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{{Short description|Ancient clay cylinder with Akkadian cuneiform script}}
{{unbalanced}}
{{Infobox artefact
{{Articleissues| weasel = September 2008| quotefarm = September 2008| globalize = September 2008}}
| name = Cyrus Cylinder
| image = ] ] ]
| image_caption = The Cyrus Cylinder, obverse and reverse sides, and transcription
| material = Baked clay
| size = {{convert|21.9|cm|in}} x {{convert|10|cm|in}} (maximum) x (end A) {{convert|7.8|cm|in}} x (end B) {{convert|7.9|cm|in}}<ref name="BM-database" />
| writing = ] ]
| created = About 539–538 BC
| period = ]<ref name="BM-database" />
| discovered = ], ] of ], by ] in March 1879<ref name="BM-database" />
| location = Room 52,<ref name="BM-database" /> ] (London)
| id = BM 90920 <ref name="BM-database" />
| registration = {{British-Museum-db|1880,0617.1941|id=327188}} <ref name="BM-database" />
}}
The '''Cyrus Cylinder''' is an ancient clay cylinder, now broken into several pieces, on which is written an ] in ] ] script in the name of the ]n king ].<ref name="Dandamayev-Cylinder" /><ref name="Kuhrt-2007a">], p. 70, 72</ref> It dates from the 6th century BC and was discovered in the ruins of the ancient ]n city of ] (now in modern ]) in 1879.<ref name="Dandamayev-Cylinder">]</ref> It is currently in the possession of the ]. It was created and used as a ] following the ] in 539 BC, when the ] was invaded by Cyrus and incorporated into his ].


The text on the Cylinder praises Cyrus, sets out his genealogy and portrays him as a king from a line of kings. The Babylonian king ], who was defeated and deposed by Cyrus, is denounced as an impious oppressor of the people of Babylonia and his low-born origins are implicitly contrasted to Cyrus' kingly heritage. The victorious Cyrus is portrayed as having been chosen by the chief Babylonian god ] to restore peace and order to the Babylonians. The text states that Cyrus was welcomed by the people of Babylon as their new ruler and entered the city in peace. It appeals to Marduk to protect and help Cyrus and his son ]. It extols Cyrus as a benefactor of the citizens of Babylonia who improved their lives, repatriated displaced people and restored temples and cult sanctuaries across ] and elsewhere in the region. It concludes with a description of how Cyrus repaired the city wall of Babylon and found a similar inscription placed there by an earlier king.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007a" />
]
The '''Cyrus cylinder''', also known as the '''Cyrus the Great cylinder''', is a document issued by the ] emperor ] in the form of a clay cylinder inscribed in ] ]. The cylinder was created following the ] in 539 BC, when Cyrus overthrew the Babylonian king ] and replaced him as ruler, ending the ]. The text of the cylinder denounces Nabonidus as impious and portrays the victorious Cyrus as pleasing to the chief god ]. It goes on to describe how Cyrus had improved the lives of the citizens of Babylonia, repatriated displaced peoples and restored temples and cult sanctuaries.


The Cylinder's text has traditionally been seen by biblical scholars as corroborative evidence of Cyrus' policy of the ] of the ] following their ]<ref name="BM-CC" /> (an act that the ] attributes to Cyrus<ref name="Free">], p. 204</ref>), as the text refers to the restoration of cult sanctuaries and repatriation of deported peoples.<ref name="Becking" /> This interpretation has been disputed, as the text identifies only Mesopotamian sanctuaries, and makes no mention of Jews, Jerusalem, or Judea.<ref name="Janzen" /> Nonetheless, it has been seen as a sign of Cyrus's relatively enlightened approach towards cultural and religious diversity. The former Director of the ], ], said that the cylinder was "the first attempt we know about running a society, a state with different nationalities and faiths{{snd}}a new kind of statecraft".<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/fa/contents/articles/opinion/2013/03/cyrus-cylinder-iran-religious-freedom-minority-rights.html |title=Cyrus Cylinder a Reminder of Persian Legacy of Tolerance |author=Barbara Slavin |publisher=Al-Monitor |date=6 March 2013 |access-date=21 September 2013}}</ref>
The cylinder had been placed under the walls of Babylon as a ]. It was discovered in 1879 by the ]-] archaeologist ] in the foundations of the ] (i.e., the Marduk temple of Babylon) and is kept today in the ] in ]. There have been reports of attempts by the directors of the British Museum and the ] in ] to arrange a loan of the Cyrus Cylinder to be temporarily displayed in the National Museum of Iran for a special exhibition.<ref>Cultural Heritage News Agency, ''Cyrus Cylinder to be returned to Iran'', Tehran, June 25, 2008, .</ref>


In modern times, the Cylinder was adopted as a ] of Iran by the ruling ], which put it on display in ] in 1971 to commemorate the ].<ref name="Ansari" /> Princess ] presented ] ] with a replica of the Cylinder. The princess asserted that "the heritage of Cyrus was the heritage of human understanding, tolerance, courage, compassion and, above all, human liberty".<ref name="UN" /> Her brother, ] ], promoted the Cylinder as the "first charter of human rights", though this interpretation has been described by various historians as "rather ]" and controversial.<ref name="Daniel" /><ref name="Mitchell" /><ref name="Arnold" /><ref name="KQED-cylinder" />
Various interpretations of the cylinder have been advanced: the British Museum characterizes it as a declaration of reform reflecting a long tradition in Mesopotamia. <ref name=BM-CC></ref><ref name="BM-Cyrus">British Museum explanatory notes, "Cyrus Cylinder": "For almost 100 years the cylinder was regarded as ancient Mesopotamian propaganda. This changed in 1971 when the Shah of Iran used it as a central image in his own propaganda celebrating 2500 years of Iranian monarchy. In Iran, the cylinder has appeared on coins, banknotes and stamps. Despite being a Babylonian document it has become part of Iran's cultural identity."</ref><ref>See also Amélie Kuhrt, "Babylonia from Cyrus to Xerxes", in ''The Cambridge Ancient History: Vol IV - Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean'', p. 124. Ed. John Boardman. Cambridge University Press, 1982. ISBN 0521228042</ref> composed in a form that matched long-standing Babylonian styles and themes. In this context, it would demonstrate Cyrus seeking the loyalty of his new Babylonian subjects by stressing his legitimacy as king, and showing his respect for the religious and political traditions of Babylonia. In the early 1970s, the ] adopted it as a symbol of his own propaganda and celebrating 2,500 years of Iranian monarchy, claiming that it was "the first human rights charter in history",<ref name="BM-Cyrus" /><ref name="MacGregor">Neil MacGregor, "The whole world in our hands", in ''Art and Cultural Heritage: Law, Policy, and Practice'', p. 383-4, ed. Barbara T. Hoffman. Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 0521857643</ref><ref name="Farrokh">Kaveh Farrokh, ''Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War'', p. 44. Osprey Publishing, 2007. ISBN 1846031087</ref> though this interpretation has sometimes been criticized as "anachronistic and erroneous," since it followed closely earlier traditions as noted.<ref name="Mitchell">See e.g. T.C. Mitchell, ''Biblical Archaeology: Documents from the British Museum'', p. 82. Cambridge University Press, 1988. ISBN 0521368677</ref> The cylinder has also attracted attention in the context of the repatriation of the ] to ] following their ]; many have viewed it as corroboration of the account in the ], though the extent to which this is the case remains disputed.


==Discovery== == Discovery ==
]
The ]-] archaeologist ] discovered the Cyrus Cylinder in March 1879 during a lengthy programme of excavations in Mesopotamia carried out for the British Museum.<ref name="Finkel">], p. 172</ref> It had been placed as a ] in the foundations of the ], the city's main temple.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007a" /> Rassam's expedition followed on from an earlier dig carried out in 1850 by the British archaeologist ], who excavated three mounds in the same area but found little of importance.<ref name="Vos" /> In 1877, Layard became Britain's ambassador to the ], which ruled Mesopotamia at the time. He helped Rassam, who had been his assistant in the 1850 dig, to obtain a '']'' (decree) from the ] ] to continue the earlier excavations. The ''firman'' was only valid for a year but a second ''firman'', with much more liberal terms, was issued in 1878. It was granted for two years (through to 15 October 1880) with the promise of an extension to 1882 if required.<ref name="Hilprecht">], pp. 204–05</ref> The Sultan's decree authorised Rassam to "pack and dispatch to England any antiquities found ... provided, however, there were no duplicates". A representative of the Sultan was instructed to be present at the dig to examine the objects as they were uncovered.<ref name="Rassam">], p. 223</ref>


With permission secured, Rassam initiated a large-scale excavation at Babylon and other sites on behalf of the Trustees of the British Museum.<ref name="Vos" /> He undertook the excavations in four distinct phases. In between each phase, he returned to England to bring back his finds and raise more funds for further work. The Cyrus Cylinder was found on the second of his four expeditions to Mesopotamia, which began with his departure from London on 8 October 1878. He arrived in his home town of ] on 16 November and travelled down the ] to ], which he reached on 30 January 1879. During February and March, he supervised excavations on a number of Babylonian sites, including Babylon itself.<ref name="Hilprecht" />
The cylinder was discovered following an earlier, fruitless excavation by the British archaeologist ]. In 1850 Layard dug into three mounds on the site of the ruined city of Babylon but found little of importance and concluded that it was not worth his time continuing there. His assistant Hormuzd Rassam, a controversial figure remembered as much for his brutal tactics as his discoveries, returned to the mounds in 1879 on behalf of the British Museum. He uncovered a number of important buildings, most notably the Esagila - a major temple to Marduk, though it was not identified as such until ]'s excavation of 1900. Rassam's excavations found a large quantity of business documents and, buried in the temple's foundations, the Cyrus Cylinder.<ref>H.F. Vos, "Archaeology of Mesopotamia", p. 267 in ''The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia'', ed. Geoffrey W. Bromiley. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1995. ISBN 0802837816</ref> Rassam's excavations went on until 1882.<ref>Clifford M. Jones, ''Cambridge Bible commentary: Old Testament illustrations'', p. 94. Cambridge University Press, 1971. ISBN 052108007X</ref> The cylinder was announced to the public by ] at a meeting of the ] on 17 November 1879.<ref>"Royal Asiatic Society", ''The Times'', 18 November 1879</ref> Rawlinson's paper on "A newly discovered Cylinder of Cyrus the Great" was published in the society's journal the following year.


]
==Description and content==
He soon uncovered a number of important buildings including the Ésagila temple, a major shrine to the chief Babylonian god ], although its identity was not fully confirmed until the German archaeologist ]'s excavation of 1900.<ref name="Koldewey">], p. vi</ref> The excavators found a large number of business documents written on clay tablets buried in the temple's foundations where they discovered the Cyrus Cylinder.<ref name="Vos">], p. 267</ref> Rassam gave conflicting accounts of where his discoveries were made. He wrote in his memoirs, ''Asshur and the land of Nimrod'', that the Cylinder had been found in a mound at the southern end of Babylon near the village of Jumjuma or Jimjima.<ref>], p. 267</ref><ref>], p. 264</ref> However, in a letter sent on 20 November 1879 to ], the Keeper of Oriental Antiquities at the British Museum, he wrote, "The Cylinder of Cyrus was found at Omran with about six hundred pieces of inscribed terracottas before I left Baghdad."<ref name="Walker">], pp. 158–59</ref> He left Baghdad on 2 April, returning to Mosul and departing from there on 2 May for a journey to London which lasted until 19 June.<ref name="Hilprecht" />


The discovery was announced to the public by ], the President of the ], at a meeting of the Society on 17 November 1879.<ref>]</ref> He described it as "one of the most interesting historical records in the cuneiform character that has yet been brought to light", though he erroneously described it as coming from the ancient city of ] rather than Babylon.<ref>]</ref> Rawlinson's "Notes on a newly-discovered Clay Cylinder of Cyrus the Great" were published in the society's journal the following year, including the first partial translation of the text.<ref name="Rawlinson">], pp. 70–97</ref>
] in ].]]
The text consists of two fragments, known as "A" (lines: 1-35, measures: 23 x 8&nbsp;cm) and "B" (36-45, 8.6 x 5.6&nbsp;cm). "A" has always been in the British Museum. "B" was originally kept in the Babylonian Collection of ], but was identified as a fragment of the cylinder by P.-R. Berger in 1970.<ref>Berger, P.-R., "Das Neujahrsfest nach den Königsinschriften des ausgehenden babylonischen Reiches", in: A. Finet (ed.), Actes de la XVIIe Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 30 juin – 4 juillet 1969 (Comité belge de recherches en Mésopotamie, Ham-sur-Heure, 1970 ), pp. 155-159.</ref> It was subsequently transferred to the British Museum in 1971 to be rejoined to the "A" fragment.<ref>John Curtis, Nigel Tallis, Béatrice André-Salvini, ''Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia'', p. 59. University of California Press, 2005. ISBN 0520247310</ref> The inscription has six distinct parts in its 45 lines: first, a introduction reviling ], the previous king of Babylon, and associating Cyrus with the god Marduk (lines 1-19); second, a royal protocol and genealogy (lines 20-22); third, a commendation of Cyrus's policy of restoring Babylon (lines 22-34); fourth, a prayer to Marduk by Cyrus on behalf of himself and his son ] (lines 34-35); fifth, a declaration about the good condition of the ] (lines 36-37); and finally, details of the building activities ordered by Cyrus in Babylon (lines 38-45).<ref name="Wiesehofer">Josef Wiesehofer trans. Azizeh Azodi, ''Ancient Persia: From 550 BC to 650 AD'', pp. 44-45. I.B.Tauris, 2001. ISBN 1860646751</ref>


== Description ==
The text begins by listing the alleged crimes of Nabonidus, charging him with desecration of the temples of the gods and the imposition of ] upon the populace. Marduk is highly displeased by Nabonidus' cruelties, and so the god calls upon a foreign king, Cyrus of the Persians, to conquer Babylon and become its new king with the god's divine blessing:
The Cyrus Cylinder is a barrel-shaped cylinder of baked clay measuring {{convert|22.5|cm|in}} by {{convert|10|cm|in}} at its maximum diameter.<ref name="BM-database">{{cite web|url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectid=327188&partid=1|title=The Cyrus Cylinder (British Museum database)|access-date=19 June 2010}}</ref> It was created in several stages around a cone-shaped core of clay within which there are large grey stone inclusions. It was built up with extra layers of clay to give it a cylindrical shape before a fine surface slip of clay was added to the outer layer, on which the text is inscribed. It was excavated in several fragments, having apparently broken apart in antiquity.<ref name="BM-database" /> Today it exists in two main fragments, known as "A" and "B", which were reunited in 1972.<ref name="BM-database" />


The main body of the Cylinder, discovered by Rassam in 1879, is fragment "A". It underwent restoration in 1961, when it was re-fired and plaster filling was added.<ref name="BM-database" /> The smaller fragment, "B", is a section measuring {{convert|8.6|cm|in}} by {{convert|5.6|cm|in}}. The latter fragment was acquired by J.B. Nies<ref name="Walker" /> of ] from an antiquities dealer.<ref>], p. 59</ref> Nies published the text in 1920.<ref name="Nies">]</ref> The fragment was apparently broken off the main body of the Cylinder during the original excavations in 1879 and was either removed from the excavations or was retrieved from one of Rassam's waste dumps. It was not confirmed as part of the Cylinder until Paul-Richard Berger of the ] definitively identified it in 1970.<ref name="Berger">], pp. 155–59</ref> Yale University lent the fragment to the British Museum temporarily (but, in practice, indefinitely) in exchange for "a suitable cuneiform tablet" from the British Museum collection.<ref name="BM-database" />
:"The worship of Marduk, the king of the gods, he ed into abomination. Daily he used to do evil against his city ... He scanned and looked all the countries, searching for a righteous ruler willing to lead . he pronounced the name of Cyrus, king of ], declared him to be the ruler of all the world."


Although the Cylinder clearly post-dates Cyrus the Great's conquest of Babylon in 539 BC, the date of its creation is unclear. It is commonly said to date to the early part of Cyrus's reign over Babylon, some time after 539 BC. The British Museum puts the Cylinder's date of origin at between 539 and 530 BC.<ref name="BM-CC" />
Cyrus goes on to call himself "king of the world, great king, legitimate king, king of Babylon, king of ] and ], king of the four quarters (of the earth), son of ], great king, king of Anshan, descendent of ], great king, king of Anshan, of a family (which) always (exercised) kingship; whose rule ] and ] love, whom they want as king to please their hearts." He describes the pious deeds he performed after his conquest: he restored peace to Babylon and the other cities sacred to Marduk, freeing their inhabitants from their "yoke", and he "brought relief to their dilapidated housing (thus) putting an end to their (main) complaints."<ref name="Mallowan">Max Mallowan, "Cyrus the Great (558-529 B.C.)", in ''The Cambridge History of Iran'', pp. 409-411, eds. Richard Nelson Frye, William Bayne Fisher. Cambridge University Press, 1968. ISBN 0521200911</ref> He repaired the ruined temples in the cities he conquered, restored their cults, and returned their sacred images as well as their former inhabitants which Narbonidus had taken to Babylon.<ref name="Pritchard">"The Ancient Near East, Volume I: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures". Vol. 1. Ed. James B. Pritchard. Princeton University Press, 1973.</ref> In the smaller "B" fragment of the cylinder, Cyrus says: "In I saw inscribed the name of my predecessor King ]". The remainder is missing but presumably describes Cyrus's rededication of the gateway mentioned.{{Request quotation|date=September 2008}}<ref>John F. Kutsko, '' Divine Presence and Absence in the Book of Ezekiel'', p. 123. Eisenbrauns, 2000. ISBN 1575060418</ref>


=== Text ===
The fragmentary nature of the inscription meant that the full text of the cylinder was, for a long time, unclear and incomplete. A partial translation by F.H. Weissbach in 1911<ref>Weissbach, F.H., ''Die Keilinschriften der Achämeniden'' (Vorderasiatische Bibliotek, 3; Leipzig; J.C. Hinrichs) (reprinted Leipzig: Zentral-Antiquariat der DDR, 1968)</ref> was supplanted by a much more complete transcription after the identification of the "B" fragment; this is now available in German<ref>Schaudig, Hanspeter. ''Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros' des Grossen samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften: Textausgabe und Grammatik (Alter Orient und Altes Testament)'', 2001. Ugarit-Verlag, 2001. ISBN 3927120758</ref> and in English<ref name="Pritchard" /><ref>Hallo, William W. (ed). ''The Context of Scripture'', I-III (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1997-2002)</ref>.
{{Wikisource|Cyrus cylinder}}
The surviving inscription on the Cyrus Cylinder consists of 45 lines of text written in Akkadian cuneiform script. The first 35 lines are on fragment "A" and the remainder are on fragment "B".<ref name="Berger" /> A number of lines at the start and end of the text are too badly damaged for more than a few words to be legible.


The text is written in an extremely formulaic style that can be divided into six distinct parts:
==Interpretation==
], 1884).]]
===As an instrument of royal propaganda===
* Lines 1–19: an introduction reviling ], the previous king of Babylon, and associating Cyrus with the god Marduk;
]
* Lines 20–22: detailing Cyrus's royal titles and genealogy, and his peaceful entry to Babylon;
The type and formulation of the cylinder was typically Babylonian and stands in a Mesopotamian tradition, dating back to the third millennium BC, of kings making similar declarations of their own righteousness when beginning their reigns.<ref>A. Kuhrt "The Cyrus Cylinder and Achaemenid imperial policy" in ''Journal of Studies of the Old Testament'' 25 pp. 83-97; ], "Did Cyrus the Great introduce a new policy towards subdued nations? Cyrus in Assyrian perspective" in ''Persica'' 10 pp. 273-285; M. Dandamaev ''A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire'', pp. 52-53 (with previous bibliography); P.-A. Beaulieu, "An Episode in the Fall of Babylon to the Persians", JNES vol. 52 n. 4 Oct. 1993. p. 243.; ], ''Ancient Persia from 550 BC to 650 AD'', 2006 1996 , p. 82; ], ''From Cyrus to Alexander'', pp. 43-43.</ref><ref></ref><ref name=livius>{{cite web | last = Lendering | first = Jona | authorlink = Jona Lendering | title = The Cyrus Cylinder | publisher = livius.org | date = ] | url = http://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder.html | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref> The cylinder is an example of a specific Mesopotamian literary genre, the royal building inscription, which had no equivalent in ] literature. The text illustrates how Cyrus co-opted local traditions and symbols to legitimize his control of Babylon.<ref name="Winn Leith">Mary Joan Winn Leith, "Israel among the Nations: The Persian Period", in ''The Oxford History of the Biblical World'', pp. 285, ed. Michael David Coogan. Oxford University Press US, 1998. ISBN 0195139372</ref> Many elements of the text were drawn from traditional Mesopotamian themes; ] notes that "such pious examples of temple work were part of a standard process of legitimisation in Babylonia, and thus follow conventional forms". These forms included a number of standard tropes, all of which are visible in the Cyrus cylinder: the preceding king is vilified and he is proclaimed to have been abandoned by the gods for his wickedness; the new king has gained power through the divine will of the gods; the new king rights the wrongs of his predecessor, addressing the welfare of the people; the sanctuaries of the gods are rebuilt or restored, offerings to the gods are made or increased and the blessings of the gods are sought; and repairs are made to the whole city, in the manner of earlier rightful kings.<ref name="Kuhrt-Corpus">Amélie Kuhrt, ''The Persian Empire: A Corpus of Sources of the Achaemenid Period'', p. 72. Routledge, 2007. ISBN 0415436281</ref>
* Lines 22–34: a commendation of Cyrus's policy of restoring Babylon;
* Lines 34–35: a prayer to Marduk on behalf of Cyrus and his son ];
* Lines 36–37: a declaration that Cyrus has enabled the people to live in peace and has increased the offerings made to the gods;
* Lines 38–45: details of the building activities ordered by Cyrus in Babylon.<ref name="Wiesehöfer-2001">], pp. 44–45.</ref>


]
Two notable point of comparison are the earlier commemorative cylinder of ], who seized the Babylonian throne in 722/1 BC, and the annals of ] of Assyria, who conquered Babylon twelve years later. As a usurper, Marduk-apla-iddina faced many of the same issues of legitimacy that Cyrus was later to face as conqueror of Babylon. He declares himself to have been chosen personally by Marduk, who ensured his victory. When he took power he performed the sacred rites and restored the sacred shrines. He states that he found a royal inscription placed in the temple foundations by an earlier Babylonian king, which he left undisturbed and honored. All of these claims also appear in Cyrus's cylinder. Twelve years later, the Assyrian king ] defeated and exiled Marduk-apla-iddina, taking up the kingship of Babylonia. Sargon's annals describe how he took on the duties of a Babylonian sovereign, honoring the gods, maintaining their temples and respecting and upholding the privileges of the urban elite. Again, Cyrus's cylinder makes exactly the same points. The text of the cylinder thus indicates a strong continuity with centuries of Babylonian tradition, as part of an established rhetoric advanced by conquerors and usurpers. As Kuhrt puts it, the cylinder
The beginning of the text is partly broken; the surviving content reprimands the character of the deposed Babylonian king ]. It lists his alleged crimes, charging him with the desecration of the temples of the gods and the imposition of ] upon the populace. According to the proclamation, as a result of these offenses, the god Marduk abandoned Babylon and sought a more righteous king. Marduk called forth Cyrus to enter Babylon and become its new ruler.<ref name="Finkel-Translation" />


