Relief-carved Fragment from Persepolis
On View In:

Artist:   Persian  
Title:   Relief-carved Fragment from Persepolis  
Date:   486-465 B.C.  
Medium:   Limestone  
Dimensions:   6 1/4 x 9 3/8 x 1 3/4 in. (15.88 x 23.81 x 4.45 cm) (irregular)  
Credit Line:   Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton  
Location:   Gallery Not on view  

This rare stone fragment bearing the carved profile head of a “foreign delegate” is from the north staircase of the great audience hall known as the Apadana at Persepolis; the magnificent ceremonial palace complex of the ancient Persian kings, Darius I (522-486 B.C.) and Xerxes I (486-456 B.C.). By the time of Xerxes I, the huge Persian empire included Lydia, Babylon, Syria, Palestine, Phoenicia, Egypt, parts of Central Asia and, for a time, Attica in Greece. Darius seems to have personally selected the pictorial theme of all the low-relief sculpture decorating his palace. Peoples of all the subject nations of the Persian empire paid yearly tribute to the great kings at Persepolis and many of these foreign dignitaries and delegates were represented in the extensive sculptural scenes of the major stairways. The largest stone palace of the ancient world, Persepolis was destroyed by Alexander the Great in 330 B.C. Its imposing remains in southwestern Iran are a testament to the power and wealth of one of the greatest empires of antiquity.


Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Sticker 'Persepolis', in black ink, on a sticker fragment, on top  
Classification:   Sculpture  
Physical Description:   bust-length profile of a man, carved in relief, with curly hair and a curly beard  
Creation Place:   Asia, Persia (Iran)  
Accession #:   2000.88  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts