XSc
Achaemenid Royal Inscriptions: collection of Old Persian cuneiform texts from the sixth, fifth, and fourth centuries BCE, left by the Achaemenid kings on their official monuments.
XSc, inscription on a slab of marble from Susa
[Fragmentary Old Persian text on a slab of marble; the text is almost identical to the Babylonian XSb.]
- adam \ Xšayâršâ \ xšâyathiya \ vazraka \ xšâyathiya \ xšâyathiyânâm \ xšâya
- thiya \ dahyunâm \ Dârayavahauš \ xšâyathiyahyâ \ puça \ Haxâmanišiya \ thât
- iy \ Xšayâšâ \ xšâyathiya \ ima \ hadiš \ akunâm \ pasâva \ yathâ \ adam \ xšâya
- thiya \ abavam \ aita \ adam \ yânam \ jadiyâmiy \ Auramazdâm \ mâm \ Au
- ramazdâ \ pâtuv \ hadâ \ bagaibiš \ utamaiy \ xšaçam \ utâ \ tyamaiy \ kartam
I am Xerxes, the great king, king of kings, king of all nations, the son of king Darius, the Achaemenid.
King Xerxes says: I built this palace after I became king. This I ask as a favor from Ahuramazda: May Ahuramazda and the gods protect me, my kingdom, and what has been built by me.
Literature
- Pierre Lecoq, Les inscriptions de la Perse achéménide (1997 Paris)