{{quote|In mind, reverential fear of Marduk, king of the gods, came to an end. He did yet more evil to his city every day; … his , he brought ruin on them all by a yoke without relief … inspected and checked all the countries, seeking for the upright king of his choice. He took the hand of Cyrus, king of the city of ], and called him by his name, proclaiming him aloud for the kingship over all of everything.<ref name="Finkel-Translation" />}}
:"reflects the pressure that Babylonian citizens were able to bring to bear on the new royal claimant ... In this context, the reign of the defeated predecessor was automatically described as bad and against the divine will - how else could he have been defeated? By implication, of course, all his acts became, inevitably and retrospectively, tainted."<ref>Amélie Kuhrt, "Cyrus the Great of Persia: Images and Realities", in ''Representations of Political Power: Case Histories from Times of Change and Dissolving Order in the Ancient Near East'', eds. Marlies Heinz, Marian H. Feldman, pp. 174-175. Eisenbrauns, 2007. ISBN 157506135X</ref>


Midway through the text, the writer switches to a ] in the voice of Cyrus, addressing the reader directly. A list of his titles is given (in a Mesopotamian rather than Persian style): "I am Cyrus, king of the world, great king, powerful king, king of Babylon, king of ] and ], king of the four quarters , son of ], great king, king of Anshan, descendant of ], great king, king of Anshan, the perpetual seed of kingship, whose reign ] and ] love, and with whose kingship, to their joy, they concern themselves."<ref name="Finkel-Translation"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170406201414/https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=327188&partId=1 |date=2017-04-06 }}. Finkel, Irving.</ref> He describes the pious deeds he performed after his conquest: he restored peace to Babylon and the other cities sacred to Marduk, freeing their inhabitants from their "yoke", and he "brought relief to their dilapidated housing (thus) putting an end to their (main) complaints".<ref name="Pritchard">]</ref> He repaired the ruined temples in the cities he conquered, restored their cults, and returned their sacred images as well as their former inhabitants which Nabonidus had taken to Babylon.<ref name="Pritchard" /> Near the end of the inscription Cyrus highlights his restoration of Babylon's city wall, saying: "I saw within it an inscription of ], a king who preceded me."<ref name="Finkel-Translation" /> The remainder is missing but presumably describes Cyrus's rededication of the gateway mentioned.<ref name="Kutsko">], p. 123</ref>
Kuhrt observes that "the main significance of the text lies in the insight it provides into the mechanism used by Cyrus to legitimize his conquest of Babylon by manipulating local traditions."<ref>Quoted in John F. Kutsko, ''Between Heaven and Earth: Divine Presence and Absence in the Book of Ezekiel'', p. 123. Eisenbrauns, 2000. ISBN 1575060418</ref> The degree of familiarity with Babylonian tropes suggests that the cylinder was authored not by the Persians but by the Babylonian priests of Marduk, working at the behest of Cyrus.<ref>Jonathan E. Dyck, ''The Theocratic Ideology of the Chronicler'', pp. 91-94. Brill Academic Publishers, 1998. ISBN 9004111468</ref> The cylinder can be compared with another work of around the same time, the ''Verse Account of Nabonidus'', in which the former Babylonian ruler is excoriated as the enemy of the priests of Marduk and Cyrus is presented as the liberator of Babylon.<ref>Lester L. Grabbe, ''A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period: Yehud, the Persian Province of Judah'', p. 267. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2004. ISBN 0567089983</ref> Both works make a point of stressing Cyrus's qualifications as a king from a line of kings, in contrast to the non-royal ancestry of Nabonidus, who is described by the cylinder as ''maţû'', "insignificant".<ref>Michael B. Dick, "The "History of David's Rise to Power" and the Neo-Babylonian Succession Apologies", in ''David and Zion: Biblical Studies in Honor of J.J.M. Roberts'', p. 10. Eds. Bernard Frank Batto, Kathryn L. Roberts, Jimmy Jack McBee Roberts. Eisenbrauns, 2004. ISBN 1575060922</ref> The ''Verse Account'' is so similar to the cylinder inscription that the two texts have been dubbed an example of "literary dependence" - not a direct dependence of one upon the other, but mutual dependence upon a common source, characterised by Morton Smith as "the propaganda put out in Babylonia by Cyrus' agents, shortly before Cyrus' conquest, to prepare the way of their lord." This viewpoint has been disputed; as Simon J. Sherwin puts it, the cylinder and the ''Verse Account'' are ''ex eventu'' compositions which utilise pre-existing Mesopotamian literary themes and do not need to be explained as the product of pre-conquest Persian propaganda.<ref name="Sherwin">Simon J. Sherwin, "Old Testament monotheism and Zoroastrian influence", in ''The God of Israel: Studies of an Inimitable Deity'', p. 122. Robert P. Gordon (ed). Cambridge University Press, 2007. ISBN 0521873657</ref>


A partial transcription by F. H. Weissbach in 1911 was supplanted by a much more complete transcription after the identification of the "B" fragment;<ref name="Weissbach">], p. 2</ref> this is now available in German and in English.<ref name="Schaudig">], pp. 550–56</ref><ref name="Pritchard" /><ref name="Hallo">], p. 315</ref> Several ] of the Cyrus Cylinder are available online, incorporating both "A" and "B" fragments.
The cylinder describes Cyrus returning to their original sanctuaries the statues of the gods that Nabonidus had brought to the city before the Persian invasion, thus restoring the normal cultic order to the satisfaction of the priesthood. Where the cylinder speaks of temples being restored and deported groups being returned to their homelands, it does not speak of a general empire-wide program but of activities specifically directed at specific places in the border region between Babylonia and Persia, including sites that had been devastated by earlier Babylonian military campaigns. Such locations were of significant strategic importance within the empire. The cylinder indicates that Cyrus sought to acquire the loyalty of the ravaged regions by funding reconstruction, the return of temple properties and the repatriation of the displaced populations. However, it is unclear how much actually changed on the ground; there is no archaeological evidence for any rebuilding or repairing of Mesopotamian temples during Cyrus' reign.<ref name="Winn Leith" />


A false translation of the text{{snd}}affirming, among other things, the abolition of slavery and the right to self-determination, a minimum wage and asylum{{snd}}has been promoted on the Internet and elsewhere.<ref name="Schulz">]</ref> As well as making claims that are not found on the real cylinder, it refers to the ] divinity ] rather than the Mesopotamian god Marduk.<ref>compare {{cite web |title=Cyrus Cylinder |url=http://www.niasnet.org/iran-history/artifacts-historical-places-of-iran/cyruscylinder/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130615163639/http://www.niasnet.org/iran-history/artifacts-historical-places-of-iran/cyruscylinder/ |archive-date=2013-06-15 |access-date=2013-04-12}} with the British Museum translation at {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151018230105/http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/articles/c/cyrus_cylinder_-_translation.aspx|date=2015-10-18}}</ref> The false translation has been widely circulated; alluding to its claim that Cyrus supposedly has stated that "Every country shall decide for itself whether or not it wants my leadership."<ref name="Schulz" /> Iranian ] winner ] in her acceptance speech described Cyrus as "the very emperor who proclaimed at the pinnacle of power 2,500 years ago that … he would not reign over the people if they did not wish it".<ref name="Schulz" /><ref name="Foucart">]</ref><ref>{{cite web|ref=2003-Noble-Peace-Prize-lecture|url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/2003/ebadi-lecture-e.html|title=Shirin Ebadi's 2003 Nobel Peace Prize lecture|publisher=Nobel Foundation|access-date=2011-03-19}}</ref>
In Cyrus' age, contemporary invaders considered the massacre and enslavement of conquered peoples to be standard practice in warfare. Conquering kings proudly recorded in royal inscriptions their brutality in sacking and destroying the lands that they had invaded. Only a century before, the ] ruler ] had massacred Babylonian rebels after a two-year siege of the city. Massacre and pillaging was thus seen as the natural consequence of defeat. Cyrus' conciliatory treatment of the Babylonians broke with this tradition. Some have argued that the Persians' policy towards their subject peoples, as described by the cylinder, was an expression of tolerance, moderation and generosity; however, most scholars argue that it was driven by the needs of the Persian Empire.
.<ref name="Min">{{cite book | title=The Levitical Authorship of Ezra-Nehemiah| last=Min| first=Kyung-Jin| pages=94| publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group, 2004 | isbn=0567082261}}</ref>. The empire was too large to be centrally directed and Cyrus sought to establish a decentralized system of government, based on existing territorial units. The magnanimity shown by Cyrus won him praise and gratitude from those he spared, as he intended.<ref>Malcolm Evans, ''Religious Liberty and International Law in Europe'', pp. 12-13. Cambridge University Press, 1997. ISBN 0521550211</ref> The policy of "toleration" described by the cylinder was thus, as Rainer Albertz puts it, "an expression of conservative support for local regions to serve the political interests of the whole ."<ref>Rainer Albertz trans. David Green, ''Israel in Exile: The History and Literature of the Sixth Century B.C.E.'', pp. 115-116. Society of Biblical Literature, 2003. ISBN 1589830555</ref> ] comments that it was more "a matter of practicality and economy ... it was simpler, and indeed cost less, to obtain the spontaneous collaboration of their subjects at a local level than to have to impose their sovereignty by force."<ref name="Soggin">{{cite book | title=An Introduction to the History of Israel and Judah| last=Soggin| first=J. Alberto| authorlink=Alberto Soggin| coauthors=John Bowman (trans)| date=1999| pages=295| publisher=SCM-Canterbury Press Ltd | isbn=0334027888}}</ref>


=== Associated fragments ===
The cylinder also provides evidence of how Cyrus saw his place as king (or, at least, how he wanted to be seen). In the text, he declares himself to be the king of the world and a king of kings, boasting of how "all the kings of the entire world ... brought their heavy tributes and kissed my feet in Babylon". He emphasizes his pre-eminence as the chosen one of the gods, identifies his son Cambyses as likewise being divinely blessed and implicitly anoints Cambyses as his successor. He restores order in the temples and improves the well-being of the people. He portrays himself as the fulcrum of the Persian empire, highlighting his role as the head of the ] of Persia and its subject territories. The outcome of Cyrus's conquest is the replacement of tyranny with just rule, of impiety with piety and of suffering with happiness among Marduk's people.<ref>Gene Ralph Garthwaite, ''The Persians'', p. 43 Blackwell Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1557868603</ref>
The British Museum announced in January 2010 that two inscribed clay fragments, which had been in the museum's collection since 1881, had been identified as part of a cuneiform tablet that was inscribed with the same text as the Cyrus Cylinder. The fragments had come from the small site of Dailem near Babylon and the identification was made by Professor ], formerly of the University of Birmingham, and ], curator in charge of the museum's Department of the Middle East.<ref>{{cite web|title=Irving Finkel|author=British Museum|url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/the_museum/departments/staff/middle_east/irving_finkel.aspx|access-date=14 December 2010}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110922221208/http://www.britishmuseum.org/the_museum/news_and_press_releases/statements/cyrus_cylinder.aspx |date=2011-09-22 }}. British Museum, 20 January 2010</ref>


=== Relation to a Chinese bone inscription ===
Cyrus' conquest of Babylon is presented in the cylinder's text as the culminating moment of his career, leading automatically to the submission of all other rulers. In fact, it is unclear who might have paid homage to Cyrus after his conquest. It is likely that he would have received the submissions of the subject-kings and governors of the overthrown Babylonian Empire, and the cylinder's allusion to kings "who dwell in tents" suggests that he also received the submission of nomadic tribes along the empire's borders. Such groups would have wished to establish good relations with the new regime in order to ensure that their trade routes remained open.<ref name="Kuhrt-Corpus" />
In 1983 two fossilized horse bones inscribed with cuneiform signs surfaced in China which Professor ] at Oxford later identified as coming from the Cyrus Cylinder. The discovery of these objects aroused much discussion about possible connections between ancient Mesopotamia and China, although their authenticity was doubted by many scholars from the beginning and they are now generally regarded as forgeries.


The history of the putative artifact goes back almost a century.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Yang|first=Zhi|date=1987|title=Brief Note on the Bone Cuneiform Inscriptions|journal=]|volume=2|pages=30–33}}</ref> The earliest record goes back to a Chinese doctor named Xue Shenwei, who sometime prior to 1928 was shown a photo of a rubbing of one of the bones by an antiquities dealer named Zhang Yi'an.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=The Cyrus Cylinder: The King of Persia's Proclamation from Ancient Babylon|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=2013|isbn=978-1780760636|editor-last=Finkel|editor-first=Irving|pages=28–34}}</ref> Although not able to view the bones at that time, Xue Shenwei later acquired one of them from another antiquities dealer named Wang Dongting in 1935 and then the second via a personal connection named Ke Yanling around 1940. While Xue did not recognize the script on the bones he guessed at its antiquity and buried the bones for safekeeping during the ]. Then, in 1983 Xue presented the bones to the ] in Beijing where Liu Jiuan and Wang Nanfang of the ] undertook their study.<ref name=":0" /> These officials identified the script as cuneiform and asked the Assyriologists Chi Yang and ] to work on the inscriptions. Identification of the source text proceeded slowly until 1985, when Wu Yuhong along with Oxford Assyriologist ] and Oliver Gurney recognized the text in one bone as coming from the Cyrus Cylinder. One year later Wu Yuhong presented his findings at the 33rd Rencontre Assyriologique and published them in a journal article.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Wu|first=Yuhong|date=1986|title=A Horse-Bone Inscription copied from the Cyrus Cylinder (Line 18-21) in the Palace Museum in Beijing|journal=Journal of Ancient Civilizations|volume=1|pages=15–20}}</ref>
The author of the cylinder is somewhat selective in describing the immediate circumstances of Cyrus's entry into Babylon. The text presents Cyrus as presenting Babylon peacefully and being welcomed by the population as a liberator. While this was technically accurate - the Persians seem to have entered Babylon without serious resistance - the text is careful to avoid mentioning the preceding ], in which Cyrus's forces defeated the army of Nabonidus.<ref name="Kuhrt-Corpus" /> As Walton and Hill put it, the claim of a wholly peaceful takeover acclaimed by the people is "standard conqueror's rhetoric and may obscure other facts".<ref>John H. Walton, Andrew E. Hill, ''Old Testament Today: A Journey from Original Meaning to Contemporary Significance'', p. 172. Zondervan, 2004. ISBN 0310238269</ref>


After that the second bone inscription remained undeciphered until 2010, when ] worked on it. In that same year the British Museum held a conference dedicated to the artifacts. Based on the serious textual errors in the inscription, including the omission of a large number of signs from the Cyrus Cylinder, Wu Yuhong argued the inscriptions were most likely copied from the cylinder while housed in the British Museum or from an early modern publication based upon it. However he acknowledged the remote possibility it was copied in late antiquity.<ref name=":0" /> Irving Finkel disputed this conclusion based on the relative obscurity of the Cyrus Cylinder until recent decades and the mismatch in paleography between the bone inscriptions and the hand copies found in early editions from the 1880s.
] also notes that "the propaganda regarding Nabonidus' rule is extensive" and the cylinder's claims about his record are not supported by many of the known facts. In contrast to the vilification expressed by the cylinder, the reign of Nabonidus was peaceful, he was recognised as a legitimate king and he undertook a variety of building projects and military campaigns commensurate with his claim to be "the king of Babylon, the universe and the four corners ".<ref>Julye Bidmead, ''The Akitu Festival: Religious Continuity And Royal Legitimation In Mesopotamia'', p. 137. Gorgias Press LLC, 2004. ISBN 1593331584</ref> Having said that, Nabonidus seems to have been deeply unpopular with the Babylonian priestly elite for his northern ancestry, his introduction of foreign gods and his self-imposed exile which was said to have prevented the celebration of the vital New Year festival.<ref name="Mallowan" />


Finally, after the workshop concluded, an 1884 edition of the Cyrus Cylinder by ] came to Irving Finkel's attention. This publication used an idiosyncratic typeface and featured a handcopy for only a section of the whole cylinder. However the typeface in that edition matched the paleography on the bone inscriptions and the extract of the cylinder published in the book matched that of the bone as well. This convinced Finkel that the bone inscriptions were early modern forgeries and that has remained the majority opinion since then.
===Old Testament studies===
{{main|Cyrus in the Judeo-Christian tradition}}
The Bible records that some Jews returned to their homeland from Babylon, where they had been settled by ], to rebuild the temple following an edict from Cyrus (] 1. 1-4). Many scholars have cited one particular passage from the Cylinder to confirm the Old Testament account:


== Interpretations ==
:(30) ... From <ref>Older translations used to give "Nineveh" instead of "". The relevant passage is fragmentary, but I. Finkel has recently concluded that it is impossible to interpret it as "Nineveh" (I. Finkel, "No Nineveh in the Cyrus Cylinder", in ''NABU'' 1997 .).</ref> to Aššur and (from) Susa, (31) Agade, Ešnunna, Zamban, Me-Turnu, Der, as far as the region of Gutium, the sacred centers on the other side of the Tigris, whose sanctuaries had been abandoned for a long time, (32) I returned the images of the gods, who had resided there , to their places and I let them dwell in eternal abodes. '''I gathered all their inhabitants and returned to them their dwellings.'''<ref> translation, adapted from Schaudig 2001.</ref>


=== Mesopotamian and Persian tradition and propaganda ===
Although it does not mention Judah or the Jews, the last phrase of line 32 has been interpreted as a reference to Cyrus' policy of allowing deportees to return to their original lands. However, this view has been challenged by Amelie Kuhrt, who argued that the people referred to are not deportees but people associated with the returned god images' cult.<ref>A. Kuhrt, "The Cyrus Cylinder and Achaemenid Imperial Policy", p. 86-87, in ''Journal for the Study of the Old Testament'' 25 (1983).</ref> Diana Edelman has pointed out chronological difficulties that arise when we accept that the Jews returned during the reign of Cyrus<ref>Diana Edelman, ''The Origins of the Second Temple: Persian Imperial Policy and the Rebuilding of Jerusalem'' (2005)</ref>, although it has been argued that she based her conclusions on questionable treatments of genealogical lists and unsubstantiated links between various figures in the early Persian period <ref>Journal of Hebrew Scriptures - Volume 7 (2007) - Review by Mark J. Boda</ref> There is no clear independent evidence to confirm the Biblical claim that Cyrus freed the Jews and that God had "charged him to build a temple in Jerusalem". The Cyrus Cylinder does correspond closely to the ''spirit'' of the decree described in Ezra, particularly the divinely chosen status of Cyrus. As with other texts from the same period, it credits the god of his intended audience for his success and makes claims of worship, piety and religious tolerance that recall the claims of Ezra. Although it cannot be used to confirm directly the authenticity of the decree cited in Ezra, it suggests that in "restoring" the Temple in Jerusalem, Cyrus acted strategically to grant privileged status to the city to gain the support and cooperation of its people. Israel's sensitive location close to ] made it a particularly sensitive area for the Persians, who would have had a strong interest in ensuring that it was firmly in their hands.<ref name="Winn Leith" />
According to the British Museum, the Cyrus Cylinder reflects a long tradition in Mesopotamia where, from as early as the third millennium BC, kings began their reigns with declarations of reforms.<ref name="BM-CC">British Museum: ]</ref> Cyrus's declaration stresses his legitimacy as the king, and is a conspicuous statement of his respect for the religious and political traditions of Babylon. The British Museum and scholars of the period describe it as an instrument of ancient Mesopotamian propaganda.<ref name="BM-inscription">]</ref><ref name="Kuhrt-1982">], p. 124</ref>


The text is a royal building inscription, a genre which had no equivalent in ] literature. It illustrates how Cyrus co-opted local traditions and symbols to legitimize his conquest and control of Babylon.<ref name="Kutsko" /><ref name="Winn">], p. 285</ref> Many elements of the text were drawn from long-standing Mesopotamian themes of legitimizing rule in Babylonia: the preceding king is reprimanded and he is proclaimed to have been abandoned by the gods for his wickedness; the new king has gained power through the divine will of the gods; the new king rights the wrongs of his predecessor, addressing the welfare of the people; the sanctuaries of the gods are rebuilt or restored, offerings to the gods are made or increased and the blessings of the gods are sought; and repairs are made to the whole city, in the manner of earlier rightful kings.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007a" />
===As a charter of human rights===
{{Splitsection|Iranian nationalism|date=September 2008}}
] and filmmaker ] with replica of the Cyrus Cylinder at UN headquarters, ]]]
The Cyrus cylinder is considered by Iran to be "the first declaration of ]"<ref name="note 3699"></ref>, a position advocated by some scholars.<ref>Arthur Henry Robertson, J. G. Merrills, ''Human Rights in the World: An Introduction to the Study of the International Protection of Human Rights'', p. 7. Manchester University Press, 1996. ISBN 0719049237</ref><ref name="Farrokh">Kaveh Farrokh, ''Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War'', p. 44. Osprey Publishing, 2007. ISBN 1846031087</ref> This characterization emerged in the early 1970s at the initiative of the then ], ], who made Cyrus the Great a key figure in government ideology and associated himself personally with the Achaemenids. In his 1971 ] (New Year) speech, the shah declared that 1971 would be "Cyrus the Great Year", during which a grand commemoration would be held to celebrate 2,500 years of Persian monarchy. It would serve as a showcase for a modern Iran in which the contributions that Iran had made to world civilization would be recognized. The main theme of the commemoration was the centrality of the monarchy within Iran's political system, identifying the shah with the famous monarchs of Persia's past, and with Cyrus the Great in particular.<ref name="Ansari">], ''Modern Iran: The Pahlavis and After'', pp. 218-19. Longman, 2007. ISBN 1405840846</ref> The shah looked to the Achaemenid period as "a moment from the national past that could best serve as a model and a slogan for the imperial society he hoped to create."<ref>Bruce Lincoln, ''Discourse and the Construction of Society: Comparative Studies of Myth, Ritual, and Classification'', p. 32. Oxford University Press US, 1992. ISBN 0195079094</ref> The government made a concerted effort to present the Achaemenid king as a humane and enlightened figure, a theme addressed in the 1971 budget speech of ] ]:


Both continuity and discontinuity are emphasized in the text of the Cylinder. It asserts the virtue of Cyrus as a god-fearing king of a traditional Mesopotamian type. On the other hand, it constantly discredits Nabonidus, reviling the deposed king's deeds and even his ancestry and portraying him as an impious destroyer of his own people. As Fowler and Hekster note, this "creates a problem for a monarch who chooses to buttress his claim to legitimacy by appropriating the 'symbolic capital' of his predecessors".<ref name="Fowler">], p. 33</ref> The Cylinder's reprimand of Nabonidus also discredits Babylonian royal authority by association. It is perhaps for this reason that the Achaemenid rulers made greater use of Assyrian rather than Babylonian royal iconography and tradition in their declarations; the Cylinder refers to the Assyrian king ] as "my predecessor", rather than any native Babylonian ruler.<ref name="Fowler" />
:"Since the beginning of its glorious history, our country has been famous for peace, friendship and humanity, and this can clearly be proved by studying the methods and measures of the great kings such as Cyrus the Great, whose efforts made possible our celebration next year of the 2500th anniversary of the Iranian monarchy."<ref name="Ansari" />


