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Note on the Persian Inscriptions at Behistun

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2011

Abstract

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Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1847

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References

page XII note 1 Herod, lib. iii. c. 70.

page XII note 2 Lib. iii. c. 118, 119.

page XIII note 1 Herod, lib. iii. c. 68 to 70.

page XIII note 2 Lib. vii. c. 62.

page XIII note 3 Lib. iii. c. 68.

page XIII note 4 Lib. iii. c. 141

page XIII note 5 There is also an Otanes, married to a daughter of Darius, who commanded in the war against Ionia and Æolia, in B.C. 497, and took Clazomenæ and Cyme; but this is neither the conspirator, nor the leader of the Persian contingent.

page XIII note 6 Herod. lib. vii. c. 61.

page XIV note 1 Phot. Bib. p. 1158.

page XIV note 2 Herod, lib. vii. c. 82.

page XIV note 1 Herod, lib. ix. c. 62, 63.

page XIV note 4 Lib. vii. c. 2.

page XV note 1 Herod, lib. vii. c. 5.

page XV note 2 Lib. vi. c. 43.

page XV note 3 Lib. iv; c. 132, 134.

page XV note 4 Ctesias, whose great object it wag to differ with Herodotus, named the fellow conspirator of Darius, instead of confounding the father and son, as in the case of Otanes and Anaphes. In speaking also of the favour which Mardonius enjoyed at the Court of Xerxes before the Grecian expedition was set on foot, he calls him as if he really supposed him to be the same noble who helped to slay the Magian thirty-six years previously.

page XV note 5 Herod, lib. vii. c. 35.

page XV note 6 Ib. c. 83.

page XV note 7 Ib. c. 65.

page XV note 8 Strabo, , Oxf. Edit. p. 771. The last king of the line was Orontes, who was dispossessed by Artaxius and Zadriadris.Google Scholar

page XVI note 1 Herod, lib. iii. c. 134 to 160.

page XVII note 1 For notices of Megabyzus and Zopyrus, see Herod, lib. vii. c. 82, and lib. iii. c.160, and Ctesias, passim. The or left in command in Europe after Darius had returned from Scythia, was a different person altogether.

page XIX note 1 Oxford Edit. p. 1031.