Persepolis (Iran) Vacation Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Persepolis in Iran.
Persepolis, City Of The Persians, is located within a fertile plain surrounded by mountains in what is today the Iranian province of Fars. The ruins of the former residence of the Achaemenid Empire are one of the greatest and most impressive palace complexes in the world, with mighty gateways, extensive barracks, reception and audience halls, as well as royal palaces. It is the most important architectural legacy of the first Persian Empire which had its heyday between the sixth and fourth centuries B.C. Dareios The Great began construction of his ceremonial capital city shortly after he had attained power as Third Emperor of Persia. Although he already had two capital cities, Pasargadae and Susa, he wanted to present to the world a third impressive city. For fifty eight years, Ionic stonemasons, Babylonian brick makers, Median and Egyptian goldsmiths, worked in Persepolis and created what was an indelible symbol of the Achaemenid Empire. Today, cleared of rubble and sand, its former glory can be imagined in full: Persepolis the magnificent!
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Persepolis, Iran
Persepolis, Iran
Ruins of Persepolis, capital of Persian Empire, Iran
Persepolis was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire, being situated 60 km northeast of the city of Shiraz in Fars Province, Iran. It exemplifies the Achaemenid style of architecture. These ruins are an UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1979.
There can be seen The Gate of All Nations or Gate of Xerxes palace. Darius I built the greatest palace at Persepolis on the western side. This palace was called the Apadana. Next to the Apadana, second largest building of the Terrace and the final edifices, is the Throne Hall or the Imperial Army's Hall of Honor (also called the Hundred-Columns Palace).
Other palaces included the Tachara, which was built under Darius I and The Hadish Palace of Xerxes I. The Council Hall, the Tryplion Hall, the Palaces of D, G, H, storerooms, stables and quarters, the unfinished gateway and a few miscellaneous structures at Persepolis are located near the south-east corner of the terrace, at the foot of the mountain.
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Persepolis-Histoire de l'Iran
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Persepolis (Iran) Vacation Travel Video Guide
Travel Video about Destination Persepolis in Iran.
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Joanna Lumley's Silk Road Adventure | Discovering the Ruins of Persepolis | ITV
Joanna ends her journey of Iran in the ruined city of Persepolis, founded in 518BC by Darius the Great. She wanders through the huge site, past fluted columns, and bas-reliefs of tribes from as far and wide as India, Russia, Armenia and Greece, bringing gifts of wine, cloth, ceramics and more to pay tribute to the Persian kings. Catch up now on the ITV Hub:
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The Ancient Iran: Persia : Persepolis; Apadana
Ancient Iran, an animation from British Museum.
Persepolis Iran تخت جمشید
Persepolis, literally meaning city of Persians, was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire (ca. 550–330 BCE). Persepolis is situated 70 km northeast of city of Shiraz in Fars Province in Iran. The earliest remains of Persepolis date back to 515 BCE. It exemplifies the Achaemenid style of architecture. UNESCO declared the ruins of Persepolis a World Heritage Site in 1979
Iran: Persepolis
Persepolis ist eine historische Stätte, die 517 vor Christus bekannt wurde. Sie liegt ca 1000 km südlich von Teheran in der nähe von Shiraz und ist UNESCO Weltkulturerbe.
Persepolis, Irán HD
Persépolis en #viajeairan #shiraz, #shiraziran, #Persépolis ,capital del Imperio Aqueménida #iran #persepolisiran , es una de las grandes maravillas de Irán Imperio Persa declarada Patrimonio de la Humanidad por la UNESCO.Construida en el siglo VI a.C, La construcción la inicio Darío I alrededor del 519 a.C y fue continuada por sus sucesores Jerjes I y Artajerjes I durante los dos siglos siguientes. Y esa continua ampliación sólo fue detenida por la conquista macedónica de Alejandro Magno.
Persepolis # Persepolis, capital of the Achaemenid Empire #iran #persepolisiran, is one of the great wonders of Iran Persian Empire declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. Built in the 6th century BC, the construction of Darius I began around 519 BC and was continued by his successors Xerxes I and Artaxerxes I during the following two centuries. And that continued expansion was only stopped by the Macedonian conquest of Alexander the Great. السياحة الايرانية #persepolishd
Destruction of Persepolis - Iran by Alexander
This is an excerpt of the video Lost Worlds by Discovery channel . It explains how and why Greeks destroyed the Persepolis and the Persian civilization.
Iran - Persepolis Excavation
The Excavation of Persepolis is one of the cultural highlights of Iran. Persepolis is located close to Shiraz in Iran.
It was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire (ca. 550-330 BC). The earliest remains of Persepolis date from around 515 BC. UNESCO declared the citadel of Persepolis a World Heritage Site in 1979.