The Cylinder itself is part of a continuous Mesopotamian tradition of depositing a wide variety of symbolic items, including animal sacrifices, stone tablets, terracotta cones, cylinders and figures. Newly crowned kings of Babylon would make public declarations of their own righteousness when beginning their reigns, often in the form of declarations that were deposited in the foundations of public buildings.<ref>British Museum: ]; ], pp. 83–97; ], pp. 52–53; ], p. 243; ], pp. 273–85; ], p. 82; ], p. 43</ref> Some contained messages, while others did not, and they had a number of purposes: elaboration of a building's value, commemoration of the ruler or builder and the magical sanctification of the building, through the invocation of divine protection.
The cylinder was adopted as the symbol for the commemoration, and Iranian magazines and journals published numerous articles about ancient Persian history.<ref name="Ansari" /> The British Museum loaned the original cylinder to the Iranian government for the duration of the festivities; it was put on display at the Shahyad Monument (now the ]) in ],<ref>David Housego, "Pique and peacocks in Persepolis", ''The Times'', 15 October 1971</ref> where a replica of the cylinder is still on display. The ] commenced on ], ] and culminated a week later with a spectacular parade at the tomb of Cyrus in ]. On October 14, the shah's sister, ], presented the ] ] with a replica of the cylinder. The princess asserted that "the heritage of Cyrus was the heritage of human understanding, tolerance, courage, compassion and, above all, human liberty". The Secretary General accepted the gift, linking the cylinder with the efforts of the ] to address "the question of Respect for Human Rights in Armed Conflict". Since then the replica cylinder has been kept at the ] in ] on the second floor hallway,<ref>United Nations Press Release 14 October 1971 ()</ref> and the text has been translated into all six official U.N. languages.<ref name="Xenophon">Xenophon trans. Larry Hedrick, ''Xenophon's Cyrus the Great: The Arts of Leadership and War'', p. xiii. Macmillan, 2007. ISBN 0312364695</ref>


The cylinder was not intended to be seen again after its burial, but the text inscribed on it would have been used for public purposes. Archive copies were kept of important inscriptions and the Cylinder's text may likewise have been copied.<ref>], p. 52 fn. 24</ref> In January 2010, the British Museum announced that two cuneiform tablets in its collection had been found to be inscribed with the same text as that on the Cyrus Cylinder,<ref name="BM-discovery-2010-01-11">]</ref> which, according to the museum, "show that the text of the Cylinder was probably a proclamation that was widely distributed across the Persian Empire".<ref name="BM-Statements">]</ref>
The notion of the cylinder as a "charter of human rights" has been criticized by a number of scholars and characterized as political propaganda on the part of the Pahlavi regime.<ref>Amélie Kuhrt, "The Cyrus Cylinder and Achaemenid imperial policy" in ''Journal of Studies of the Old Testament'' 25, p. 84; {{cite web | last = Lendering | first = Jona | authorlink = Jona Lendering |title = The Cyrus Cylinder | publisher = livius.org | date = ] | url = http://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder.html | accessdate = 2008-07-30 }}</ref> ], the ], argues that the cylinder was used by the Shah as "a mantra of his newly constructed national identity" and remarks that the assertion that Iran was the birthplace of human rights "must have startled many who had tried to assert their human rights under his regime." He comments that the cylinder is "in no real sense an Iranian document, but is part of a much larger history of the ancient Near East, of Mesopotamian kingship, and of the Jewish diaspora."<ref name="MacGregor">Neil MacGregor, "The whole world in our hands", in ''Art and Cultural Heritage: Law, Policy, and Practice'', p. 383-4, ed. Barbara T. Hoffman. Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 0521857643</ref> C.B.F. Walker, writing in the immediate aftermath of the shah's commemorations, comments that the cylinder "is a normal building inscription within the Assyrian-Babylonian tradition, and can certainly not be regarded as some declaration of human rights".<ref>Walker, C.B.F., 1972, "A recently identified fragment of the Cyrus Cylinder", ''Iran'' 10, pp. 159-159</ref>


==== Similarities with other royal inscriptions ====
It has also been argued that the concept of human rights is an anachronism alien to the historical context. ] critizes the interpretation of the cylinder as a charter of human rights as being both anachronistic and tendentious.<ref>Elton L. Daniel, ''The History of Iran'', p. 39. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000. ISBN 0313307318</ref> As T.C. Mitchell puts it, the interpretation "reflects a misunderstanding."<ref name="Mitchell">See e.g. T.C. Mitchell, ''Biblical Archaeology: Documents from the British Museum'', p. 82. Cambridge University Press, 1988. ISBN 0521368677</ref> MacGregor points out that "Comparison by scholars in the British Museum with other similar texts showed that rulers in ancient Iraq had been making comparable declarations upon succeeding to the throne for two millennia before Cyrus" and notes "it is one of the museum's tasks to resist the narrowing of the object's meaning and its appropriation to one political agenda". Cyrus has often been depicted as a particularly humane ruler, based on his characterization by ancient sources such as Persian texts, the Old Testament of the Bible and ],<ref name="Master of Empire">{{cite book| last = Brown| first = Dale| authorlink =| title = Persians: Masters of Empire |publisher = Time-Life Books| location = | date = 1996| pages = 7-8| isbn = 0-8094-9104-4 }} </ref><ref name="Arberry"> Arberry, AJ (1953). "The Legacy of Persia" Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1953, p.8</ref> but as M.A. Dandamaev points out, "almost all the texts ... which praise Cyrus have the character of propagandistic writings and demand a very critical approach ... by accepting everything said in the texts which were composed by Babylonian priests, we ourselves become the victims of Cyrus' propaganda."<ref>M. A. Dandamaev trans. W. J. Vogelsang, ''A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire'', p. 53. BRILL, 1989. ISBN 9004091726</ref>
]]]


The Cyrus Cylinder bears striking similarities to older Mesopotamian royal inscriptions. Two notable examples are the Cylinder of ], who seized the Babylonian throne in 722/1 BC, and the annals of ] of Assyria, who conquered Babylon twelve years later. As a conqueror, Marduk-apla-iddina faced many of the same problems of legitimacy that Cyrus did when he conquered Babylon. He declares himself to have been chosen personally by Marduk, who ensured his victory. When he took power, he performed the sacred rites and restored the sacred shrines. He states that he found a royal inscription placed in the temple foundations by an earlier Babylonian king, which he left undisturbed and honored. All of these claims also appear in Cyrus's Cylinder. Twelve years later, the Assyrian king ] defeated and exiled Marduk-apla-iddina, taking up the kingship of Babylonia. Sargon's annals describe how he took on the duties of a Babylonian sovereign, honouring the gods, maintaining their temples and respecting and upholding the privileges of the urban elite. Again, Cyrus's Cylinder makes exactly the same points. Nabonidus, Cyrus's deposed predecessor as king of Babylon, commissioned foundation texts on clay cylinders{{snd}}such as the ], also in the British Museum{{snd}}that follows the same basic formula.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007b">], pp. 174–75.</ref>
The Iranian writer ] has rejected this interpretation, asserting that it is inconsistent with independent Mesopotamian, Greek, and Biblical sources, as well as archaeological findings.<ref name="Response to Daily Telegraph"> {{cite web| last =Farokh | first = Kaveh| authorlink = | coauthors =
| title = Retort to the Daily Telegraph’s article against Cyrus the Great
Attack on the Legacy of Cyrus the Great | work = | publisher = International Committee to Save the Archeological Sites of Pasarga| date = 2008-05-07| url = http://www.savepasargad.com/~New-050508/01.General-News/Newss-Pages/Professor%20Kaveh%20Farokh-E.htm| format = | doi = | accessdate = 2008-07-24}} </ref><ref name="Response to Spiegel">{{cite web | last =Farokh | first = Kaveh | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Response to Spiegel Magazine's Attack on the Legacy of Cyrus the Great | work = | publisher = International Committee to Save the Archeological Sites of Pasargad| date = 2008-07-24
| url = http://www.savepasargad.com/~New-050508/01.General-News/Newss-Pages/kaveh%20farrokh.htm| format = | doi = | accessdate = 2008-08-11}}</ref> Reza Shabani similarly argues that the cylinder "discusses human rights in a way unique for the era, dealing with ways to protect the honor, prestige, and religious beliefs of all the nations dependent to Iran in those days."<ref name="Shabani">{{cite book | title=Iranian History at a Glance| last=Shabani| first=Reza| coauthors=Mahmood Farrokhpey (trans)| pages=21| publisher=Alhoda UK | isbn=9644390059}}</ref>


The text of the Cylinder thus indicates a strong continuity with centuries of Babylonian tradition, as part of an established rhetoric advanced by conquerors.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007b" /> As Kuhrt puts it:
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}


{{quote| reflects the pressure that Babylonian citizens were able to bring to bear on the new royal claimant … In this context, the reign of the defeated predecessor was automatically described as bad and against the divine will – how else could he have been defeated? By implication, of course, all his acts became, inevitably and retrospectively, tainted.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007b" />}}
==Literature==
===Editions and translations===
The latest edition of the ] text is:
*Hanspeter Schaudig, ''Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros' des Großen, samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften. Textausgabe und Grammatik.'' (2001 Münster, Ugarit-Verlag) ( with English translation based on Cogan 2003)


The familiarity with long-established Babylonian tropes suggests that the Cylinder was authored by the Babylonian priests of Marduk, working at the behest of Cyrus.<ref name="Dyck">], pp. 91–94.</ref> It can be compared with another work of around the same time, the ''Verse Account of Nabonidus'', in which the former Babylonian ruler is excoriated as the enemy of the priests of Marduk and Cyrus is presented as the liberator of Babylon.<ref name="Grabbe">], p. 267</ref> Both works make a point of stressing Cyrus's qualifications as a king from a line of kings, in contrast to the non-royal ancestry of Nabonidus, who is described by the Cylinder as merely ''maţû'', "insignificant".<ref name="Dick">], p. 10</ref>
Older translations and transliterations:
*Rawlinson, H.G., & Th.G. Pinches, ''A Selection from the Miscellaneous Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia'' (1884, 1909 London: fragment A only)).
*Rogers, Robert William: ''Cuneiform Parallels to the Old Testament'' (1912), New York, Eaton & Mains (: fragment A only).
*] (ed.): ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament'' (''ANET'') (1950, 1955, 1969). Translation by A. L. Oppenheim. (fragment A and B).
* P.-R. Berger, "Der Kyros-Zylinder mit dem Susatzfragment BIN II Nr.32 und die akkidischen Personennamen im Danielbuch" in: ''Zeitschrift für Assyriologie'' 65 (1975) 192-234
*Mordechai Cogan's translation, in W.H. Hallo and K.L. Younger, ''The Context of Scripture'' vol. II, ''Monumental Inscriptions from the Biblical World'' (2003, Leiden and Boston) ( with Schaudig's transliteration)
*Brosius, Maria (ed.): ''The Persian Empire from Cyrus II to Artaxerxes I'' (2000, London Association of Classical Teachers (LACT) 16, London.


The ''Verse Account'' is so similar to the Cyrus Cylinder inscription that the two texts have been dubbed an example of "literary dependence"{{snd}}not the ''direct'' dependence of one upon the other, but mutual dependence upon a common source. This is characterised by the historian ] as "the propaganda put out in Babylonia by Cyrus's agents, shortly before Cyrus's conquest, to prepare the way of their lord".<ref name="Smith">], p. 78</ref> This viewpoint has been disputed; as Simon J. Sherwin of the ] puts it, the Cyrus Cylinder and the ''Verse Account'' are "after the event" compositions which reuse existing Mesopotamian literary themes and do not need to be explained as the product of pre-conquest Persian propaganda.<ref name="Sherwin">], p. 122.</ref>
]
]
]


The German historian Hanspeter Schaudig has identified a line on the Cylinder ("He saved his city Babylon from its oppression") with a line from tablet VI of the Babylonian "Epic of Creation", '']'', in which Marduk builds Babylon.<ref name="Haubold">], p. 51</ref> Johannes Haubold suggests that reference represents Cyrus's takeover as a moment of ultimate restoration not just of political and religious institutions, but of the cosmic order underpinning the universe.<ref>], p. 52</ref>
]

]
====Analysis of the Cyrus Cylinder's claims====
]
] depicting Nabonidus praying to the ], sun and the planet Venus. The Babylonian king's religious practices were harshly condemned by the Cyrus Cylinder's inscription.]]
]

]
=====Vilification of Nabonidus=====
]
The Cyrus Cylinder's vilification of Nabonidus is consistent with other Persian propaganda regarding the deposed king's rule. In contrast to the Cylinder's depiction of Nabonidus as an illegitimate ruler who ruined his country, the reign of Nabonidus was largely peaceful, he was recognised as a legitimate king and he undertook a variety of building projects and military campaigns commensurate with his claim to be "the king of Babylon, the universe, and the four corners ".<ref name="Bidmead">], p. 137</ref>
]

]
=====Nabonidus as actually seen in Babylon=====
]
The Assyriologist ] has interpreted Nabonidus's exaltation of the moon god ] as "an outright usurpation of Marduk's prerogatives by the moon god".<ref>], p. 134</ref> Although the Babylonian king continued to make rich offerings to Marduk, his greater devotion to Sin was unacceptable to the Babylonian priestly elite.<ref>], p. 135</ref> Nabonidus came from the unfashionable north of Babylonia, introduced foreign gods and went into a lengthy self-imposed exile which was said to have prevented the celebration of the vital ].<ref name="Mallowan">], pp. 409–11</ref>
]

]
=====Nabonidus as seen in the Harran Stela, contrasted with the Cyrus Cylinder=====
]
The ]<ref>For the text, see J. B. Pritchard, ed., ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament'' (3rd ed.; Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1969), 562a–563b.</ref> is generally acknowledged as a genuine document commissioned by Nabonidus.<ref>{{Cite book| last=Beaulieu| first=Paul-Alain| title=The Reign of Nabonidus, King of Babylon 556–539 B.C.| url=https://babylonian-collection.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/YNER%2010%20-%20Beaulieu%20-%20The%20Reign%20of%20Nabonidus%20King%20of%20Babylon%20556-549%20BC%20(1989).pdf| publisher=Yale University Press| year=1989| isbn=0300043147| location=New Haven and London| page=17}}</ref> In it, Nabonidus seeks to glorify his own accomplishments, notably his restoration of the Elhulhul Temple, which was devoted to the moon-god Sin. In this regard, the Harran Stela verifies the picture that is dwelt on in the Cyrus Cylinder, that Nabonidus had largely abandoned the homage due to Marduk, chief god of Babylon, in favor of the worship of Sin. Since his mother ] was apparently a priestess of Sin, or at least a lifelong devotee, this helps explain the unwise political decision regarding Marduk on the part of Nabonidus, a decision that Cyrus takes great advantage of in the Cyrus Cylinder. His mother was also a resident of ], which affords another reason why Nabonidus moved there in the third year of his reign (553 BC), at which time he "entrusted the 'Camp' to his oldest (son) ]], the first-born . . . He let (everything) go, entrusted the kingship to him."<ref>Pritchard, ed., ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts'', 313b. This cuneiform text is called the “Verse Account of Nabonidus.”</ref>
]

]
In at least one respect, however, the Harran Stela is incongruous with the portrayal of events in the Cyrus Cylinder. In the Stela, Nabonidus lists the enemies of Babylon as "the king of ], the ] and the land of the ], all the hostile kings." The significance of this lies in the date the Stela was composed: According to ], its composition dates to the latter part of the reign of Nabonidus, probably the fourteenth or fifteenth year, i.e. 542–540 BC.<ref>Beaulieu, ''Reign of Nabonidus'', 32.</ref> The problem with this is that, according to the current consensus view, based largely on the Cyrus Cylinder and later Persian documents that followed in its genre, the Persians should have been named here as a major enemy of Babylon at a time three years or less before the fall of the city to the forces under Cyrus. Nabonidus, however, names the Medes, not the Persians, as a main enemy; as king of the realm he would certainly know who his enemies were. By naming the Medes instead of the Persians, the Harran Stela is more in conformity with the narration of events in ]'s '']'', where Cyrus and the Persians were under the ''de jure'' suzerainty of the Medes until shortly after the fall of Babylon, at which time Cyrus, king of Persia, became king of the Medes as well.
]

A further discussion of the relationship of the Harran Stela (=Babylonian propaganda) to the Cyrus Cylinder (=Persian propaganda) is found in the ] article, including a discussion of why the Cyrus Cylinder and later Persian texts never name Belshazzar, despite his close association with events associated with the fall of Babylon, as related both in the Bible (Daniel, chapter 5) and in Xenophon's ''Cyropaedia''.<ref>''Cyropaedia'' 4.6.3; 5.2.27; 5.4.12, 24, 26, 33; 7.5.29. The ''Cyropaedia'' refers to Belshazzar as “this young fellow who has just come to the throne.” His death is described as occurring on the night the city was captured, which was also the time of a festival (7.5.25), in agreement with the narration of these events in the book of Daniel (5:1, 30).</ref>

=====Conquest and local support=====
Cyrus's conquest of Babylonia was resisted by Nabonidus and his supporters, as the ] demonstrated. ] ] comments that "it is doubtful that even before the fall of Cyrus was impatiently awaited by a population desperate for a 'liberator'."<ref>], p. 43</ref> However, Cyrus's takeover as king does appear to have been welcomed by some of the Babylonian population.<ref name="Buchanan">], pp. 12–13</ref> The Judaic historian Lisbeth S. Fried says that there is little evidence that the high-ranking priests of Babylonia during the Achaemenid period were Persians and characterises them as Babylonian collaborators.<ref>], p. 30</ref>

The text presents Cyrus as entering Babylon peacefully and being welcomed by the population as a liberator. This presents an implicit contrast with previous conquerors, notably the Assyrian rulers ], who invaded and plundered Babylon in the 12th century BC, and ], who did the same thing 150 years before Cyrus conquered the region.<ref name="Arnold" /> The massacre and enslavement of conquered people was common practice and was explicitly highlighted by conquerors in victory statements. The Cyrus Cylinder presents a very different message; Johannes Haubold notes that it portrays Cyrus's takeover as a harmonious moment of convergence between Babylonian and Persian history, not a natural disaster but the salvation of Babylonia.<ref name="Haubold" />

However, the Cylinder's account of Cyrus's conquest clearly does not tell the whole story, as it suppresses any mention of the earlier conflict between the Persians and the Babylonians;<ref name="Haubold" /> ] describes it as a "skilled work of tendentious history".<ref name="Mallowan" /> The text omits the Battle of Opis, in which Cyrus's forces defeated and apparently massacred Nabonidus's army.<ref name="Kuhrt-2007a" /><ref>Oppenheim, A. Leo, in Pritchard, James B. ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament''. Princeton University Press, 1950</ref><ref>], p. 41</ref> Nor does it explain a two-week gap reported by the Nabonidus Chronicle between the Persian entry into Babylon and the surrender of the Esagila temple. Lisbeth S. Fried suggests that there may have been a siege or stand-off between the Persians and the temple's defenders and priests, about whose fate the Cylinder and Chronicle makes no mention. She speculates that they were killed or expelled by the Persians and replaced by more pro-Persian members of the Babylonian priestly elite.<ref>], p. 29</ref> As Walton and Hill put it, the claim of a wholly peaceful takeover acclaimed by the people is "standard conqueror's rhetoric and may obscure other facts".<ref name="Walton">], p. 172</ref> Describing the claim of one's own armies being welcomed as liberators as "one of the great imperial fantasies", ], Professor of Divinity at the ], notes that the Babylonian population repeatedly revolted against Persian rule in 522 BC, 521 BC, 484 BC and 482 BC (though not against Cyrus or his son Cambeses). The rebels sought to restore national independence and the line of native Babylonian kings{{snd}}perhaps an indication that they were not as favourably disposed towards the Persians as the Cylinder suggests.<ref>], p. 40</ref>

=====Restoration of temples=====
The inscription goes on to describe Cyrus returning to their original sanctuaries the statues of the gods that Nabonidus had brought to the city before the Persian invasion. This restored the normal cultic order to the satisfaction of the priesthood. It alludes to temples being restored and deported groups being returned to their homelands but does not imply an empire-wide programme of restoration. Instead, it refers to specific areas in the border region between Babylonia and Persia, including sites that had been devastated by earlier Babylonian military campaigns. The Cylinder indicates that Cyrus sought to acquire the loyalty of the ravaged regions by funding reconstruction, the return of temple properties and the repatriation of the displaced populations. However, it is unclear how much actually changed on the ground; there is no archaeological evidence for any rebuilding or repairing of Mesopotamian temples during Cyrus's reign.<ref name="Winn" />

=====Internal policy=====
The Persians' policy towards their subject people, as described by the Cylinder, was traditionally viewed as an expression of tolerance, moderation and generosity "on a scale previously unknown".<ref name="Masroori">], pp. 13–15</ref> The policies of Cyrus toward subjugated nations have been contrasted to those of the Assyrians and Babylonians, who had treated subject peoples harshly; he permitted the resettling of those who had been previously deported and sponsored the reconstruction of religious buildings.<ref name="Dandamaev">], pp. 52–53</ref> Cyrus was often depicted positively in Western tradition by sources such as the Old Testament of the Bible and the Greek writers ] and ].<ref name="Brown">], pp. 7–8</ref><ref name="Arberry">], p. 8</ref> The '']'' of Xenophon was particularly influential during the ] when Cyrus was romanticised as an exemplary model of a virtuous and successful ruler.<ref>], p. 225</ref>

Modern historians argue that while Cyrus's behavior was indeed conciliatory, it was driven by the needs of the Persian Empire, and was not an expression of personal tolerance per se.<ref name="Min">], p. 94</ref> The empire was too large to be centrally directed; Cyrus followed a policy of using existing territorial units to implement a decentralized system of government. The magnanimity shown by Cyrus won him praise and gratitude from those he spared.<ref name="Evans">], pp. 12–13</ref> The policy of toleration described by the Cylinder was thus, as biblical historian Rainer Albertz puts it, "an expression of conservative support for local regions to serve the political interests of the whole ".<ref name="Albertz">], pp. 115–16</ref> Another biblical historian, ], comments that it was more "a matter of practicality and economy … it was simpler, and indeed cost less, to obtain the spontaneous collaboration of their subjects at a local level than to have to impose their sovereignty by force".<ref name="Soggin">], p. 295</ref>

=====Differences between the Cyrus Cylinder and previous Babylonian and Assyrian cylinders=====
There are scholars who agree that the Cyrus Cylinder demonstrates a break from past traditions, and the ushering in of a new era.<ref>], pp. 104–125.</ref> A comparison of the Cyrus Cylinder with the inscriptions of previous conquerors of Babylon highlights this sharply. For instance, when Sennacherib, king of Assyria(705-681 BC) captured the city in 690 BC after a 15-month siege, Babylon endured a dreadful destruction and massacre.<ref name=" Razmjou122">], p. 122.</ref> Sennacharib describes how, having captured the King of Babylon, he had him tied up in the middle of the city like a pig. Then he describes how he destroyed Babylon, and filled the city with corpses, looted its wealth, broke its gods, burned and destroyed its houses down to foundations, demolished its walls and temples and dumped them in the canals. This is in stark contrast to Cyrus the Great and the Cyrus Cylinder. The past Assyrian, and Babylonian tradition of victor's justice was a common treatment for a defeated people at this time. Sennacherib's tone for instance, reflected his relish of and pride in massacre and destruction, which is totally at odds with the message of the Cyrus Cylinder.<ref name=" Razmjou122"/><ref>John Curtis, ''The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia, A New Beginning For the Middle East'', pp. 31–41 {{ISBN|978-0714111872}}</ref>

