Persepolis , ancient city of Persia, ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid empire under Darius I and his successors. The administrative capitals were elsewhere,
notably at Susa and Babylon. The ruins of Persepolis lie 30 mi (48 km) NE of Shiraz
in a fertile plain of the Pulvar River, with strong natural mountain
defenses. There are ruins of the palaces of Darius
I, Xerxes, and later kings as well as
the citadel that contained the treasury looted by Alexander;
the ruins lie on a huge platform constructed of limestone from the adjacent
mountain. A few miles distant are the rock-hewn tombs of Achaemenid
kings and monuments of the Sassanids on a
mountainside called by the natives Naqsh-e-Rostam for the legendary
Persian hero Rustam. In the same place there is a 3,000-year-old inscription
of Shutruk-Nakhkhunte, a famous Elamite king (c.12071171 B.C.). Scattered over the plain, a short distance from the platform of Persepolis,
are the ruins of Stakhr or Estakhr, the official capital of the Sassanids, whose administrative capital was Ctesiphon. Excavations have disclosed, 2 mi (3 km) away, a village of the Neolithic period,
with mural decorations in red ocher that date back to about 4000 B.C.