of the earth, son of king Darius
... Darius was the son of king Artaxerxes ... Artaxerxes
was...
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