Some scholars believe that no other king ever returned captives to their homes as Cyrus did.<ref name=" Razmjou123">], p. 123.</ref> Some argue that the Assyrians sometimes gave limited religious freedom to local cults and the people they conquered, interpreting the submission to the "exalted might" of ], the "yoke of Ashur" and the looting and destruction of temples as religious intolerance.
Similar actions carried out by Babylonian kings, like the destruction of the temple of Jerusalem as well as the temple in Harran and Nabonidus carrying other gods from their temples to Babylon, were also argued to represent religious intolerance. This is then compared to the Cyrus Cylinder, and argued that it was not a typical declaration that was keeping with the old traditions of the past.<ref name=" Razmjou123"/>

However, Sennacherib's destruction of Babylon can not be taken as the norm, and solely judging from Sennacherib's own inscriptions, the destruction was already bad by Neo-Assyrian standards.{{sfn|Nielsen|2018|p=95}} The destruction of cult statues has precedence in the Ancient Near East, such as ] claiming to have plundered the shrines and destroyed the cult statues of his enemy state ],{{sfn|Schaudig|2012|p=128}} but the destruction of cult statues was the more severe and extreme treatment.{{sfn|Zaia|2015|p=37-39}} Nabonidus likely gathered cult statues to Babylon to prepare for an incoming Persian attack, and this tradition has precedence with ] who also brought the statues to Dur-Yakin to keep them from the Assyrians, and some Babylonian cities also sent their statues to Babylon in 626 BCE in light of ]'s advance.{{sfn|Beaulieu|1986|p=223}}

Other scholars disagree with the view that Cyrus had a policy of religious tolerance, which stood in contrast to the Assyrians and Babylonians. This assumes a religious discourse that compelled the ancients to suppress the worship of other gods, but no such discourse existed.{{sfn|van der Spek|2014|p=235}} Reverence for the gods of Assyria did not prevent the existence of local cults, for example ] after his conquest of the Harhar region reconstructed the local temples and returned the statues of the gods.{{sfn|Cogan|1974|p=55}} In treaties conducted with vassals, local gods were invoked alongside Assyrian gods in the oath treaties in the curse sections,{{sfn|Cogan|1974|p=47-49}} indicating that the presence of the gods of both parties were required for the oath{{sfn|Zaia|2015|p=27}} and the oath treaties never carried a stipulation on the worship of Assyrian gods or the hindrance of worship on local gods.{{sfn|Cogan|1993|p=409}} Cogan had concluded that the idea that the cult of Ashur and other Assyrian gods were imposed onto defeated subjects should be rejected, and residents in the annexed provinces were required to provide for the cult of Ashur as they were counted as Assyrian citizens{{sfn|Cogan|1974|p=60}} as it was the duty of Assyrian citizens to do so.{{sfn|Cogan|1974|p=51}}
Kuhrt pointed out that similar to Achaemenid ideology, in Assyrian ideology the acceptance of the power of the Assyrian king was synonymous with the acceptance of the power of their gods, particularly Ashur, and although worship of the Assyrian gods was not forcibly imposed, recognition of Assyrian power entailed the recognition of the superior strength of their gods.{{sfn|Kuhrt|2008|p=124}}

The return of divine statues and people, commonly seen as a special Achaemenid policy, was also attested in Assyrian sources. Esarhaddon, after repairing the statues of the Arabian gods and engraving an inscription to serve as remembrance of Assyria's power, returned the statues on Hazail's request.{{sfn|Cogan|1974|p=36}} Accounts on returning statues are also found in the epithets of Esarhaddon.{{sfn|Zaia|2015|p=36-37}} ] claims to have brought back abducted people, and Esarhaddon brought back Babylonians who had been displaced following Sennacherib's destruction of the city to the reconstructed Babylon.{{sfn|van der Spek|2014|p=258}} Briant summarizes that this view that Cyrus was exceptional only arises if one only takes into account Jewish sources, and the idea disappears if placed in the context of the Ancient Near East.<ref>], p. 48</ref>

=== Biblical interpretations ===
{{Main|Cyrus the Great in the Bible}}
{{further|The Return to Zion}}
]
The Bible records that some Jews (who were exiled by the Babylonians), returned to their homeland from Babylon, where they had been settled by ], to rebuild the temple following an edict from Cyrus. The ] (]–4:5) provides a narrative account of the rebuilding project.<ref name="Hurowitz">], pp. 581–91</ref> Scholars have linked one particular passage from the Cylinder to the Old Testament account:<ref name="Kuhrt-1982" />

{{quote|From <ref>Some translations give "]." The relevant passage is fragmentary, but Finkel has recently concluded that it is impossible to interpret it as "Nineveh". (I. Finkel, "No Nineveh in the Cyrus Cylinder", in ''NABU'' 1997/23)</ref> to ] and ], ], ], Zabban, Me-Turnu, ], as far as the region of ]{{Broken anchor|date=2024-07-27|bot=User:Cewbot/log/20201008/configuration|target_link=Gutian people#Gutium as a later geographic term|reason= The anchor (Gutium as a later geographic term) ].}}, the sacred centers on the other side of the ], whose sanctuaries had been abandoned for a long time, I returned the images of the gods, who had resided there , to their places and I let them dwell in eternal abodes. I gathered all their inhabitants and returned to them their dwellings.<ref>{{cite web |last=Lendering |first=Jona |date=5 February 2010 |title=Cyrus Cylinder (2) |publisher=Livius.org |url=http://www.livius.org:80/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder2.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180311235804/https://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder2.html |archive-date=11 March 2018 |access-date=10 January 2007 }} Text adapted from {{harvtxt|Schaudig|2001}}. English translation adapted from Cogan's translation in {{harvtxt|Hallo|Younger|2003}}.</ref>}}

This passage has often been interpreted as a reference to the benign policy instituted by Cyrus of allowing exiled peoples, such as the Jews, to return to their original homelands.<ref name="Becking">], p. 8</ref> The Cylinder's inscription has been linked with the reproduction in the Book of Ezra of two texts that are claimed to be edicts issued by Cyrus concerning the repatriation of the Jews and the reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem.<ref>]</ref> The two edicts (one in ] and one in ]) are substantially different in content and tone, leading some historians to argue that one or both may be a ''post hoc'' fabrication.<ref>], p. 113</ref> The question of their authenticity remains unresolved, though it is widely believed that they do reflect some sort of Persian royal policy, albeit perhaps not one that was couched in the terms given in the text of the biblical edicts.

The dispute over the authenticity of the biblical edicts has prompted interest in this passage from the Cyrus Cylinder, specifically concerning the question of whether it indicates that Cyrus had a ''general'' policy of repatriating subject peoples and restoring their sanctuaries.<ref>], p. 134</ref> The text of the Cylinder is very specific, listing places in Mesopotamia and the neighboring regions. It does not describe any general release or return of exiled communities but focuses on the return of Babylonian deities to their own home cities. It emphasises the re-establishment of local religious norms, reversing the alleged neglect of Nabonidus – a theme that Amélie Kuhrt describes as "a literary device used to underline the piety of Cyrus as opposed to the blasphemy of Nabonidus". She suggests that Cyrus had simply adopted a policy used by earlier Assyrian rulers of giving privileges to cities in key strategic or politically sensitive regions and that there was no general policy as such.<ref name="Kuhrt-1983">], pp. 83–97</ref> ], a historian of early Judaism, has written that "the religious policy of the Persians was not that different from the basic practice of the Assyrians and Babylonians before them" in tolerating – but not promoting – local cults, other than their own gods.<ref>], p. 542</ref>

Cyrus may have seen ], situated in a strategic location between Mesopotamia and Egypt, as worth patronising for political reasons. His Achaemenid successors generally supported indigenous cults in subject territories and thereby curried favour with the cults' devotees.<ref name="Bedford138">], pp. 138–39</ref> Conversely, Persian kings might destroy the shrines of peoples who had rebelled against them, as happened at ] in 494 BC following the ].<ref>Greaves, Alan M. ''Miletos: A History'', p. 84. Routledge, 2002. {{ISBN|978-0415238465}}</ref> The Cylinder's text does not describe any general policy of a return of exiles or mention any sanctuary outside Babylonia<ref name="Janzen">], p. 157</ref> therein supporting Peter Ross Bedford's argument that the Cylinder is "not a manifesto for a general policy regarding indigenous cults and their worshippers throughout the empire".<ref>], p. 137</ref> Amélie Kuhrt notes that "the purely Babylonian context of the Cylinder provides no proof" that Cyrus gave attention to the Jewish exiles or the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem<ref name="Kuhrt-1982" /> and biblical historian Bob Becking concludes that "it has nothing to do with Judeans, Jews or Jerusalem". Becking also points to the lack of reference to the Jews in surviving Achaemenid texts as an indication that they were not considered of any particular importance.<ref name="Becking" />

The German scholar ] summarizes the widely held traditional view by noting that "Many scholars have read into a confirmation of the Old Testament passages about the steps taken by Cyrus towards the erection of the Jerusalem temple and the repatriation of the Judaeans" and that this interpretation undergirded a belief "that the instructions to this effect were actually provided in these very formulations of the Cyrus Cylinder".<ref name="Wiesehöfer-2001" />

=== Human rights ===
The Cylinder gained new prominence in the late 1960s when the last ] called it "the world's first charter of ]".<ref name="MacGregor">]</ref> The cylinder was a key symbol of the Shah's political ideology and is still regarded by some commentators as a charter of human rights, but this has been disputed by specialist scholars on the Persian empire.<ref name="Ansari" />

==== Pahlavi Iranian government's view ====
] at Pahlavi Iranian imperial era]]
The Cyrus Cylinder was dubbed the "first declaration of human rights" by the pre-] Iranian government,<ref name="note">{{Cite web|url=https://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|title=United Nations Note to Correspondents no. 3699, 13 October 1971|access-date=26 March 2020|archive-date=7 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807221203/http://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref> a reading prominently advanced by ] ], in a 1967 book, ''The White Revolution of Iran''. The Shah identified Cyrus as a key figure in government ideology and associated his government with the Achaemenids.<ref name="Wiesehöfer-1999">], pp. 55–68</ref> He wrote that "the history of our empire began with the famous declaration of Cyrus, which, for its advocacy of humane principles, justice and liberty, must be considered one of the most remarkable documents in the history of mankind."<ref name="Pahlavi" /> The Shah described Cyrus as the first ruler in history to give his subjects "freedom of opinion and other basic rights".<ref name="Pahlavi">], p. 9</ref> In 1968, the Shah opened ] in ] by saying that the Cyrus Cylinder was the precursor to the modern ].<ref name="Robertson">], p. 7</ref>

In his 1971 ] (New Year) speech, the Shah declared that 1350 ] (1971–1972) would be Cyrus the Great Year, during which a grand commemoration would be held to celebrate 2,500 years of Persian monarchy. It would serve as a showcase for a modern Iran in which the contributions that Iran had made to world civilization would be recognized. The main theme of the commemoration was the centrality of the monarchy within Iran's political system, associating the Shah of Iran with the famous monarchs of Persia's past, and with Cyrus in particular.<ref name="Ansari">], pp. 218–19.</ref> The Shah looked to the Achaemenid period as "a moment from the national past that could best serve as a model and a slogan for the imperial society he hoped to create".<ref name="Lincoln">], p. 32.</ref>

The Cyrus Cylinder was adopted as the symbol for the commemoration, and Iranian magazines and journals published numerous articles about ancient Persian history.<ref name="Ansari" /> The British Museum loaned the original Cylinder to the Iranian government for the duration of the festivities; it was put on display at the Shahyad Monument (now the ]) in ].<ref name="Housego">]</ref> The ] commenced on October 12, 1971, and culminated a week later with a spectacular parade at the tomb of Cyrus in ]. On October 14, the shah's sister, ], presented the ] ] with a replica of the Cylinder. The princess asserted that "the heritage of Cyrus was the heritage of human understanding, tolerance, courage, compassion and, above all, human liberty".<ref name="UN" /> The Secretary General accepted the gift, linking the Cylinder with the efforts of the ] to address "the question of Respect for Human Rights in Armed Conflict".<ref name="UN" /> Since then the replica Cylinder has been kept at the ] in ] on the second floor hallway.<ref name="UN">United Nations Press Release 14 October 1971( {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807221203/http://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf |date=2017-08-07 }})</ref> The United Nations continues to promote the cylinder as "an ancient declaration of human rights".<ref name="Schulz" />

==== Reception in the Islamic Republic ====
In September 2010, former Iranian president ] officially opened the Cyrus Cylinder exhibition at the ]. After the Pahlavi era, it was the second time the cylinder was brought to Iran. It was also its longest-running exhibition inside the country. Ahmadinejad considers the Cyrus Cylinder as the incarnation of human values and a cultural heritage for all humanity, and called it the "''First Charter of Human Rights''". The ] had loaned the Cyrus Cylinder to the National Museum of Iran for four months.

{{Quote|text=The Cylinder reads that everyone is entitled to freedom of thought and choice and all individuals should pay respect to one another. The historical charter also underscores the necessity of fighting oppression, defending the oppressed, respecting human dignity, and recognizing human rights. The Cyrus Cylinder bears testimony to the fact that the Iranian nation has always been the flag-bearer of justice, devotion and human values throughout history.|author=] during Cyrus Cylinder exhibition at ] |source=}}

Some Iranian politicians such as ] ] criticized Ahmadinejad for bringing the Cyrus Cylinder to Iran, although Tehran daily '']'', viewed as an ultra-conservative newspaper, had opined that the Islamic Republic should never have returned the Cyrus Cylinder to Britain (note that the cylinder was not discovered in Iran, but in present-day Iraq):

{{Quote|text=There is an important question: Doesn't the cylinder belong to Iran? And hasn't the British government stolen ancient artifacts from our country? If the answers to these questions are positive, then why should we return this stolen historical and valuable work to the thieves?|author=] during Cyrus Cylinder exhibition in Iran|source=}}

At the time, the Curator of the National Museum of Iran, Azadeh Ardakani, reported approximately 48,000 visitors to the Cylinder exhibition, amongst whom over 2000 were foreigners, including foreign ambassadors.

==== Scholarly views ====
The interpretation of the Cylinder as a "charter of human rights" has been described by various historians as "rather anachronistic" and tendentious.<ref name="Daniel">], p. 39</ref><ref>], p. 47</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">], p. 104</ref><ref name="Curtis">], p. 59</ref><ref name="KQED-cylinder">{{cite news |url=http://www.kqed.org/arts/visualarts/article.jsp?essid=124632 |title=Oldest Known Charter of Human Rights Comes to San Francisco |date=13 August 2013 |access-date=21 September 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130922152858/http://www.kqed.org/arts/visualarts/article.jsp?essid=124632 |archive-date=22 September 2013 }}</ref> It has been dismissed as a "misunderstanding"<ref name="Mitchell">], p. 83</ref> and characterized as political propaganda devised by the Pahlavi regime.<ref name="Kuhrt-1983" /> The German historian Josef Wiesehöfer comments that the portrayal of Cyrus as a champion of human rights is as illusory as the image of the "humane and enlightened Shah of Persia".<ref name="Wiesehöfer-1999" /> ] and Helaine Silverman describe the Shah's aim as being to legitimise the Iranian nation and his own regime, and to counter the growing influence of Islamic fundamentalism by creating an alternative narrative rooted in the ancient Persian past.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Silverman, Helaine|author2=Ruggles, D. Fairchild |author2-link=D. Fairchild Ruggles |title=Cultural Heritage and Human Rights|page=11|publisher=Springer|year=2008|isbn=978-0387765792}}</ref>

Writing in the immediate aftermath of the Shah's anniversary commemorations, the British Museum's C.B.F. Walker comments that the "essential character of the Cyrus Cylinder a general declaration of human rights or religious toleration but simply a building inscription, in the Babylonian and Assyrian tradition, commemorating Cyrus's restoration of the city of Babylon and the worship of Marduk previously neglected by Nabonidus".<ref name="Walker" /> Two professors specialising in the history of the ancient Near East, Bill T. Arnold and Piotr Michalowski, comment: "Generically, it belongs with other foundation deposit inscriptions; it is not an edict of any kind, nor does it provide any unusual human rights declaration as is sometimes claimed."<ref name="Arnold">], pp. 426–30</ref> Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones of the ] notes that "there is nothing in the text" that suggests the concept of human rights.<ref name="ReferenceA" /> Neil MacGregor comments:

{{quote|Comparison by scholars in the ] with other similar texts, however, showed that rulers in ancient Iraq had been making comparable declarations upon succeeding to the throne for two millennia before Cyrus it is one of the museum's tasks to resist the narrowing of the object's meaning and its appropriation to one political agenda.<ref name="MacGregor" />}} He cautions that while the Cylinder is "clearly linked with the ]," it is "in no real sense an Iranian document: it is part of a much larger history of the ancient Near East, of Mesopotamian kingship, and of the ]".<ref name="MacGregor" /> In a similar vein, Qamar Adamjee of the ] describes it as a "very traditional kingship document" and cautions that "it's anachronistic to use 20th century terms to describe events that happened two thousand five hundred years ago."<ref name="KQED-cylinder"/>

== Exhibition history ==
]
The Cyrus Cylinder has been displayed in the British Museum since its formal acquisition in 1880.<ref name="BM-database" /> It has been loaned five times{{snd}}twice to Iran, between 7–22 October 1971 in conjunction with the ] and again from September–December 2010, once to ] from March–June 2006,<ref name="BM-database" /> once to the United States in a traveling exhibition from March–October 2013, and once to the Yale Peabody Museum for their reopening celebrations in May-June 2024.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://peabody.yale.edu/news/first_charter_of_human_rights | title="First Charter of Human Rights" on Display at Peabody &#124; Yale Peabody Museum }}</ref> Many replicas have been made. Some were distributed by the Shah following the 1971 commemorations, while the British Museum and ] have sold them commercially.<ref name="BM-database" />

The British Museum's ownership of the Cyrus Cylinder has been the cause of some controversy in Iran, although the artifact was obtained legally and was not excavated on Iranian soil but on former ] (modern ]). When it was loaned in 1971, the Iranian press campaigned for its transfer to Iranian ownership. The Cylinder was brought back to London without difficulty, but the British Museum's Board of Trustees subsequently decided that it would be "undesirable to make a further loan of the Cylinder to Iran."<ref name="BM-database" />

In 2005–2006 the British Museum mounted a major exhibition on the ], ''Forgotten Empire: the World of Ancient Persia.'' It was held in collaboration with the Iranian government, which loaned the British Museum a number of iconic artefacts in exchange for an undertaking that the Cyrus Cylinder would be loaned to the National Museum of Iran in return.<ref>]</ref>

The planned loan of the Cylinder was postponed in October 2009 following the ] so that the British Museum could be "assured that the situation in the country was suitable".<ref name=Sheikholeslami>]</ref> In response, the Iranian government threatened to end cooperation with the British Museum if the Cylinder was not loaned within the following two months.<ref name=Sheikholeslami /><ref name="Wilson">]</ref> This deadline was postponed despite appeals by the Iranian government<ref name=Sheikholeslami /><ref>"]"</ref> but the Cylinder did eventually go on display in Tehran in September 2010 for a four-month period.<ref name="CyrusCylinderReturns">]</ref> The exhibition was very popular, attracting 48,000 people within the first ten days and about 500,000 people by the time it closed in January 2011.<ref>" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614012543/http://www.tehrantimes.com/Index_view.asp?code=227412 |date=2011-06-14}}". ''Tehran Times'', September 26, 2010</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.economist.com/books-and-arts/2013/03/23/diplomatic-whirl|title=Diplomatic whirl|date=2013-03-23|newspaper=]|access-date=2019-07-30|issn=0013-0613}}</ref> However, at its opening, Iranian president ] mingled ]an and ancient Persian symbology, which commentators inside and outside Iran criticised as an overt appeal to religious nationalism.<ref name="Esfandiari">Esfandiari, Golnaz. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100918113749/http://www.rferl.org/content/Historic_Cyrus_Cylinder_Called_A_Stranger_In_Its_Own_Home/2157345.html?page=1&x=1#relatedInfoContainer |date=2010-09-18}}. "Persian Letters", Radio Free Europe. September 14, 2010</ref>

On November 28, 2012, the ] announced the first United States tour of the Cylinder. Under the headline "British Museum lends ancient 'bill of rights' cylinder to US", Museum director Neil MacGregor declared that "The cylinder, often referred to as the first bill of human rights, 'must be shared as widely as possible'".<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-20508195|title=Babylonian artefact to tour US|date=2012-11-28|access-date=2019-07-30|language=en-GB}}</ref> The British Museum itself announced the news in its press release, saying "'First declaration of human rights' to tour five cities in the United States".<ref>{{Cite press release|url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/about_us/news_and_press/press_releases/2012/cyrus_cylinder_travels_to_us.aspx|title=The Cyrus Cylinder travels to the US|website=British Museum|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-07-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130207165713/https://www.britishmuseum.org/about_us/news_and_press/press_releases/2012/cyrus_cylinder_travels_to_us.aspx |archive-date=7 February 2013}}</ref> According to the British Museum's website for the Cylinder's US exhibition "CyrusCylinder2013.com", the tour started in March 2013 and included ]'s ], the ] in ], the ] in ], the ] in ] and culminated at the ] in ], in October 2013.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://cyruscylinder2013.com/venues/|title=Tour Venues and Dates|date=2013-02-28|website=Cyrus Cylinder US Tour 2013|language=en-US|access-date=2019-07-30|archive-date=2014-05-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140513010951/http://cyruscylinder2013.com/venues/|url-status=dead}}</ref>

The cylinder, along with thirty two other associated objects from the ] collection, including a pair of gold armlets from the ] and the Darius Seal, were part of an exhibition titled 'The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia – A New Beginning' at the ] in ], India, from December 21, 2013, to February 25, 2014. It was organised by the British Museum and the Prince of Wales Museum in partnership with ], ] and Navajbai Ratan Tata Trust, all set up by luminaries from the ] community, who are descendants of Persian ], who hold ] in great regard, as many scholars consider him as a follower of ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.tata.co.in/company/releasesinside/The-Cyrus-Cylinder-and-Ancient-Persia-A-New-Beginning-an-exhibition-in-partnership-with-three-Tata-trusts |title='The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia - A New Beginning', an exhibition in partnership with three Tata trusts - Tata Sons - Tata group |access-date=2014-06-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150513150652/http://www.tata.co.in/company/releasesinside/The-Cyrus-Cylinder-and-Ancient-Persia-A-New-Beginning-an-exhibition-in-partnership-with-three-Tata-trusts |archive-date=2015-05-13 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
The cylinder is currently on display through June 2024 at the Yale Peabody Museum, in New Haven CT to celebrate their reopening<ref>{{cite web | url=https://peabody.yale.edu/news/first_charter_of_human_rights | title="First Charter of Human Rights" on Display at Peabody &#124; Yale Peabody Museum }}</ref>