This clip is a reworked version of clip
Persepolis is located close to Shiraz in Iran.
The background music of this clip is royalty free music from Jon Sayles (
Tehran derby, Iran 2015–16 Esteghlal vs Persepolis
2015/10/30 football Persian Gulf Pro League
Esteghlal 1-1 Persepolis
attendance 90,000
イランサッカー国内リーグ、エステグラルvsペルセポリス。
ともに首都テヘランを本拠地とし、テヘランダービーとして世界でも有数のダービーマッチと評されている。
当日の来場は9万人、テヘランが赤と青に二分される日。
Chicago joins Iran in banning Persepolis
During the past few days, Chicago Public Schools' has garnered a lot of attention after the city announced that students would be forced to find new faculties to attend. A total of 51 elementary schools are scheduled to close, but that isn't the only thing that is coming to end. The novel Persepolis is being cut from the seventh grade curriculum and many are protesting the claims that the book is to graphic and portrays powerful images of torture. RT's Anastasia Churkina has more on the ban.
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The Persepolis Plateau Iran's Antediluvian Jewel's (Part 1)
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Narration By Don Moffit: DonMoffit.com
There are many ancient sites which upon exploration, create an air of doubt surrounding the academic explanation as to their origins.
Supposed constructors simply incapable of creating such wonders. Raising logical questions within the minds of the astute.
With Iran being a place littered with such structures, one of the most famous of which, known as Persepolis.
Found upon the banks of the river Pulvar, this plateau of trilithons and mythical carvings, simply baffle modern sculptures and indeed the modern man.
The site possesses claimed Achaemenid styles of architecture.
Although we feel these claims are a misconception, and are in reality, the work of someone else.
Declared a World Heritage Site in 1979, the ancient Persians, claimed it as their own city, naming it “Pārsa,” which means Old Persian.
However, it seems, like so many other inexplicable sites found around the world, it was simply re-inhabited, yet unlike these many other sites, inscriptions found upon buried treasure at the site, actually possesses an inscription, left by one of the oldest rulers of the Persians, openly admitting this re-inhabitation as a reality.
Treasure found still successfully concealed at the site, a sign of the people’s loyalty to their king, not discovered until modern times, presumably protected by them, and its secret location, until theuir death at the hands of Alexander The Greats invaders. Solid gold & silver tablets preserving the kings account of the site’s origin.
Quote,
Darius the great king, king of kings, king of countries, son of Hystaspes, this is the kingdom which I hold, from the Sacae who are beyond Sogdia, to Kush, from Sind to the Indus valley to Lydia and the Oldest of Persia Spardâ, - this, bestowed upon me by Ahuramazda, the greatest of gods. May Ahuramazda protect me and my royal house!
An inscription I perceive as an explanation that the ruler himself, due to the site’s8888 incredible nature, believed it had been built by the gods, and by divine right, had been bestowed upon him.
Archaeological evidence accumulated by the French archaeologist André Godard, who excavated Persepolis in the early 1930s, believed that it was Cyrus the Great, who chose the site Persepolis was built upon, and that Darius I built the terrace and the palaces. These conclusions, I assert were due to Darius and Cyrus re-utilising such structures as their places of burial, this due to their divine perceptions, explained upon these once hidden treasures.
When one visits the site, they are initially confronted with gigantic megalithic stones, not only within its foundations, creating the platform used as a stronghold for many years. But also, somehow set aloft, forming still existing trilithons, which regardless of the demolition efforts undertaken by alexander, still litter the site.
A 125,000 square meter terrace artificially constructed, partly cut straight out of Rahmat mountain.
An additional factor which supports my argument, of a highly advanced builder, are the Lamassu.
These mythical animals reminiscent of centaurs are many tons in weight, and in a previous video, we shown the tremendous challenge a mere 150 years ago, transporting such megaliths was.
Not to mention the tremendous artistic achievements these stone carvings would have been, along with countless other, intricate, masterfully carved artworks, throughout the site which mystify all who gaze upon them.
Furthermore, and perhaps most interesting, are the far more primitive looking versions. Some argue were incomplete, others argue were attempts by future primitive cultures.
These attempts, although in some areas share tool markings reminiscent of patterns, like those of the stone cutting technologies we have recently been studying in depth, may just bes mere coincidences due to the random hacking, that seems to have been undertaken upon the stones.
Due to the positioning of the Persepolis plateau, it was logically not constructed as a military stronghold, but rather a temple devoted to something else.
It is a site full of compelling features, most of which, in direct contradiction to that which is claimed by modern academia, and indeed their institutional cohorts, Iran’s museums, it is a site, we find, highly compelling.
Persepolis background: Iran and the Iranian Revolution
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Persepolis - Tea Mage Goes To Iran
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