==''The Freedom Sculpture''==
{{Main|Freedom Sculpture}}
''The Freedom Sculpture'' or ''Freedom: A Shared Dream'' ({{langx|fa|تندیس آزادی}}) is a 2017 stainless steel public art sculpture by artist and architect ], located in ], California, and modeled on the Cyrus Cylinder.<ref name="KCRW">{{cite news |last1=Anderton |first1=Frances |title=Cecil Balmond Designs 'Freedom Sculpture' for Los Angeles |url=https://www.kcrw.com/culture/shows/design-and-architecture/freedom-sculpture-henry-rollins-surfboards/cecil-balmond-designs-freedom-sculpture-for-los-angeles |access-date=21 November 2020 |publisher=KCRW |date=4 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://la.curbed.com/2017/7/5/15923494/la-freedom-sculpture-century-city-cylinder | title=Century City Freedom Sculpture unveiled on Santa Monica Boulevard median| date=2017-07-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-freedom-sculpture-20170704-story.html | title='Los Angeles embodies diversity.' the city's new sculpture celebrating freedom is unveiled |work= Los Angeles Times| date=5 July 2017 }}</ref>

== See also ==
* ]
* ]
* ]

== Notes and references ==
{{reflist}}

== Further reading ==
=== Books and journals ===
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite book|ref=Abtahi|last=Abtahi|first=Hirad|editor=Abtahi, Hirad|editor2=Boas, Gideon|title=The Dynamics of International Criminal Justice: Essays in Honour of Sir Richard May|publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|location=Leiden|year=2006|isbn=978-9004145870}}
* {{cite book|ref=Albertz|last=Albertz|first=Rainer|title=Israel in Exile: The History and Literature of the Sixth Century B.C.E.|publisher=Society of Biblical Literature|location=Atlanta|year=2003|isbn=978-1589830554}}
* {{cite book|ref=Ansari|last=Ansari|first=Ali|author-link=Ali M. Ansari|title=Modern Iran: The Pahlavis and After|publisher=Longman|location=Harlow|year=2007|isbn=978-1405840842}}
* {{cite book|ref=Arberry|last=Arberry|first=A.J.|title=The Legacy of Persia|url=https://archive.org/details/legacyofpersia0000arbe|url-access=registration|publisher=Clarendon Press|location=Oxford|year=1953|isbn=978-0-19-821905-7|oclc=1283292}}
* {{cite book|ref=Arnold|author1=Arnold, Bill T.|author2=Michalowski, Piotr|editor=Chavelas, Mark W.|chapter=Achaemenid Period Historical Texts Concerning Mesopotamia|title=The Ancient Near East: Historical Sources in Translation|publisher=Blackwell|location=London|year=2006|isbn=978-0631235811}}
* {{cite book|ref=Bedford|last=Bedford|first=Peter Ross|title=Temple Restoration in Early Achaemenid Judah|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=2000|isbn=978-9004115095}}
* {{cite book |last1=Beaulieu |first1=Paul-Alain |title=The Reign of Nabonidus, King of Babylon (556-539 B.C.) |date=1986 |publisher=Yale University |isbn=978-0-300-04314-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/reignofnabonidus0000beau/page/222/mode/2up |language=en}}
* {{cite journal|ref=Beaulieu|last=Beaulieu|first=P.-A.|title=An Episode in the Fall of Babylon to the Persians|journal=]|volume=52|pages=241–61|number=4|date=Oct 1993|doi=10.1086/373633|s2cid=162399298}}
* {{cite book|ref=Becking|last=Becking|first=Bob|editor=Lipschitz, Oded|editor2=Oeming, Manfred|chapter="We All Returned as One!": Critical Notes on the Myth of the Mass Return|title=Judah and the Judeans in the Persian period|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2006|isbn=978-1575061047}}
* {{cite book|ref=Berger|last=Berger|first=P.-R.|chapter=Das Neujahrsfest nach den Königsinschriften des ausgehenden babylonischen Reiches|editor=Finet, A.|title=Actes de la XVIIe Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale|series=Publications du Comité belge de recherches historiques, épigraphiques et archéologiques en Mésopotamie, nr. 1|publisher=Comité belge de recherches en Mésopotamie|location=Ham-sur-Heure|year=1970|language=de}}
* {{cite book|ref=Bidmead|last=Bidmead|first=Julye|title=The Akitu Festival: Religious Continuity And Royal Legitimation In Mesopotamia|publisher=Gorgias Press LLC|location=Piscataway, NJ|year=2004|isbn=978-1593331580}}
* {{cite book|ref=Briant|last=Briant|first=Pierre|author-link=Pierre Briant|title=From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire|publisher=Eisenbraun|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2006|isbn=978-1575061207}}
* {{cite book|ref=Brown|last=Brown|first=Dale|title=Persians: Masters of Empire|publisher=Time-Life Books|location=Alexandra, VA|year=1996|isbn=978-0809491049|url=https://archive.org/details/persiansmasterso00time}}
* {{cite book|ref=Buchanan|last=Buchanan|first=G.|editor=Bury, J.B.|editor2=Cook, S.A.|editor3=Adcock, F.E.|chapter=The Foundation and Extension of the Persian Empire|title=The Cambridge Ancient History: IV. The Persian Empire and the West|url=https://archive.org/details/cambridgeancient00bury|url-access=registration|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|year=1964|oclc=57550495}}
* {{cite book |last1=Cogan |first1=Mordechai |title=Imperialism and religion : Assyria, Judah, and Israel in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C.E. |date=1974 |publisher= : Society of Biblical Literature : distributed by Scholars Press |isbn=978-0-88414-041-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/imperialismrelig0000coga/page/46/mode/2up}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Cogan |first1=Mordechai |title=Judah under Assyrian Hegemony: A Reexamination of Imperialism and Religion |journal=Journal of Biblical Literature |date=1993 |volume=112 |issue=3 |pages=403–414 |doi=10.2307/3267741 |jstor=3267741 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3267741 |issn=0021-9231}}
* {{cite book|ref=Curtis|author1=Curtis, John|author2=Tallis, Nigel|author3=André-Salvini, Béatrice|title=Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia|publisher=University of California Press|location=Berkeley|year=2005|isbn=978-0520247314}}
* {{cite book|ref=Dandamaev|last=Dandamaev|first=M.A.|title=A political history of the Achaemenid Empire|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=1989|isbn=978-9004091726}}
* {{cite book|ref=Daniel|last=Daniel|first=Elton L.|title=The History of Iran|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofiran0000dani|url-access=registration|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|location=Westport, CT|year=2000|isbn=978-0313307317}}
* {{cite book|ref=Dick|last=Dick|first=Michael B.|editor=Batto, Bernard Frank|editor2=Roberts, Kathryn L.|editor3=McBee Roberts, Jimmy Jack|chapter=The "History of David's Rise to Power" and the Neo-Babylonian Succession Apologies|title=David and Zion: Biblical Studies in Honor of J.J.M. Roberts|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2004|isbn=978-1575060927}}
* {{cite book|ref=Dyck|last=Dyck|first=Jonathan E.|title=The Theocratic Ideology of the Chronicler|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=1998|isbn=978-9004111462}}
* {{cite book|ref=Evans|last=Evans|first=Malcolm|title=Religious Liberty and International Law in Europe|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|year=1997|isbn=978-0521550215|url=https://archive.org/details/religiousliberty00evan}}
* {{cite book|ref=Finkel|author1=Finkel, I.L.|author2=Seymour, M.J.|title=Babylon|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|year=2009|isbn=978-0195385403}}
* {{cite book|ref=Fowler|author1=Fowler, Richard|author2=Hekster, Olivier|title=Imaginary kings: royal images in the ancient Near East, Greece and Rome|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|year=2005|location=Stuttgart|isbn=978-3515087650}}
* {{cite book|ref=Free|author1=Free, Joseph P.|author2=Vos, Howard Frederic|editor=Vos, Howard Frederic|title=Archaeology and Bible history|publisher=Zondervan|location=Grand Rapids, MI|year=1992|isbn=978-0310479611}}
* {{cite book|ref=Fried|last=Fried|first=Lisbeth S.|title=The priest and the great king: temple-palace relations in the Persian Empire|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2004|isbn=978-1575060903}}
* {{cite book|ref=Grabbe|last=Grabbe|first=Lester L.|author-link=Lester L. Grabbe |title=A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period: Yehud, the Persian Province of Judah|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|location=London|year=2004|isbn=978-0567089984}}
* {{cite book|ref=Grabbe-2006|last=Grabbe|first=Lester L.|editor=Lipschitz, Oded|editor2=Oeming, Manfred|chapter=The "Persian Documents" in the Book of Ezra: Are They Authentic?|title=Judah and the Judeans in the Persian period|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2006|isbn=978-1575061047}}
* {{cite book|ref=Hallo|author=Hallo, William|editor=Hallo, William|editor2=Younger, K. Lawson|title=The Context of Scripture: Monumental inscriptions from the biblical world |volume=2|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=2002|isbn=978-9004106192}}
* {{cite book|ref=Haubold|author=Haubold, Johannes|editor=Bridges, Emma|editor2=Hall, Edith|editor2-link=Edith Hall |editor3=Rhodes, P.J.|chapter=Xerxes' Homer|title=Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium|location=Oxford|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2007|isbn=978-0199279678}}
* {{cite book|ref=Hilprecht|last=Hilprecht|first=Hermann Volrath|author-link=Hermann Volrath Hilprecht|title=Explorations in Bible lands during the 19th century|url=https://archive.org/details/explorationsinbi00hilp|publisher=A.J. Molman and Company|location=Philadelphia|year=1903}}
* {{cite journal|ref=Hurowitz|last=Hurowitz|first=Victor Avigdor|title=Restoring the Temple: Why and when?|journal=]|volume=93|number=3/4|date=Jan–Apr 2003}}
* {{cite book|ref=Janzen|last=Janzen|first=David|title=Witch-hunts, purity and social boundaries: the expulsion of the foreign women in Ezra 9–10|publisher=Sheffield Academic Press|location=London|year=2002|isbn=978-1841272924}}
* {{cite book|ref=Koldewey|author1=Koldewey, Robert|author2=Griffith Johns, Agnes Sophia|title=The excavations at Babylon|url=https://archive.org/details/ldpd_10797913_000|publisher=MacMillan & co.|year=1914|location=London}}
* {{cite book|ref=Kuhrt-1982|last=Kuhrt|first=Amélie|author-link=Amélie Kuhrt|chapter=Babylonia from Cyrus to Xerxes|title=The Cambridge Ancient History: Vol IV – Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean|editor=Boardman, John|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|year=1982|isbn=978-0521228046}}
* {{cite journal|ref=Kuhrt-1983|last=Kuhrt|first=Amélie|title=The Cyrus Cylinder and Achaemenid imperial policy|journal=]|volume=25|year=1983|issn=1476-6728}}
* {{cite book|ref=Kuhrt-2007a|last=Kuhrt|first=Amélie|title=The Persian Empire: A Corpus of Sources of the Achaemenid Period|publisher=Routledge|location=London|year=2007|isbn=978-0415436281}}
* {{cite book|ref=Kuhrt-2007b|last=Kuhrt|first=Amélie|editor=Heinz, Marlies|editor2=Feldman, Marian H.|chapter=Cyrus the Great of Persia: Images and Realities|title=Representations of Political Power: Case Histories from Times of Change and Dissolving Order in the Ancient Near East|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2007|isbn=978-1575061351}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Kuhrt |first1=Amélie |title=The Problem of Achaemenid 'Religious Policy' |journal=Die Welt der Götterbilder |date=27 August 2008 |pages=117–144 |doi=10.1515/9783110204155.1.117 |url=https://ia801504.us.archive.org/2/items/TheProblemOfAchaemenidReligiousPolicy/Kuhrt2007TheProblemOfAchaemenidreligious-.pdf |publisher=De Gruyter |isbn=978-3-11-019463-0 |language=de}}
* {{cite book|ref=Kutsko|last=Kutsko|first=John F.|title=Between Heaven and Earth: Divine Presence and Absence in the Book of Ezekiel|publisher=Eisenbrauns|location=Winona Lake, IN|year=2000|isbn=978-1575060415}}
* {{cite book|ref=Lincoln|last=Lincoln|first=Bruce|title=Discourse and the Construction of Society: Comparative Studies of Myth, Ritual, and Classification|publisher=Oxford University Press US|location=New York|year=1992|isbn=978-0195079098}}
* {{cite book|ref=Lincoln (2007)|last=Lincoln|first=Bruce|title=Religion, empire and torture: the case of Achaemenian Persia, with a postscript on Abu Ghraib|publisher=University of Chicago Press|location=Chicago|year=2007|isbn=978-0226481968}}
* {{cite book|ref=Llewellyn-Jones|editor-last=Harrison|editor-first=Thomas|last=Llewellyn-Jones|first=Lloyd|chapter=The First Persian Empire 550–330 BC|title=The Great Empires of the Ancient World|page=104|publisher=Getty Publications|year=2009|isbn=978-0892369874}}
* {{cite book|ref=Mallowan|last=Mallowan|first=Max|author-link=Max Mallowan |oclc=40820893 |chapter=Cyrus the Great (558–529 B.C.)|title=The Cambridge History of Iran. Vol. 2, The Median and Achaemenian periods|publisher=Cambridge University Press|editor=Frye, Richard Nelson|editor2=Fisher, William Bayne|location=Cambridge|year=1968|isbn=978-0-521-20091-2}}
* {{cite book |ref=Masroori |last=Masroori |first=C. |chapter=Cyrus II and the Political Utility of Religious Toleration |title=Religious Toleration: "The Variety of Rites" from Cyrus to Defoe |publisher=St. Martin's Press |editor1-first=J. C. |editor1-last=Laursen |location=New York |year= 1999 |isbn=978-0312222338 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/religi_xxx_1999_00_3217 }}
* {{cite book |ref=Min| last=Min| first=Kyung-Jin|title=The Levitical Authorship of Ezra-Nehemiah|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group |location=London|isbn=978-0567082268| date=2004}}
* {{cite book|ref=Mitchell|last=Mitchell|first=T.C.|title=Biblical Archaeology: Documents from the British Museum|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=London|year=1988|isbn=978-0521368674}}
* {{cite book |last1=Nielsen |first1=John Preben |title=The reign of Nebuchadnezzar I in history and historical memory |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |location=New-York (N.Y.) |isbn=978-1138120402}}
* {{cite book|ref=Nies|author1=Nies, J.B.|author2=Keiser, C.E.|title=Babylonian Inscriptions in the Collection of J.B. Nies|volume=II|year=1920}}
* {{cite book|ref=Pahlavi|last=Pahlavi|first=Mohammed Reza|author-link=Mohammed Reza Pahlavi|title=The White Revolution of Iran|publisher=Imperial Pahlavi Library|year=1967}}
* {{cite book|ref=Pritchard|editor=Pritchard, James Bennett|title=The Ancient Near East, Volume I: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures|publisher=Princeton University Press|location=Princeton|year=1973|oclc=150577756}}
* {{cite book|ref=Razmjou|last=Razmjou|first=Shahrokh|author-link=Shahrokh Razmjou|editor-last=Finkel|editor-first=Irving|editor-link=Irving Finkel|title=The Cyrus Cylinder: The King of Persia's Proclamation from Ancient Babylon|place=London|publisher=published by I. B. Tauris & Co. Ltd|year=2013|pages=104–125|contribution=The Cyrus Cylinder: A Persian Perspective|contribution-url=https://www.academia.edu/44496133/_The_Cyrus_Cylinder_A_Persian_Perspective_|isbn=978-1-78076-063-6}}
* {{cite book|ref=Rassam|last=Rassam|first=Hormuzd|author-link=Hormuzd Rassam|title=Asshur and the land of Nimrod|url=https://archive.org/details/asshurandlandni00rogegoog|year=1897|publisher=Curts & Jennings|location=London}}
* {{cite journal|ref=Rawlinson|last=Rawlinson|first=H. C.|author-link=Sir Henry Rawlinson, 1st Baronet|year=1880|title=Notes on a newly-discovered clay Cylinder of Cyrus the Great|journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland|volume=12}}
* {{cite book|ref=Robertson-Merrills|author1=Robertson, Arthur Henry|author2=Merrills, J. G.|title=Human rights in the world : an introduction to the study of the international protection of human rights|publisher=Manchester University Press|location=Manchester|year=1996|isbn=978-0719049231|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/humanrightsinwor0000robe}}
* {{cite book|ref=Schaudig|last=Schaudig|first=Hanspeter|title=Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros' des Grossen samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften : Textausgabe und Grammatik|publisher=Ugarit-Verlag|location=Münster|year=2001|isbn=978-3927120754|language=de}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Schaudig |first1=Hanspeter |title=Death of Statues and Rebirth of Gods |journal=Iconoclasm and Text Destruction in the Ancient Near East and Beyond |date=2012 |volume=Oriental Institute Seminars 8 |pages=123–149 |url=https://www.academia.edu/en/7817124/_Death_of_Statues_and_Rebirth_of_Gods_in_N_N_May_ed_Iconoclasm_and_Text_Destruction_in_the_Ancient_Near_East_and_Beyond_Oriental_Institute_Seminars_8_Chicago_2012_pp_123_149}}
* {{cite book |ref=Shabani|title=Iranian History at a Glance|last=Shabani|first=Reza|others=Mahmood Farrokhpey (trans.)|publisher=Alhoda UK |isbn=978-9644390050|location=London|year=2005 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=RhHENa0o6zMC&pg=21}}
* {{cite book|ref=Sherwin|last=Sherwin|first=Simon J.|editor=Gordon, Robert P|chapter=Old Testament monotheism and Zoroastrian influence|title=The God of Israel: Studies of an Inimitable Deity|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|year=2007|isbn=978-0521873659}}
* {{cite book|ref=Smith|last=Smith|first=Morton|editor=Cohen, Shaye J.D.|title=Studies in the cult of Yahweh, Volume 1|page=78|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=1996|isbn=978-9004104778}}
* {{cite book |ref=Soggin|last=Soggin|first=J. Alberto|author-link=Alberto Soggin|others=John Bowman (trans.)|title=An Introduction to the History of Israel and Judah|year=1999|publisher=SCM-Canterbury Press Ltd |location=London |isbn=978-0334027881}}
* {{cite book|ref=Stillman|last=Stillman|first=Robert E.|title=Philip Sidney and the poetics of Renaissance cosmopolitanism|publisher=Ashgate Publishing|year=2008|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0754663690}}
* {{cite journal|ref=van der Spek|last=van der Spek|first=R.J.|author-link=R. J. van der Spek|title=Did Cyrus the Great introduce a new policy towards subdued nations? Cyrus in Assyrian perspective|journal=Persica|volume=10|year=1982|oclc=499757419}}
* {{cite journal |last1=van der Spek |first1=R. J |title=Cyrus the Great, Exiles, and Foreign Gods: A Comparison of Assyrian and Persian Policies on Subject Nations. |journal=Extraction & Control- Studies in Honor of Matthew W. Stolper |date=1 January 2014 |volume=Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization |issue=68 |pages=233–264 |url=https://www.academia.edu/3753890}}
* {{cite book|ref=Vos|last=Vos|first=Howard Frederic|title=The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia|chapter=Archaeology of Mesopotamia|editor=Bromiley, Geoffrey W.|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|location=Grand Rapids, Mich.|year=1995|isbn=978-0802837813}}
* {{cite journal|ref=Walker|last=Walker|first=C.B.F.|title=A recently identified fragment of the Cyrus Cylinder|journal=Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies|number=10|year=1972|volume=10|pages=158–159|doi=10.2307/4300475|jstor=4300475|issn=0578-6967}}
* {{cite book|ref=Walton|author1=Walton, John H.|author2=Hill, Andrew E.|title=Old Testament Today: A Journey from Original Meaning to Contemporary Significance|publisher=Zondervan|location=Grand Rapids, MI|year=2004|isbn=978-0310238263}}
* {{cite book|ref=Wiesehöfer-1999|last=Wiesehöfer|first=Josef|author-link=Josef Wiesehöfer|chapter=Kyros, der Schah und 2500 Jahre Menschenrechte. Historische Mythenbildung zur Zeit der Pahlavi-Dynastie|title=Mythen, Geschichte(n), Identitäten. Der Kampf um die Vergangenheit|editor=Conermann, Stephan|publisher=EB-Verlag|location=Schenefeld/Hamburg|year=1999|isbn=978-3930826520|language=de}}
* {{cite book|ref=Wiesehöfer-2001|last=Wiesehöfer|first=Josef|title=Ancient Persia: From 550 BC to 650 AD|publisher=I.B. Tauris|location=London|year=2001|isbn=978-1860646751}}
* {{cite book|ref=Weissbach|last=Weissbach|first=Franz Heinrich|title=Die Keilinschriften der Achämeniden|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.509085|series=Vorderasiatische Bibliotek|publisher=J. C. Hinrichs|location=Leipzig|year=1911|language=de}}
* {{cite book|ref=Winn Leith|last=Winn Leith|first=Mary Joan|editor=Coogan, Michael David|chapter=Israel among the Nations: The Persian Period|title=The Oxford History of the Biblical World|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780195087079|url-access=registration|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|year=1998|isbn=978-0195139372}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Zaia |first1=Shana |title=State-Sponsored Sacrilege: "Godnapping" and Omission in Neo-Assyrian Inscriptions |journal=Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History |date=1 December 2015 |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=19–54 |doi=10.1515/janeh-2015-0006 |url=https://www.academia.edu/19437399 |language=en |issn=2328-9562}}
* {{cite book|ref=Farrokh|last=Farrokh|first=Kaveh|author-link=Kaveh Farrokh|chapter=Cyrus the Great and early Achaemenids|title=Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|year=2007|isbn=978-1846031083}}
* {{cite book|ref=Lauren|last=Lauren|first=Paul Gordon|chapter=Philosophical Visions: Human Nature, Natural Law, and Natural Rights|title=The Evolution of International Human Rights: Visions Seen|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|location=Philadelphia|year=2003|isbn=978-0812218541}}
{{refend}}

=== Media articles ===
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite news|ref=Royal Asiatic Society|title=Royal Asiatic Society|work=The Times|date=18 November 1879}}
* {{cite news|ref=Monument|title=A Monument of Cyrus the Great|work=The Oriental Journal|location=London|date=January 1880}}
* {{cite news|ref=Housego|title=Pique and peacocks in Persepolis|last=Housego|first=David|work=The Times|date=1971-10-15}}
* {{cite news|ref=Foucart|last=Foucart|first=Stéphane|title=Cyrus le taiseux|work=]|date=2007-08-19|url=http://www.lemonde.fr/web/imprimer_element/0,40-0@2-781732,50-945518,0.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130107084547/http://www.lemonde.fr/web/imprimer_element/0,40-0@2-781732,50-945518,0.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=2013-01-07|access-date=2008-07-30|language=fr}}
* {{cite news|ref=Jeffries|last=Jeffries|first=Stuart|title=A private view|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2005/oct/22/heritage|work=The Guardian|date=2005-10-22|access-date=2010-06-19|location=London}}
* {{cite news|ref=MacGregor|last=MacGregor|first=Neil|author-link=Neil MacGregor|title=The whole world in our hands|journal=The Guardian|date=2004-07-24|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2004/jul/24/heritage.art|access-date=2010-06-26|location=London}}
* {{cite news|ref=Schulz|last=Schulz|first=Matthias|title=Falling for Ancient Propaganda: UN Treasure Honors Persian Despot|work=]|date=15 July 2008|url=http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,566027,00.html|access-date=25 November 2015}}
* {{cite news|ref=Sheikholeslami|last=Sheikholeslami|first=Ali|title=Iran Gives British Museum 2-Month Deadline Over Cyrus Cylinder|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a5av3UWdN1aU|publisher=Bloomberg News|date=2009-10-12|access-date=2010-06-19}}
* {{cite news |ref=Wilson |last=Wilson |first=John |title=British Museum in battle with Iran over ancient 'charter of rights' |newspaper=The Observer |date=2010-01-24 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/science/2010/jan/24/cyrus-cylinder-iran-museum-row |access-date=2010-06-24 |location=London }}
* {{cite news|ref=Iran severs|author=Staff|title=Iran severs cultural ties with British Museum over Persian treasure|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/7183364/Iran-severs-cultural-ties-with-British-Museum-over-Persian-treasure.html|work=Daily Telegraph|date=2010-02-07|access-date=2010-06-20|location=London}}
* {{cite news |ref=IranSeeksComp |title=Iran seeks compensation from British Museum |date=2010-04-18 |work=] |url=http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=217775 }}
* {{cite news |ref=Iran Demands |title=Iran demands $300,000 from British Museum over Cyrus Cylinder delay |date=2010-04-20 |work=] |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article7102268.ece#cid=OTC-RSS&attr=797093 |quote=Iran is demanding that the British Museum pay $300,000 (£197,000) after it refused to hand over the Cyrus Cylinder{{snd}}a cuneiform tablet regarded as the first declaration of human rights. |location=London }}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
* {{cite news |ref=CyrusCylinderReturns |title=Cyrus Cylinder, world's oldest human rights charter, returns to Iran on loan |work=] |date=2010-09-10 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/sep/10/cyrus-cylinder-returns-iran |access-date=2010-09-10 |location=London }}
* {{cite news |ref=CyrusCylinderIrna |title=موزه بريتانيا: تبادل اشياء تاريخي با موزه ملي ايران براي ما مهم است (British Museum: Exchange of historical objects with the National Museum of Iran is important to us) |publisher=] |date=2010-09-10 |url=http://www.irna.com/html/1389/13890619/267560.htm |access-date=2010-09-10 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927160111/http://www.irna.com/html/1389/13890619/267560.htm |archive-date=2011-09-27 }}
* {{cite news |ref=CyrusCylinderInstalled |title=منشور حقوق بشر كوروش در موزه ملي ايران استقرار يافت (The Human Rights Declaration of Cyrus was Installed at National Museum) |publisher=] |date=2010-09-11 |url=http://www.irna.ir/html/1389/13890620/267930.htm |access-date=2010-09-11 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120316174257/http://www.irna.ir/html/1389/13890620/267930.htm |archive-date=2012-03-16 }}
{{refend}}

=== Other sources ===
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite web |title=Highlights – the Cyrus Cylinder |website=British Museum |url=http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectid=327188&partid=1 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120321184218/http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectid=327188&partid=1 |archive-date=2012-03-21 |url-status=dead |ref=BM-The Cyrus Cylinder }}
* {{cite web |title=The Cyrus Cylinder |website=British Museum |url=http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/me/c/cyrus_cylinder.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080903134225/http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/me/c/cyrus_cylinder.aspx |archive-date=2008-09-03 |url-status=dead |ref=BM-database }}
* {{cite news |ref=BM-discovery-2010-01-11 |access-date=2010-06-25 |title=British Museum Postpones Sending Artifact to Iran |quote='The agreement has been made with our colleagues in Iran that we'll postpone the loan to investigate this exciting discovery with them,' said Hannah Boulton, head of press and ] at the British Museum. 'That's the reason for the postponement.' Boulton said the latest postponement had no link to recent events. |last=Nayeri |first=F. |date=2010-01-11 |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aL3dIlC_zlj0 |publisher=Bloomberg }}
* {{cite book|ref=BM-inscription|title=The Cyrus Cylinder|quote=For almost 100 years the Cylinder was regarded as ancient Mesopotamian propaganda. This changed in 1971 when the Shah of Iran used it as a central image in his own propaganda celebrating 2500 years of Iranian monarchy. In Iran, the Cylinder has appeared on coins, banknotes and stamps. Despite being a Babylonian document it has become part of Iran's cultural identity.|publisher=British Museum|location=Inscription in room 55}}
* {{cite web |ref=BM-Statements regarding |url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/the_museum/news_and_press_releases/statements/cyrus_cylinder.aspx |title=Statements regarding the Cyrus Cylinder |last=The British Museum |publisher=British Museum |date=2010-01-20 |access-date=2010-06-01 }}
* {{cite web|ref=UN Note|url=https://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|title=Note to Correspondents no. 3699|publisher=United Nations|date=1971-10-13|access-date=2010-06-08|archive-date=2017-08-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807221203/http://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web |ref=Lendering |last=Lendering |first=Jona |author-link=Jona Lendering |title=The Cyrus Cylinder |publisher=livius.org |date=2007-01-28 |url=https://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder.html |access-date=2008-07-30 |archive-date=2017-07-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170722222501/http://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder.html |url-status=dead }}
* {{cite encyclopedia|ref=Dandamayev-Iranica|last=Dandamaev|first=M.A.|title=Cyrus II The Great|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Iranica|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/cyrus-iii|date=2010-01-26|access-date=2010-06-08}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|ref=Dandamayev-Cylinder|last=Dandamaev|first=M.A.|title=The Cyrus Cylinder|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Iranica|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/cyrus-iv|date=2010-01-26|access-date=2010-09-13}}
* {{cite web|ref=UN Press Release|url=https://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|title=United Nations Press Release SG/SM/1553/HQ263|date=1971-10-14|access-date=2010-06-08|archive-date=2017-08-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807221203/http://www.livius.org/a/1/inscriptions/cyrus.pdf|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|ref=UN-photo|url=http://www.unmultimedia.org/s/photo/detail/111/0111530.html|title=Gift of Iran to the United Nations|publisher=United Nations|access-date=2010-06-10|date=August 1985}}
* {{cite web |ref=UN-HumanRightsDay |url=https://www.un.org/events/humanrights/2008/history.shtml |title=The First Global Statement of the Inherent Dignity and Equality |publisher=United Nations |access-date=2010-09-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101216001612/http://www.un.org/events/humanrights/2008/history.shtml |archive-date=2010-12-16 }}
{{refend}}

=== Editions and translations ===
{{Commons category|Cyrus cylinder}}
{{refbegin}}
* Rawlinson, H.C., & Th. G. Pinches, ''A Selection from the Miscellaneous Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia'' (1884, 1909 London: fragment A only).
* Rogers, Robert William: ''Cuneiform Parallels to the Old Testament'' (1912), New York, Eaton & Mains ( {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060813164703/http://www.kchanson.com/ANCDOCS/meso/cyrus.html |date=2006-08-13 }}: fragment A only).
* ] (ed.): ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament'' (''ANET'') (1950, 1955, 1969). Translation by A. L. Oppenheim. (fragment A and B).
* P.-R. Berger, "Der Kyros-Zylinder mit dem Zusatzfragment BIN II Nr.32 und die akkidischen Personennamen im Danielbuch" in '']'' 65 (1975) 192–234
* {{cite book |translator-first=Mordechai |translator-last=Cogan |editor-first1=W.H. |editor-last1=Hallo |editor-first2=K.L. |editor-last2=Younger |title=The Context of Scripture: Monumental Inscriptions from the Biblical World |date=2003 |location=Leiden |publisher=Brill | isbn=978-9004106192 }}
* Brosius, Maria (ed.): ''The Persian Empire from Cyrus II to Artaxerxes I'' (2000), London Association of Classical Teachers (LACT) 16, London.
* {{cite book |first=Hanspeter |last=Schaudig |title=Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros' des Großen, samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften. Textausgabe und Grammatik |year=2001 |location=Münster |publisher=Ugarit-Verlag |language=de }}
* {{cite book |last=Michalowski |first=P. |chapter=The Cyrus Cylinder |pages=426–30 |editor-last=Chavalas | editor-first=Mark W. | title=Ancient Near East: Historical Sources in Translation | publisher=Wiley | series=Blackwell Sourcebooks in Ancient History | year=2007 | isbn=978-0631235811}}
* {{cite web |last=Lendering |first=Jona |date=5 February 2010 |title=Cyrus Cylinder (2) |publisher=Livius.org |url=http://www.livius.org:80/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder2.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180311235804/https://www.livius.org/ct-cz/cyrus_I/cyrus_cylinder2.html |archive-date=11 March 2018 |access-date=10 January 2007 }} Text adapted from {{harvtxt|Schaudig|2001}}. English translation adapted from Cogan's translation in {{harvtxt|Hallo|Younger|2003}}.
* {{cite web |translator-first1=Irving |translator-last1=Finkel |date=2012 |title=Translation of the text on the Cyrus Cylinder |url=http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/articles/c/cyrus_cylinder_-_translation.aspx |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121221112524/http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/articles/c/cyrus_cylinder_-_translation.aspx |archive-date=21 December 2012 |publisher=British Museum |access-date=12 April 2013 }}
* {{cite book | last=Finkel | first=Irving | year=2013 |chapter=The Cyrus Cylinder: The Babylonian perspective | title=The Cyrus Cylinder: The King of Persia's Proclamation from Ancient Babylon | publisher=I. B. Tauris | isbn=978-1780760636 | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=13agk1fkNuAC&pg=PA4 | pages=4ff}}
* {{cite web |translator-last=Razmjou |translator-first=Shahrokh |date=2013 |orig-year=2010 |title=Cyrus Cylinder in Persian |language=fa |url=http://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/cyrus-cylinder_translation-persian.pdf |access-date=1 October 2018}} {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120816144928/http://www.britishmuseum.org/PDF/cyrus_cylinder_translation_persian_v2.pdf |date=2012-08-16 }} dated to 13 September 2010. <!-- Also available at http://www.cais-soas.com/CAIS/PDF/cyrus_cylinder_razmju_translation_persian_v2.pdf -->
{{refend}}

== External links ==
*
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130422021729/http://www.ted.com/talks/neil_macgregor_2600_years_of_history_in_one_object.html |date=2013-04-22 }}
* at ]
*
{{British-Museum-object|1880,0617.1941|url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectid=327188&partid=1&searchText=cyrus+cylinder&numpages=10&orig=%2fresearch%2fsearch_the_collection_database.aspx&currentPage=1}}

{{Cyrus the Great}}
{{British Museum}}

{{Good article}}

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Latest revision as of 20:20, 17 November 2024

Ancient clay cylinder with Akkadian cuneiform script
Cyrus Cylinder
Front view of a barrel-shaped clay cylinder resting on a stand. The cylinder is covered with lines of cuneiform text Rear view of a barrel-shaped clay cylinder resting on a stand. The cylinder is round with square edge very close up. It is covered with lines of cuneiform and has a hollow centre. The centre is lined with plate measuring around 10 millimeters in thickness.text Barrel cylinder of Cyrus (transcription)The Cyrus Cylinder, obverse and reverse sides, and transcription
MaterialBaked clay
Size21.9 centimetres (8.6 in) x 10 centimetres (3.9 in) (maximum) x (end A) 7.8 centimetres (3.1 in) x (end B) 7.9 centimetres (3.1 in)
WritingAkkadian cuneiform script
CreatedAbout 539–538 BC
Period/cultureAchaemenid Empire
DiscoveredBabylon, Baghdad Vilayet of Ottoman Iraq, by Hormuzd Rassam in March 1879
Present locationRoom 52, British Museum (London)
IdentificationBM 90920
Registration1880,0617.1941

The Cyrus Cylinder is an ancient clay cylinder, now broken into several pieces, on which is written an Achaemenid royal inscription in Akkadian cuneiform script in the name of the Persian king Cyrus the Great. It dates from the 6th century BC and was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Mesopotamian city of Babylon (now in modern Iraq) in 1879. It is currently in the possession of the British Museum. It was created and used as a foundation deposit following the Persian conquest of Babylon in 539 BC, when the Neo-Babylonian Empire was invaded by Cyrus and incorporated into his Persian Empire.

The text on the Cylinder praises Cyrus, sets out his genealogy and portrays him as a king from a line of kings. The Babylonian king Nabonidus, who was defeated and deposed by Cyrus, is denounced as an impious oppressor of the people of Babylonia and his low-born origins are implicitly contrasted to Cyrus' kingly heritage. The victorious Cyrus is portrayed as having been chosen by the chief Babylonian god Marduk to restore peace and order to the Babylonians. The text states that Cyrus was welcomed by the people of Babylon as their new ruler and entered the city in peace. It appeals to Marduk to protect and help Cyrus and his son Cambyses. It extols Cyrus as a benefactor of the citizens of Babylonia who improved their lives, repatriated displaced people and restored temples and cult sanctuaries across Mesopotamia and elsewhere in the region. It concludes with a description of how Cyrus repaired the city wall of Babylon and found a similar inscription placed there by an earlier king.

The Cylinder's text has traditionally been seen by biblical scholars as corroborative evidence of Cyrus' policy of the repatriation of the Jewish people following their Babylonian captivity (an act that the Book of Ezra attributes to Cyrus), as the text refers to the restoration of cult sanctuaries and repatriation of deported peoples. This interpretation has been disputed, as the text identifies only Mesopotamian sanctuaries, and makes no mention of Jews, Jerusalem, or Judea. Nonetheless, it has been seen as a sign of Cyrus's relatively enlightened approach towards cultural and religious diversity. The former Director of the British Museum, Neil MacGregor, said that the cylinder was "the first attempt we know about running a society, a state with different nationalities and faiths – a new kind of statecraft".

In modern times, the Cylinder was adopted as a national symbol of Iran by the ruling Pahlavi dynasty, which put it on display in Tehran in 1971 to commemorate the 2,500-year celebration of the Persian Empire. Princess Ashraf Pahlavi presented United Nations Secretary General U Thant with a replica of the Cylinder. The princess asserted that "the heritage of Cyrus was the heritage of human understanding, tolerance, courage, compassion and, above all, human liberty". Her brother, Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, promoted the Cylinder as the "first charter of human rights", though this interpretation has been described by various historians as "rather anachronistic" and controversial.

Discovery

Sepia photograph of a man in 19th century Middle Eastern dress, with a large moustache, reclining in a chair with his hands crossed across his lap
Hormuzd Rassam in Mosul circa 1854. The Cyrus Cylinder was discovered during Rassam's excavations in Babylon in February–March 1879.

The Assyro-British archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam discovered the Cyrus Cylinder in March 1879 during a lengthy programme of excavations in Mesopotamia carried out for the British Museum. It had been placed as a foundation deposit in the foundations of the Ésagila, the city's main temple. Rassam's expedition followed on from an earlier dig carried out in 1850 by the British archaeologist Austen Henry Layard, who excavated three mounds in the same area but found little of importance. In 1877, Layard became Britain's ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, which ruled Mesopotamia at the time. He helped Rassam, who had been his assistant in the 1850 dig, to obtain a firman (decree) from the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II to continue the earlier excavations. The firman was only valid for a year but a second firman, with much more liberal terms, was issued in 1878. It was granted for two years (through to 15 October 1880) with the promise of an extension to 1882 if required. The Sultan's decree authorised Rassam to "pack and dispatch to England any antiquities found ... provided, however, there were no duplicates". A representative of the Sultan was instructed to be present at the dig to examine the objects as they were uncovered.

With permission secured, Rassam initiated a large-scale excavation at Babylon and other sites on behalf of the Trustees of the British Museum. He undertook the excavations in four distinct phases. In between each phase, he returned to England to bring back his finds and raise more funds for further work. The Cyrus Cylinder was found on the second of his four expeditions to Mesopotamia, which began with his departure from London on 8 October 1878. He arrived in his home town of Mosul on 16 November and travelled down the Tigris to Baghdad, which he reached on 30 January 1879. During February and March, he supervised excavations on a number of Babylonian sites, including Babylon itself.

Map showing the terrain at the site of Babylon as it was in 1829. Various mounds, outcrops and canals are shown, with the river Tigris running through the middle. At the centre of the map is a mound marked "E" where the Cyrus Cylinder was discovered in March 1879
Map of the site of Babylon in 1829. Hormuzd Rassam's diggers found the Cyrus Cylinder in the mound of Tell Amran-ibn-Ali (marked with an "E" at the centre of the map) under which lay the ruined Esagila temple.

He soon uncovered a number of important buildings including the Ésagila temple, a major shrine to the chief Babylonian god Marduk, although its identity was not fully confirmed until the German archaeologist Robert Koldewey's excavation of 1900. The excavators found a large number of business documents written on clay tablets buried in the temple's foundations where they discovered the Cyrus Cylinder. Rassam gave conflicting accounts of where his discoveries were made. He wrote in his memoirs, Asshur and the land of Nimrod, that the Cylinder had been found in a mound at the southern end of Babylon near the village of Jumjuma or Jimjima. However, in a letter sent on 20 November 1879 to Samuel Birch, the Keeper of Oriental Antiquities at the British Museum, he wrote, "The Cylinder of Cyrus was found at Omran with about six hundred pieces of inscribed terracottas before I left Baghdad." He left Baghdad on 2 April, returning to Mosul and departing from there on 2 May for a journey to London which lasted until 19 June.

The discovery was announced to the public by Sir Henry Rawlinson, the President of the Royal Asiatic Society, at a meeting of the Society on 17 November 1879. He described it as "one of the most interesting historical records in the cuneiform character that has yet been brought to light", though he erroneously described it as coming from the ancient city of Borsippa rather than Babylon. Rawlinson's "Notes on a newly-discovered Clay Cylinder of Cyrus the Great" were published in the society's journal the following year, including the first partial translation of the text.

Description

The Cyrus Cylinder is a barrel-shaped cylinder of baked clay measuring 22.5 centimetres (8.9 in) by 10 centimetres (3.9 in) at its maximum diameter. It was created in several stages around a cone-shaped core of clay within which there are large grey stone inclusions. It was built up with extra layers of clay to give it a cylindrical shape before a fine surface slip of clay was added to the outer layer, on which the text is inscribed. It was excavated in several fragments, having apparently broken apart in antiquity. Today it exists in two main fragments, known as "A" and "B", which were reunited in 1972.

The main body of the Cylinder, discovered by Rassam in 1879, is fragment "A". It underwent restoration in 1961, when it was re-fired and plaster filling was added. The smaller fragment, "B", is a section measuring 8.6 centimetres (3.4 in) by 5.6 centimetres (2.2 in). The latter fragment was acquired by J.B. Nies of Yale University from an antiquities dealer. Nies published the text in 1920. The fragment was apparently broken off the main body of the Cylinder during the original excavations in 1879 and was either removed from the excavations or was retrieved from one of Rassam's waste dumps. It was not confirmed as part of the Cylinder until Paul-Richard Berger of the University of Münster definitively identified it in 1970. Yale University lent the fragment to the British Museum temporarily (but, in practice, indefinitely) in exchange for "a suitable cuneiform tablet" from the British Museum collection.

Although the Cylinder clearly post-dates Cyrus the Great's conquest of Babylon in 539 BC, the date of its creation is unclear. It is commonly said to date to the early part of Cyrus's reign over Babylon, some time after 539 BC. The British Museum puts the Cylinder's date of origin at between 539 and 530 BC.

Text

The surviving inscription on the Cyrus Cylinder consists of 45 lines of text written in Akkadian cuneiform script. The first 35 lines are on fragment "A" and the remainder are on fragment "B". A number of lines at the start and end of the text are too badly damaged for more than a few words to be legible.

The text is written in an extremely formulaic style that can be divided into six distinct parts:

Fifteen horizontal lines of text written in Akkadian cuneiform script.
Extract from the Cyrus Cylinder (lines 15–21), giving the genealogy of Cyrus and an account of his capture of Babylon in 539 BC (E. A. Wallis Budge, 1884).
  • Lines 1–19: an introduction reviling Nabonidus, the previous king of Babylon, and associating Cyrus with the god Marduk;
  • Lines 20–22: detailing Cyrus's royal titles and genealogy, and his peaceful entry to Babylon;
  • Lines 22–34: a commendation of Cyrus's policy of restoring Babylon;
  • Lines 34–35: a prayer to Marduk on behalf of Cyrus and his son Cambyses;
  • Lines 36–37: a declaration that Cyrus has enabled the people to live in peace and has increased the offerings made to the gods;
  • Lines 38–45: details of the building activities ordered by Cyrus in Babylon.
Detail image of text
Sample detail image showing cuneiform script.

The beginning of the text is partly broken; the surviving content reprimands the character of the deposed Babylonian king Nabonidus. It lists his alleged crimes, charging him with the desecration of the temples of the gods and the imposition of forced labor upon the populace. According to the proclamation, as a result of these offenses, the god Marduk abandoned Babylon and sought a more righteous king. Marduk called forth Cyrus to enter Babylon and become its new ruler.

In mind, reverential fear of Marduk, king of the gods, came to an end. He did yet more evil to his city every day; … his , he brought ruin on them all by a yoke without relief … inspected and checked all the countries, seeking for the upright king of his choice. He took the hand of Cyrus, king of the city of Anshan, and called him by his name, proclaiming him aloud for the kingship over all of everything.

Midway through the text, the writer switches to a first-person narrative in the voice of Cyrus, addressing the reader directly. A list of his titles is given (in a Mesopotamian rather than Persian style): "I am Cyrus, king of the world, great king, powerful king, king of Babylon, king of Sumer and Akkad, king of the four quarters , son of Cambyses, great king, king of Anshan, descendant of Teispes, great king, king of Anshan, the perpetual seed of kingship, whose reign Bel and Nebo love, and with whose kingship, to their joy, they concern themselves." He describes the pious deeds he performed after his conquest: he restored peace to Babylon and the other cities sacred to Marduk, freeing their inhabitants from their "yoke", and he "brought relief to their dilapidated housing (thus) putting an end to their (main) complaints". He repaired the ruined temples in the cities he conquered, restored their cults, and returned their sacred images as well as their former inhabitants which Nabonidus had taken to Babylon. Near the end of the inscription Cyrus highlights his restoration of Babylon's city wall, saying: "I saw within it an inscription of Ashurbanipal, a king who preceded me." The remainder is missing but presumably describes Cyrus's rededication of the gateway mentioned.

A partial transcription by F. H. Weissbach in 1911 was supplanted by a much more complete transcription after the identification of the "B" fragment; this is now available in German and in English. Several editions of the full text of the Cyrus Cylinder are available online, incorporating both "A" and "B" fragments.

A false translation of the text – affirming, among other things, the abolition of slavery and the right to self-determination, a minimum wage and asylum – has been promoted on the Internet and elsewhere. As well as making claims that are not found on the real cylinder, it refers to the Zoroastrian divinity Ahura Mazda rather than the Mesopotamian god Marduk. The false translation has been widely circulated; alluding to its claim that Cyrus supposedly has stated that "Every country shall decide for itself whether or not it wants my leadership." Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi in her acceptance speech described Cyrus as "the very emperor who proclaimed at the pinnacle of power 2,500 years ago that … he would not reign over the people if they did not wish it".

Associated fragments

The British Museum announced in January 2010 that two inscribed clay fragments, which had been in the museum's collection since 1881, had been identified as part of a cuneiform tablet that was inscribed with the same text as the Cyrus Cylinder. The fragments had come from the small site of Dailem near Babylon and the identification was made by Professor Wilfred Lambert, formerly of the University of Birmingham, and Irving Finkel, curator in charge of the museum's Department of the Middle East.

Relation to a Chinese bone inscription

In 1983 two fossilized horse bones inscribed with cuneiform signs surfaced in China which Professor Oliver Gurney at Oxford later identified as coming from the Cyrus Cylinder. The discovery of these objects aroused much discussion about possible connections between ancient Mesopotamia and China, although their authenticity was doubted by many scholars from the beginning and they are now generally regarded as forgeries.

The history of the putative artifact goes back almost a century. The earliest record goes back to a Chinese doctor named Xue Shenwei, who sometime prior to 1928 was shown a photo of a rubbing of one of the bones by an antiquities dealer named Zhang Yi'an. Although not able to view the bones at that time, Xue Shenwei later acquired one of them from another antiquities dealer named Wang Dongting in 1935 and then the second via a personal connection named Ke Yanling around 1940. While Xue did not recognize the script on the bones he guessed at its antiquity and buried the bones for safekeeping during the Cultural Revolution. Then, in 1983 Xue presented the bones to the Palace Museum in Beijing where Liu Jiuan and Wang Nanfang of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage undertook their study. These officials identified the script as cuneiform and asked the Assyriologists Chi Yang and Wu Yuhong to work on the inscriptions. Identification of the source text proceeded slowly until 1985, when Wu Yuhong along with Oxford Assyriologist Stephanie Dalley and Oliver Gurney recognized the text in one bone as coming from the Cyrus Cylinder. One year later Wu Yuhong presented his findings at the 33rd Rencontre Assyriologique and published them in a journal article.

After that the second bone inscription remained undeciphered until 2010, when Irving Finkel worked on it. In that same year the British Museum held a conference dedicated to the artifacts. Based on the serious textual errors in the inscription, including the omission of a large number of signs from the Cyrus Cylinder, Wu Yuhong argued the inscriptions were most likely copied from the cylinder while housed in the British Museum or from an early modern publication based upon it. However he acknowledged the remote possibility it was copied in late antiquity. Irving Finkel disputed this conclusion based on the relative obscurity of the Cyrus Cylinder until recent decades and the mismatch in paleography between the bone inscriptions and the hand copies found in early editions from the 1880s.

Finally, after the workshop concluded, an 1884 edition of the Cyrus Cylinder by E. A. Wallis Budge came to Irving Finkel's attention. This publication used an idiosyncratic typeface and featured a handcopy for only a section of the whole cylinder. However the typeface in that edition matched the paleography on the bone inscriptions and the extract of the cylinder published in the book matched that of the bone as well. This convinced Finkel that the bone inscriptions were early modern forgeries and that has remained the majority opinion since then.

Interpretations

Mesopotamian and Persian tradition and propaganda

According to the British Museum, the Cyrus Cylinder reflects a long tradition in Mesopotamia where, from as early as the third millennium BC, kings began their reigns with declarations of reforms. Cyrus's declaration stresses his legitimacy as the king, and is a conspicuous statement of his respect for the religious and political traditions of Babylon. The British Museum and scholars of the period describe it as an instrument of ancient Mesopotamian propaganda.

The text is a royal building inscription, a genre which had no equivalent in Old Persian literature. It illustrates how Cyrus co-opted local traditions and symbols to legitimize his conquest and control of Babylon. Many elements of the text were drawn from long-standing Mesopotamian themes of legitimizing rule in Babylonia: the preceding king is reprimanded and he is proclaimed to have been abandoned by the gods for his wickedness; the new king has gained power through the divine will of the gods; the new king rights the wrongs of his predecessor, addressing the welfare of the people; the sanctuaries of the gods are rebuilt or restored, offerings to the gods are made or increased and the blessings of the gods are sought; and repairs are made to the whole city, in the manner of earlier rightful kings.

Both continuity and discontinuity are emphasized in the text of the Cylinder. It asserts the virtue of Cyrus as a god-fearing king of a traditional Mesopotamian type. On the other hand, it constantly discredits Nabonidus, reviling the deposed king's deeds and even his ancestry and portraying him as an impious destroyer of his own people. As Fowler and Hekster note, this "creates a problem for a monarch who chooses to buttress his claim to legitimacy by appropriating the 'symbolic capital' of his predecessors". The Cylinder's reprimand of Nabonidus also discredits Babylonian royal authority by association. It is perhaps for this reason that the Achaemenid rulers made greater use of Assyrian rather than Babylonian royal iconography and tradition in their declarations; the Cylinder refers to the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal as "my predecessor", rather than any native Babylonian ruler.

The Cylinder itself is part of a continuous Mesopotamian tradition of depositing a wide variety of symbolic items, including animal sacrifices, stone tablets, terracotta cones, cylinders and figures. Newly crowned kings of Babylon would make public declarations of their own righteousness when beginning their reigns, often in the form of declarations that were deposited in the foundations of public buildings. Some contained messages, while others did not, and they had a number of purposes: elaboration of a building's value, commemoration of the ruler or builder and the magical sanctification of the building, through the invocation of divine protection.

The cylinder was not intended to be seen again after its burial, but the text inscribed on it would have been used for public purposes. Archive copies were kept of important inscriptions and the Cylinder's text may likewise have been copied. In January 2010, the British Museum announced that two cuneiform tablets in its collection had been found to be inscribed with the same text as that on the Cyrus Cylinder, which, according to the museum, "show that the text of the Cylinder was probably a proclamation that was widely distributed across the Persian Empire".

Similarities with other royal inscriptions

The Nabonidus Cylinder

The Cyrus Cylinder bears striking similarities to older Mesopotamian royal inscriptions. Two notable examples are the Cylinder of Marduk-apla-iddina II, who seized the Babylonian throne in 722/1 BC, and the annals of Sargon II of Assyria, who conquered Babylon twelve years later. As a conqueror, Marduk-apla-iddina faced many of the same problems of legitimacy that Cyrus did when he conquered Babylon. He declares himself to have been chosen personally by Marduk, who ensured his victory. When he took power, he performed the sacred rites and restored the sacred shrines. He states that he found a royal inscription placed in the temple foundations by an earlier Babylonian king, which he left undisturbed and honored. All of these claims also appear in Cyrus's Cylinder. Twelve years later, the Assyrian king Sargon II defeated and exiled Marduk-apla-iddina, taking up the kingship of Babylonia. Sargon's annals describe how he took on the duties of a Babylonian sovereign, honouring the gods, maintaining their temples and respecting and upholding the privileges of the urban elite. Again, Cyrus's Cylinder makes exactly the same points. Nabonidus, Cyrus's deposed predecessor as king of Babylon, commissioned foundation texts on clay cylinders – such as the Cylinder of Nabonidus, also in the British Museum – that follows the same basic formula.

The text of the Cylinder thus indicates a strong continuity with centuries of Babylonian tradition, as part of an established rhetoric advanced by conquerors. As Kuhrt puts it:

reflects the pressure that Babylonian citizens were able to bring to bear on the new royal claimant … In this context, the reign of the defeated predecessor was automatically described as bad and against the divine will – how else could he have been defeated? By implication, of course, all his acts became, inevitably and retrospectively, tainted.

The familiarity with long-established Babylonian tropes suggests that the Cylinder was authored by the Babylonian priests of Marduk, working at the behest of Cyrus. It can be compared with another work of around the same time, the Verse Account of Nabonidus, in which the former Babylonian ruler is excoriated as the enemy of the priests of Marduk and Cyrus is presented as the liberator of Babylon. Both works make a point of stressing Cyrus's qualifications as a king from a line of kings, in contrast to the non-royal ancestry of Nabonidus, who is described by the Cylinder as merely maţû, "insignificant".

The Verse Account is so similar to the Cyrus Cylinder inscription that the two texts have been dubbed an example of "literary dependence" – not the direct dependence of one upon the other, but mutual dependence upon a common source. This is characterised by the historian Morton Smith as "the propaganda put out in Babylonia by Cyrus's agents, shortly before Cyrus's conquest, to prepare the way of their lord". This viewpoint has been disputed; as Simon J. Sherwin of the University of Cambridge puts it, the Cyrus Cylinder and the Verse Account are "after the event" compositions which reuse existing Mesopotamian literary themes and do not need to be explained as the product of pre-conquest Persian propaganda.

The German historian Hanspeter Schaudig has identified a line on the Cylinder ("He saved his city Babylon from its oppression") with a line from tablet VI of the Babylonian "Epic of Creation", Enûma Eliš, in which Marduk builds Babylon. Johannes Haubold suggests that reference represents Cyrus's takeover as a moment of ultimate restoration not just of political and religious institutions, but of the cosmic order underpinning the universe.

Analysis of the Cyrus Cylinder's claims

Stone stele with a carving depicting a man with a beard, carrying a tall staff and wearing a robe and conical hat, gesturing to three symbols representing the moon, sun and Venus.
Stele depicting Nabonidus praying to the moon, sun and the planet Venus. The Babylonian king's religious practices were harshly condemned by the Cyrus Cylinder's inscription.
Vilification of Nabonidus

The Cyrus Cylinder's vilification of Nabonidus is consistent with other Persian propaganda regarding the deposed king's rule. In contrast to the Cylinder's depiction of Nabonidus as an illegitimate ruler who ruined his country, the reign of Nabonidus was largely peaceful, he was recognised as a legitimate king and he undertook a variety of building projects and military campaigns commensurate with his claim to be "the king of Babylon, the universe, and the four corners ".

Nabonidus as actually seen in Babylon

The Assyriologist Paul-Alain Beaulieu has interpreted Nabonidus's exaltation of the moon god Sin as "an outright usurpation of Marduk's prerogatives by the moon god". Although the Babylonian king continued to make rich offerings to Marduk, his greater devotion to Sin was unacceptable to the Babylonian priestly elite. Nabonidus came from the unfashionable north of Babylonia, introduced foreign gods and went into a lengthy self-imposed exile which was said to have prevented the celebration of the vital New Year festival.

Nabonidus as seen in the Harran Stela, contrasted with the Cyrus Cylinder

The Harran Stela is generally acknowledged as a genuine document commissioned by Nabonidus. In it, Nabonidus seeks to glorify his own accomplishments, notably his restoration of the Elhulhul Temple, which was devoted to the moon-god Sin. In this regard, the Harran Stela verifies the picture that is dwelt on in the Cyrus Cylinder, that Nabonidus had largely abandoned the homage due to Marduk, chief god of Babylon, in favor of the worship of Sin. Since his mother Addagoppe was apparently a priestess of Sin, or at least a lifelong devotee, this helps explain the unwise political decision regarding Marduk on the part of Nabonidus, a decision that Cyrus takes great advantage of in the Cyrus Cylinder. His mother was also a resident of Harran, which affords another reason why Nabonidus moved there in the third year of his reign (553 BC), at which time he "entrusted the 'Camp' to his oldest (son) , the first-born . . . He let (everything) go, entrusted the kingship to him."

In at least one respect, however, the Harran Stela is incongruous with the portrayal of events in the Cyrus Cylinder. In the Stela, Nabonidus lists the enemies of Babylon as "the king of Egypt, the Medes and the land of the Arabs, all the hostile kings." The significance of this lies in the date the Stela was composed: According to Paul-Alain Beaulieu, its composition dates to the latter part of the reign of Nabonidus, probably the fourteenth or fifteenth year, i.e. 542–540 BC. The problem with this is that, according to the current consensus view, based largely on the Cyrus Cylinder and later Persian documents that followed in its genre, the Persians should have been named here as a major enemy of Babylon at a time three years or less before the fall of the city to the forces under Cyrus. Nabonidus, however, names the Medes, not the Persians, as a main enemy; as king of the realm he would certainly know who his enemies were. By naming the Medes instead of the Persians, the Harran Stela is more in conformity with the narration of events in Xenophon's Cyropaedia, where Cyrus and the Persians were under the de jure suzerainty of the Medes until shortly after the fall of Babylon, at which time Cyrus, king of Persia, became king of the Medes as well.

A further discussion of the relationship of the Harran Stela (=Babylonian propaganda) to the Cyrus Cylinder (=Persian propaganda) is found in the Harran Stela article, including a discussion of why the Cyrus Cylinder and later Persian texts never name Belshazzar, despite his close association with events associated with the fall of Babylon, as related both in the Bible (Daniel, chapter 5) and in Xenophon's Cyropaedia.

Conquest and local support

Cyrus's conquest of Babylonia was resisted by Nabonidus and his supporters, as the Battle of Opis demonstrated. Iranologist Pierre Briant comments that "it is doubtful that even before the fall of Cyrus was impatiently awaited by a population desperate for a 'liberator'." However, Cyrus's takeover as king does appear to have been welcomed by some of the Babylonian population. The Judaic historian Lisbeth S. Fried says that there is little evidence that the high-ranking priests of Babylonia during the Achaemenid period were Persians and characterises them as Babylonian collaborators.

The text presents Cyrus as entering Babylon peacefully and being welcomed by the population as a liberator. This presents an implicit contrast with previous conquerors, notably the Assyrian rulers Tukulti-Ninurta I, who invaded and plundered Babylon in the 12th century BC, and Sennacherib, who did the same thing 150 years before Cyrus conquered the region. The massacre and enslavement of conquered people was common practice and was explicitly highlighted by conquerors in victory statements. The Cyrus Cylinder presents a very different message; Johannes Haubold notes that it portrays Cyrus's takeover as a harmonious moment of convergence between Babylonian and Persian history, not a natural disaster but the salvation of Babylonia.

However, the Cylinder's account of Cyrus's conquest clearly does not tell the whole story, as it suppresses any mention of the earlier conflict between the Persians and the Babylonians; Max Mallowan describes it as a "skilled work of tendentious history". The text omits the Battle of Opis, in which Cyrus's forces defeated and apparently massacred Nabonidus's army. Nor does it explain a two-week gap reported by the Nabonidus Chronicle between the Persian entry into Babylon and the surrender of the Esagila temple. Lisbeth S. Fried suggests that there may have been a siege or stand-off between the Persians and the temple's defenders and priests, about whose fate the Cylinder and Chronicle makes no mention. She speculates that they were killed or expelled by the Persians and replaced by more pro-Persian members of the Babylonian priestly elite. As Walton and Hill put it, the claim of a wholly peaceful takeover acclaimed by the people is "standard conqueror's rhetoric and may obscure other facts". Describing the claim of one's own armies being welcomed as liberators as "one of the great imperial fantasies", Bruce Lincoln, Professor of Divinity at the University of Chicago, notes that the Babylonian population repeatedly revolted against Persian rule in 522 BC, 521 BC, 484 BC and 482 BC (though not against Cyrus or his son Cambeses). The rebels sought to restore national independence and the line of native Babylonian kings – perhaps an indication that they were not as favourably disposed towards the Persians as the Cylinder suggests.

Restoration of temples

The inscription goes on to describe Cyrus returning to their original sanctuaries the statues of the gods that Nabonidus had brought to the city before the Persian invasion. This restored the normal cultic order to the satisfaction of the priesthood. It alludes to temples being restored and deported groups being returned to their homelands but does not imply an empire-wide programme of restoration. Instead, it refers to specific areas in the border region between Babylonia and Persia, including sites that had been devastated by earlier Babylonian military campaigns. The Cylinder indicates that Cyrus sought to acquire the loyalty of the ravaged regions by funding reconstruction, the return of temple properties and the repatriation of the displaced populations. However, it is unclear how much actually changed on the ground; there is no archaeological evidence for any rebuilding or repairing of Mesopotamian temples during Cyrus's reign.

Internal policy

The Persians' policy towards their subject people, as described by the Cylinder, was traditionally viewed as an expression of tolerance, moderation and generosity "on a scale previously unknown". The policies of Cyrus toward subjugated nations have been contrasted to those of the Assyrians and Babylonians, who had treated subject peoples harshly; he permitted the resettling of those who had been previously deported and sponsored the reconstruction of religious buildings. Cyrus was often depicted positively in Western tradition by sources such as the Old Testament of the Bible and the Greek writers Herodotus and Xenophon. The Cyropaedia of Xenophon was particularly influential during the Renaissance when Cyrus was romanticised as an exemplary model of a virtuous and successful ruler.

Modern historians argue that while Cyrus's behavior was indeed conciliatory, it was driven by the needs of the Persian Empire, and was not an expression of personal tolerance per se. The empire was too large to be centrally directed; Cyrus followed a policy of using existing territorial units to implement a decentralized system of government. The magnanimity shown by Cyrus won him praise and gratitude from those he spared. The policy of toleration described by the Cylinder was thus, as biblical historian Rainer Albertz puts it, "an expression of conservative support for local regions to serve the political interests of the whole ". Another biblical historian, Alberto Soggin, comments that it was more "a matter of practicality and economy … it was simpler, and indeed cost less, to obtain the spontaneous collaboration of their subjects at a local level than to have to impose their sovereignty by force".

Differences between the Cyrus Cylinder and previous Babylonian and Assyrian cylinders

There are scholars who agree that the Cyrus Cylinder demonstrates a break from past traditions, and the ushering in of a new era. A comparison of the Cyrus Cylinder with the inscriptions of previous conquerors of Babylon highlights this sharply. For instance, when Sennacherib, king of Assyria(705-681 BC) captured the city in 690 BC after a 15-month siege, Babylon endured a dreadful destruction and massacre. Sennacharib describes how, having captured the King of Babylon, he had him tied up in the middle of the city like a pig. Then he describes how he destroyed Babylon, and filled the city with corpses, looted its wealth, broke its gods, burned and destroyed its houses down to foundations, demolished its walls and temples and dumped them in the canals. This is in stark contrast to Cyrus the Great and the Cyrus Cylinder. The past Assyrian, and Babylonian tradition of victor's justice was a common treatment for a defeated people at this time. Sennacherib's tone for instance, reflected his relish of and pride in massacre and destruction, which is totally at odds with the message of the Cyrus Cylinder.

Some scholars believe that no other king ever returned captives to their homes as Cyrus did. Some argue that the Assyrians sometimes gave limited religious freedom to local cults and the people they conquered, interpreting the submission to the "exalted might" of Ashur, the "yoke of Ashur" and the looting and destruction of temples as religious intolerance. Similar actions carried out by Babylonian kings, like the destruction of the temple of Jerusalem as well as the temple in Harran and Nabonidus carrying other gods from their temples to Babylon, were also argued to represent religious intolerance. This is then compared to the Cyrus Cylinder, and argued that it was not a typical declaration that was keeping with the old traditions of the past.

However, Sennacherib's destruction of Babylon can not be taken as the norm, and solely judging from Sennacherib's own inscriptions, the destruction was already bad by Neo-Assyrian standards. The destruction of cult statues has precedence in the Ancient Near East, such as Lugalzagesi claiming to have plundered the shrines and destroyed the cult statues of his enemy state Lagash, but the destruction of cult statues was the more severe and extreme treatment. Nabonidus likely gathered cult statues to Babylon to prepare for an incoming Persian attack, and this tradition has precedence with Merodach-Baladan who also brought the statues to Dur-Yakin to keep them from the Assyrians, and some Babylonian cities also sent their statues to Babylon in 626 BCE in light of Sin-shar-ishkun's advance.

Other scholars disagree with the view that Cyrus had a policy of religious tolerance, which stood in contrast to the Assyrians and Babylonians. This assumes a religious discourse that compelled the ancients to suppress the worship of other gods, but no such discourse existed. Reverence for the gods of Assyria did not prevent the existence of local cults, for example Sargon after his conquest of the Harhar region reconstructed the local temples and returned the statues of the gods. In treaties conducted with vassals, local gods were invoked alongside Assyrian gods in the oath treaties in the curse sections, indicating that the presence of the gods of both parties were required for the oath and the oath treaties never carried a stipulation on the worship of Assyrian gods or the hindrance of worship on local gods. Cogan had concluded that the idea that the cult of Ashur and other Assyrian gods were imposed onto defeated subjects should be rejected, and residents in the annexed provinces were required to provide for the cult of Ashur as they were counted as Assyrian citizens as it was the duty of Assyrian citizens to do so. Kuhrt pointed out that similar to Achaemenid ideology, in Assyrian ideology the acceptance of the power of the Assyrian king was synonymous with the acceptance of the power of their gods, particularly Ashur, and although worship of the Assyrian gods was not forcibly imposed, recognition of Assyrian power entailed the recognition of the superior strength of their gods.

The return of divine statues and people, commonly seen as a special Achaemenid policy, was also attested in Assyrian sources. Esarhaddon, after repairing the statues of the Arabian gods and engraving an inscription to serve as remembrance of Assyria's power, returned the statues on Hazail's request. Accounts on returning statues are also found in the epithets of Esarhaddon. Adad-nirari III claims to have brought back abducted people, and Esarhaddon brought back Babylonians who had been displaced following Sennacherib's destruction of the city to the reconstructed Babylon. Briant summarizes that this view that Cyrus was exceptional only arises if one only takes into account Jewish sources, and the idea disappears if placed in the context of the Ancient Near East.

Biblical interpretations

Main article: Cyrus the Great in the Bible Further information: The Return to Zion
Map showing various places in Mesopotamia mentioned by the Cyrus Cylinder.
Places in Mesopotamia mentioned by the Cyrus Cylinder. Most of the localities it mentions in connection with the restoration of temples were in eastern and northern Mesopotamia, in territories that had been ruled by the deposed Babylonian king Nabonidus (excepting Susa).

The Bible records that some Jews (who were exiled by the Babylonians), returned to their homeland from Babylon, where they had been settled by Nebuchadnezzar, to rebuild the temple following an edict from Cyrus. The Book of Ezra (1–4:5) provides a narrative account of the rebuilding project. Scholars have linked one particular passage from the Cylinder to the Old Testament account:

From to Aššur and Susa, Agade, Ešnunna, Zabban, Me-Turnu, Der, as far as the region of Gutium, the sacred centers on the other side of the Tigris, whose sanctuaries had been abandoned for a long time, I returned the images of the gods, who had resided there , to their places and I let them dwell in eternal abodes. I gathered all their inhabitants and returned to them their dwellings.

This passage has often been interpreted as a reference to the benign policy instituted by Cyrus of allowing exiled peoples, such as the Jews, to return to their original homelands. The Cylinder's inscription has been linked with the reproduction in the Book of Ezra of two texts that are claimed to be edicts issued by Cyrus concerning the repatriation of the Jews and the reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. The two edicts (one in Hebrew and one in Aramaic) are substantially different in content and tone, leading some historians to argue that one or both may be a post hoc fabrication. The question of their authenticity remains unresolved, though it is widely believed that they do reflect some sort of Persian royal policy, albeit perhaps not one that was couched in the terms given in the text of the biblical edicts.

The dispute over the authenticity of the biblical edicts has prompted interest in this passage from the Cyrus Cylinder, specifically concerning the question of whether it indicates that Cyrus had a general policy of repatriating subject peoples and restoring their sanctuaries. The text of the Cylinder is very specific, listing places in Mesopotamia and the neighboring regions. It does not describe any general release or return of exiled communities but focuses on the return of Babylonian deities to their own home cities. It emphasises the re-establishment of local religious norms, reversing the alleged neglect of Nabonidus – a theme that Amélie Kuhrt describes as "a literary device used to underline the piety of Cyrus as opposed to the blasphemy of Nabonidus". She suggests that Cyrus had simply adopted a policy used by earlier Assyrian rulers of giving privileges to cities in key strategic or politically sensitive regions and that there was no general policy as such. Lester L. Grabbe, a historian of early Judaism, has written that "the religious policy of the Persians was not that different from the basic practice of the Assyrians and Babylonians before them" in tolerating – but not promoting – local cults, other than their own gods.

Cyrus may have seen Jerusalem, situated in a strategic location between Mesopotamia and Egypt, as worth patronising for political reasons. His Achaemenid successors generally supported indigenous cults in subject territories and thereby curried favour with the cults' devotees. Conversely, Persian kings might destroy the shrines of peoples who had rebelled against them, as happened at Miletos in 494 BC following the Ionian Revolt. The Cylinder's text does not describe any general policy of a return of exiles or mention any sanctuary outside Babylonia therein supporting Peter Ross Bedford's argument that the Cylinder is "not a manifesto for a general policy regarding indigenous cults and their worshippers throughout the empire". Amélie Kuhrt notes that "the purely Babylonian context of the Cylinder provides no proof" that Cyrus gave attention to the Jewish exiles or the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem and biblical historian Bob Becking concludes that "it has nothing to do with Judeans, Jews or Jerusalem". Becking also points to the lack of reference to the Jews in surviving Achaemenid texts as an indication that they were not considered of any particular importance.

The German scholar Josef Wiesehöfer summarizes the widely held traditional view by noting that "Many scholars have read into a confirmation of the Old Testament passages about the steps taken by Cyrus towards the erection of the Jerusalem temple and the repatriation of the Judaeans" and that this interpretation undergirded a belief "that the instructions to this effect were actually provided in these very formulations of the Cyrus Cylinder".

Human rights

The Cylinder gained new prominence in the late 1960s when the last Shah of Iran called it "the world's first charter of human rights". The cylinder was a key symbol of the Shah's political ideology and is still regarded by some commentators as a charter of human rights, but this has been disputed by specialist scholars on the Persian empire.

Pahlavi Iranian government's view

Cyrus Cylinder at the center of the official emblem of 2,500 year celebration of the Persian Empire at Pahlavi Iranian imperial era

The Cyrus Cylinder was dubbed the "first declaration of human rights" by the pre-Revolution Iranian government, a reading prominently advanced by Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, in a 1967 book, The White Revolution of Iran. The Shah identified Cyrus as a key figure in government ideology and associated his government with the Achaemenids. He wrote that "the history of our empire began with the famous declaration of Cyrus, which, for its advocacy of humane principles, justice and liberty, must be considered one of the most remarkable documents in the history of mankind." The Shah described Cyrus as the first ruler in history to give his subjects "freedom of opinion and other basic rights". In 1968, the Shah opened the first United Nations Conference on Human Rights in Tehran by saying that the Cyrus Cylinder was the precursor to the modern Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

In his 1971 Nowruz (New Year) speech, the Shah declared that 1350 AP (1971–1972) would be Cyrus the Great Year, during which a grand commemoration would be held to celebrate 2,500 years of Persian monarchy. It would serve as a showcase for a modern Iran in which the contributions that Iran had made to world civilization would be recognized. The main theme of the commemoration was the centrality of the monarchy within Iran's political system, associating the Shah of Iran with the famous monarchs of Persia's past, and with Cyrus in particular. The Shah looked to the Achaemenid period as "a moment from the national past that could best serve as a model and a slogan for the imperial society he hoped to create".

The Cyrus Cylinder was adopted as the symbol for the commemoration, and Iranian magazines and journals published numerous articles about ancient Persian history. The British Museum loaned the original Cylinder to the Iranian government for the duration of the festivities; it was put on display at the Shahyad Monument (now the Azadi Tower) in Tehran. The 2,500 year celebrations commenced on October 12, 1971, and culminated a week later with a spectacular parade at the tomb of Cyrus in Pasargadae. On October 14, the shah's sister, Princess Ashraf Pahlavi, presented the United Nations Secretary General U Thant with a replica of the Cylinder. The princess asserted that "the heritage of Cyrus was the heritage of human understanding, tolerance, courage, compassion and, above all, human liberty". The Secretary General accepted the gift, linking the Cylinder with the efforts of the United Nations General Assembly to address "the question of Respect for Human Rights in Armed Conflict". Since then the replica Cylinder has been kept at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City on the second floor hallway. The United Nations continues to promote the cylinder as "an ancient declaration of human rights".

Reception in the Islamic Republic

In September 2010, former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad officially opened the Cyrus Cylinder exhibition at the National Museum of Iran. After the Pahlavi era, it was the second time the cylinder was brought to Iran. It was also its longest-running exhibition inside the country. Ahmadinejad considers the Cyrus Cylinder as the incarnation of human values and a cultural heritage for all humanity, and called it the "First Charter of Human Rights". The British Museum had loaned the Cyrus Cylinder to the National Museum of Iran for four months.

The Cylinder reads that everyone is entitled to freedom of thought and choice and all individuals should pay respect to one another. The historical charter also underscores the necessity of fighting oppression, defending the oppressed, respecting human dignity, and recognizing human rights. The Cyrus Cylinder bears testimony to the fact that the Iranian nation has always been the flag-bearer of justice, devotion and human values throughout history.

— Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during Cyrus Cylinder exhibition at National Museum of Iran

Some Iranian politicians such as MP Ali Motahari criticized Ahmadinejad for bringing the Cyrus Cylinder to Iran, although Tehran daily Kayhan, viewed as an ultra-conservative newspaper, had opined that the Islamic Republic should never have returned the Cyrus Cylinder to Britain (note that the cylinder was not discovered in Iran, but in present-day Iraq):

There is an important question: Doesn't the cylinder belong to Iran? And hasn't the British government stolen ancient artifacts from our country? If the answers to these questions are positive, then why should we return this stolen historical and valuable work to the thieves?

— Kayhan newspaper during Cyrus Cylinder exhibition in Iran

At the time, the Curator of the National Museum of Iran, Azadeh Ardakani, reported approximately 48,000 visitors to the Cylinder exhibition, amongst whom over 2000 were foreigners, including foreign ambassadors.

Scholarly views

The interpretation of the Cylinder as a "charter of human rights" has been described by various historians as "rather anachronistic" and tendentious. It has been dismissed as a "misunderstanding" and characterized as political propaganda devised by the Pahlavi regime. The German historian Josef Wiesehöfer comments that the portrayal of Cyrus as a champion of human rights is as illusory as the image of the "humane and enlightened Shah of Persia". D. Fairchild Ruggles and Helaine Silverman describe the Shah's aim as being to legitimise the Iranian nation and his own regime, and to counter the growing influence of Islamic fundamentalism by creating an alternative narrative rooted in the ancient Persian past.

Writing in the immediate aftermath of the Shah's anniversary commemorations, the British Museum's C.B.F. Walker comments that the "essential character of the Cyrus Cylinder a general declaration of human rights or religious toleration but simply a building inscription, in the Babylonian and Assyrian tradition, commemorating Cyrus's restoration of the city of Babylon and the worship of Marduk previously neglected by Nabonidus". Two professors specialising in the history of the ancient Near East, Bill T. Arnold and Piotr Michalowski, comment: "Generically, it belongs with other foundation deposit inscriptions; it is not an edict of any kind, nor does it provide any unusual human rights declaration as is sometimes claimed." Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones of the University of Edinburgh notes that "there is nothing in the text" that suggests the concept of human rights. Neil MacGregor comments:

Comparison by scholars in the British Museum with other similar texts, however, showed that rulers in ancient Iraq had been making comparable declarations upon succeeding to the throne for two millennia before Cyrus it is one of the museum's tasks to resist the narrowing of the object's meaning and its appropriation to one political agenda.

He cautions that while the Cylinder is "clearly linked with the history of Iran," it is "in no real sense an Iranian document: it is part of a much larger history of the ancient Near East, of Mesopotamian kingship, and of the Jewish diaspora". In a similar vein, Qamar Adamjee of the Asian Art Museum describes it as a "very traditional kingship document" and cautions that "it's anachronistic to use 20th century terms to describe events that happened two thousand five hundred years ago."

Exhibition history

View of the Cyrus Cylinder in its display cabinet, situated behind glass on a display stand. Other ancient Persian artefacts can be seen lining the room in the background.
The Cyrus Cylinder in Room 52 of the British Museum in London

The Cyrus Cylinder has been displayed in the British Museum since its formal acquisition in 1880. It has been loaned five times – twice to Iran, between 7–22 October 1971 in conjunction with the 2,500 year celebration of the Persian Empire and again from September–December 2010, once to Spain from March–June 2006, once to the United States in a traveling exhibition from March–October 2013, and once to the Yale Peabody Museum for their reopening celebrations in May-June 2024. Many replicas have been made. Some were distributed by the Shah following the 1971 commemorations, while the British Museum and National Museum of Iran have sold them commercially.

The British Museum's ownership of the Cyrus Cylinder has been the cause of some controversy in Iran, although the artifact was obtained legally and was not excavated on Iranian soil but on former Ottoman territory (modern Iraq). When it was loaned in 1971, the Iranian press campaigned for its transfer to Iranian ownership. The Cylinder was brought back to London without difficulty, but the British Museum's Board of Trustees subsequently decided that it would be "undesirable to make a further loan of the Cylinder to Iran."

In 2005–2006 the British Museum mounted a major exhibition on the Persian Empire, Forgotten Empire: the World of Ancient Persia. It was held in collaboration with the Iranian government, which loaned the British Museum a number of iconic artefacts in exchange for an undertaking that the Cyrus Cylinder would be loaned to the National Museum of Iran in return.

The planned loan of the Cylinder was postponed in October 2009 following the June 2009 Iranian presidential election so that the British Museum could be "assured that the situation in the country was suitable". In response, the Iranian government threatened to end cooperation with the British Museum if the Cylinder was not loaned within the following two months. This deadline was postponed despite appeals by the Iranian government but the Cylinder did eventually go on display in Tehran in September 2010 for a four-month period. The exhibition was very popular, attracting 48,000 people within the first ten days and about 500,000 people by the time it closed in January 2011. However, at its opening, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad mingled Islamic Republican and ancient Persian symbology, which commentators inside and outside Iran criticised as an overt appeal to religious nationalism.

On November 28, 2012, the BBC announced the first United States tour of the Cylinder. Under the headline "British Museum lends ancient 'bill of rights' cylinder to US", Museum director Neil MacGregor declared that "The cylinder, often referred to as the first bill of human rights, 'must be shared as widely as possible'". The British Museum itself announced the news in its press release, saying "'First declaration of human rights' to tour five cities in the United States". According to the British Museum's website for the Cylinder's US exhibition "CyrusCylinder2013.com", the tour started in March 2013 and included Washington D.C.'s Smithsonian's Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco and culminated at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, in October 2013.

The cylinder, along with thirty two other associated objects from the British Museum collection, including a pair of gold armlets from the Oxus Treasure and the Darius Seal, were part of an exhibition titled 'The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia – A New Beginning' at the Prince of Wales Museum in Mumbai, India, from December 21, 2013, to February 25, 2014. It was organised by the British Museum and the Prince of Wales Museum in partnership with Sir Dorabji Tata Trust, Sir Ratan Tata Trust and Navajbai Ratan Tata Trust, all set up by luminaries from the Parsi community, who are descendants of Persian Zoroastrians, who hold Cyrus in great regard, as many scholars consider him as a follower of Zoroastrianism. The cylinder is currently on display through June 2024 at the Yale Peabody Museum, in New Haven CT to celebrate their reopening

The Freedom Sculpture

Main article: Freedom Sculpture

The Freedom Sculpture or Freedom: A Shared Dream (Persian: تندیس آزادی) is a 2017 stainless steel public art sculpture by artist and architect Cecil Balmond, located in Century City, California, and modeled on the Cyrus Cylinder.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ "The Cyrus Cylinder (British Museum database)". Retrieved 19 June 2010.
  2. ^ Dandamayev, (2010-01-26)
  3. ^ Kuhrt (2007), p. 70, 72
  4. ^ British Museum: The Cyrus Cylinder
  5. Free & Vos (1992), p. 204
  6. ^ Becking, p. 8
  7. ^ Janzen, p. 157
  8. Barbara Slavin (6 March 2013). "Cyrus Cylinder a Reminder of Persian Legacy of Tolerance". Al-Monitor. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  9. ^ Ansari, pp. 218–19.
  10. ^ United Nations Press Release 14 October 1971(SG/SM/1553/HQ263 Archived 2017-08-07 at the Wayback Machine)
  11. ^ Daniel, p. 39
  12. ^ Mitchell, p. 83
  13. ^ Arnold, pp. 426–30
  14. ^ "Oldest Known Charter of Human Rights Comes to San Francisco". 13 August 2013. Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  15. Finkel (2009), p. 172
  16. ^ Vos (1995), p. 267
  17. ^ Hilprecht (1903), pp. 204–05
  18. Rassam (1897), p. 223
  19. Koldewey, p. vi
  20. Rassam, p. 267
  21. Hilprecht (1903), p. 264
  22. ^ Walker, pp. 158–59
  23. The Times (18 November 1879)
  24. The Oriental Journal (January 1880)
  25. Rawlinson (1880), pp. 70–97
  26. Curtis, Tallis & André-Salvini, p. 59
  27. Nies & Keiser (1920)
  28. ^ Berger, pp. 155–59
  29. ^ Wiesehöfer (2001), pp. 44–45.
  30. ^ Translation of the text on the Cyrus Cylinder Archived 2017-04-06 at the Wayback Machine. Finkel, Irving.
  31. ^ Pritchard
  32. ^ Kutsko, p. 123
  33. Weissbach, p. 2
  34. Schaudig, pp. 550–56
  35. Hallo, p. 315
  36. ^ Schulz (2008-07-15)
  37. compare "Cyrus Cylinder". Archived from the original on 2013-06-15. Retrieved 2013-04-12. with the British Museum translation at Archived 2015-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  38. Foucart (2007-08-19)
  39. "Shirin Ebadi's 2003 Nobel Peace Prize lecture". Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  40. British Museum. "Irving Finkel". Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  41. Cyrus Cylinder (press release) Archived 2011-09-22 at the Wayback Machine. British Museum, 20 January 2010
  42. Yang, Zhi (1987). "Brief Note on the Bone Cuneiform Inscriptions". Journal of Ancient Civilizations. 2: 30–33.
  43. ^ Finkel, Irving, ed. (2013). The Cyrus Cylinder: The King of Persia's Proclamation from Ancient Babylon. I.B.Tauris. pp. 28–34. ISBN 978-1780760636.
  44. Wu, Yuhong (1986). "A Horse-Bone Inscription copied from the Cyrus Cylinder (Line 18-21) in the Palace Museum in Beijing". Journal of Ancient Civilizations. 1: 15–20.
  45. Inscription in the British Museum, Room 55
  46. ^ Kuhrt (1982), p. 124
  47. ^ Winn Leith, p. 285
  48. ^ Fowler & Hekster, p. 33
  49. British Museum: The Cyrus Cylinder; Kuhrt (1983), pp. 83–97; Dandamaev, pp. 52–53; Beaulieu, p. 243; van der Spek, pp. 273–85; Wiesehöfer (2001), p. 82; Briant, p. 43
  50. Haubold, p. 52 fn. 24
  51. British Museum e-mail (2010-01-11)
  52. British Museum statement (2010-01-20)
  53. ^ Kuhrt (2007), pp. 174–75.
  54. Dyck, pp. 91–94.
  55. Grabbe (2004), p. 267
  56. Dick, p. 10
  57. Smith, p. 78
  58. Sherwin, p. 122.
  59. ^ Haubold, p. 51
  60. Haubold, p. 52
  61. Bidmead, p. 137
  62. Bidmead, p. 134
  63. Bidmead, p. 135
  64. ^ Mallowan, pp. 409–11
  65. For the text, see J. B. Pritchard, ed., Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (3rd ed.; Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1969), 562a–563b.
  66. Beaulieu, Paul-Alain (1989). The Reign of Nabonidus, King of Babylon 556–539 B.C. (PDF). New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 17. ISBN 0300043147.
  67. Pritchard, ed., Ancient Near Eastern Texts, 313b. This cuneiform text is called the “Verse Account of Nabonidus.”
  68. Beaulieu, Reign of Nabonidus, 32.
  69. Cyropaedia 4.6.3; 5.2.27; 5.4.12, 24, 26, 33; 7.5.29. The Cyropaedia refers to Belshazzar as “this young fellow who has just come to the throne.” His death is described as occurring on the night the city was captured, which was also the time of a festival (7.5.25), in agreement with the narration of these events in the book of Daniel (5:1, 30).
  70. Briant, p. 43
  71. Buchanan, pp. 12–13
  72. Fried, p. 30
  73. Oppenheim, A. Leo, in Pritchard, James B. Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament. Princeton University Press, 1950
  74. Briant, p. 41
  75. Fried, p. 29
  76. Walton & Hill, p. 172
  77. Lincoln, p. 40
  78. Masroori, pp. 13–15
  79. Dandamaev, pp. 52–53
  80. Brown, pp. 7–8
  81. Arberry, p. 8
  82. Stillman, p. 225
  83. Min, p. 94
  84. Evans, pp. 12–13
  85. Albertz, pp. 115–16
  86. Soggin, p. 295
  87. Razmjou, pp. 104–125.
  88. ^ Razmjou, p. 122.
  89. John Curtis, The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia, A New Beginning For the Middle East, pp. 31–41 ISBN 978-0714111872
  90. ^ Razmjou, p. 123.
  91. Nielsen 2018, p. 95.
  92. Schaudig 2012, p. 128.
  93. Zaia 2015, p. 37-39.
  94. Beaulieu 1986, p. 223.
  95. van der Spek 2014, p. 235.
  96. Cogan 1974, p. 55.
  97. Cogan 1974, p. 47-49.
  98. Zaia 2015, p. 27.
  99. Cogan 1993, p. 409.
  100. Cogan 1974, p. 60.
  101. Cogan 1974, p. 51.
  102. Kuhrt 2008, p. 124.
  103. Cogan 1974, p. 36.
  104. Zaia 2015, p. 36-37.
  105. van der Spek 2014, p. 258.
  106. Briant, p. 48
  107. Hurowitz, pp. 581–91
  108. Some translations give "Nineveh." The relevant passage is fragmentary, but Finkel has recently concluded that it is impossible to interpret it as "Nineveh". (I. Finkel, "No Nineveh in the Cyrus Cylinder", in NABU 1997/23)
  109. Lendering, Jona (5 February 2010). "Cyrus Cylinder (2)". Livius.org. Archived from the original on 11 March 2018. Retrieved 10 January 2007. Text adapted from Schaudig (2001). English translation adapted from Cogan's translation in Hallo & Younger (2003).
  110. Dandamaev (2010-01-26)
  111. Bedford, p. 113
  112. Bedford, p. 134
  113. ^ Kuhrt (1983), pp. 83–97
  114. Grabbe (2006), p. 542
  115. Bedford, pp. 138–39
  116. Greaves, Alan M. Miletos: A History, p. 84. Routledge, 2002. ISBN 978-0415238465
  117. Bedford, p. 137
  118. ^ MacGregor
  119. "United Nations Note to Correspondents no. 3699, 13 October 1971" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  120. ^ Wiesehöfer (1999), pp. 55–68
  121. ^ Pahlavi, p. 9
  122. Robertson, p. 7
  123. Lincoln, p. 32.
  124. Housego (1971-10-15)
  125. Briant, p. 47
  126. ^ Llewellyn-Jones, p. 104
  127. Curtis, Tallis & Andre-Salvini, p. 59
  128. Silverman, Helaine; Ruggles, D. Fairchild (2008). Cultural Heritage and Human Rights. Springer. p. 11. ISBN 978-0387765792.
  129. ""First Charter of Human Rights" on Display at Peabody | Yale Peabody Museum".
  130. Jeffries (2005-10-22)
  131. ^ Sheikholeslami (2009-10-12)
  132. Wilson (2010-01-24)
  133. "Iran severs cultural ties with British Museum over Persian treasure (2010-02-07)"
  134. "Cyrus Cylinder, world's oldest human rights charter, returns to Iran on loan," The Guardian (2010-09-10)
  135. "Cyrus Cylinder warmly welcomed at home Archived 2011-06-14 at the Wayback Machine". Tehran Times, September 26, 2010
  136. "Diplomatic whirl". The Economist. 2013-03-23. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  137. Esfandiari, Golnaz. Historic Cyrus Cylinder Called 'A Stranger In Its Own Home' Archived 2010-09-18 at the Wayback Machine. "Persian Letters", Radio Free Europe. September 14, 2010
  138. "Babylonian artefact to tour US". 2012-11-28. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  139. "The Cyrus Cylinder travels to the US". British Museum (Press release). Archived from the original on 7 February 2013. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  140. "Tour Venues and Dates". Cyrus Cylinder US Tour 2013. 2013-02-28. Archived from the original on 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  141. "'The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia - A New Beginning', an exhibition in partnership with three Tata trusts - Tata Sons - Tata group". Archived from the original on 2015-05-13. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
  142. ""First Charter of Human Rights" on Display at Peabody | Yale Peabody Museum".
  143. Anderton, Frances (4 July 2017). "Cecil Balmond Designs 'Freedom Sculpture' for Los Angeles". KCRW. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  144. "Century City Freedom Sculpture unveiled on Santa Monica Boulevard median". 2017-07-05.
  145. "'Los Angeles embodies diversity.' the city's new sculpture celebrating freedom is unveiled". Los Angeles Times. 5 July 2017.

Further reading

Books and journals

Media articles

Other sources

Editions and translations

  • Rawlinson, H.C., & Th. G. Pinches, A Selection from the Miscellaneous Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia (1884, 1909 London: fragment A only).
  • Rogers, Robert William: Cuneiform Parallels to the Old Testament (1912), New York, Eaton & Mains (Online Archived 2006-08-13 at the Wayback Machine: fragment A only).
  • Pritchard, James B. (ed.): Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (ANET) (1950, 1955, 1969). Translation by A. L. Oppenheim. (fragment A and B).
  • P.-R. Berger, "Der Kyros-Zylinder mit dem Zusatzfragment BIN II Nr.32 und die akkidischen Personennamen im Danielbuch" in Zeitschrift für Assyriologie 65 (1975) 192–234
  • Hallo, W.H.; Younger, K.L., eds. (2003). The Context of Scripture: Monumental Inscriptions from the Biblical World. Translated by Cogan, Mordechai. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-9004106192.
  • Brosius, Maria (ed.): The Persian Empire from Cyrus II to Artaxerxes I (2000), London Association of Classical Teachers (LACT) 16, London.
  • Schaudig, Hanspeter (2001). Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros' des Großen, samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften. Textausgabe und Grammatik (in German). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.
  • Michalowski, P. (2007). "The Cyrus Cylinder". In Chavalas, Mark W. (ed.). Ancient Near East: Historical Sources in Translation. Blackwell Sourcebooks in Ancient History. Wiley. pp. 426–30. ISBN 978-0631235811.
  • Lendering, Jona (5 February 2010). "Cyrus Cylinder (2)". Livius.org. Archived from the original on 11 March 2018. Retrieved 10 January 2007. Text adapted from Schaudig (2001). English translation adapted from Cogan's translation in Hallo & Younger (2003).
  • "Translation of the text on the Cyrus Cylinder". Translated by Finkel, Irving. British Museum. 2012. Archived from the original on 21 December 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  • Finkel, Irving (2013). "The Cyrus Cylinder: The Babylonian perspective". The Cyrus Cylinder: The King of Persia's Proclamation from Ancient Babylon. I. B. Tauris. pp. 4ff. ISBN 978-1780760636.
  • "Cyrus Cylinder in Persian" (PDF) (in Persian). Translated by Razmjou, Shahrokh. 2013 . Retrieved 1 October 2018. Earlier version Archived 2012-08-16 at the Wayback Machine dated to 13 September 2010.

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This article is about an item held in the British Museum. The object reference is 1880,0617.1941.
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