Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Persepolis' has mentioned 'Palace' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
It is also unclear what permanent structures there were outside the palace complex; it may be better to think of Persepolis as just that complex rather than a "city" in the normal sense.
Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 History 3.1 Destruction 3.2 After the fall of the Achaemenid Empire 4 Archaeological research 4.1 Architecture 5 Ruins and remains 5.1 Gate of All Nations 5.2 The Apadana Palace 5.2.1 Apadana Palace coin hoard 5.3 The Throne Hall 5.4 Other palaces and structures 5.5 Tombs 5.6 Ancient texts 6 Modern events 6.1 2,500-year celebration of the Persian Empire 6.2 The controversy of the Sivand Dam 7 Museums (outside Iran) that display material from Persepolis 8 General views 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External links
[8] According to Gene R. Garthwaite, the Susa Palace served as Darius' model for Persepolis.
Around that time, a fire burned "the palaces" or "the palace".
It is believed that the fire which destroyed Persepolis started from Hadish Palace, which was the living quarters of Xerxes I, and spread to the rest of the city.
Noted structures include the Great Stairway, the Gate of All Nations, the Apadana, the Hall of a Hundred Columns, the Tripylon Hall and the Tachara, the Hadish Palace, the Palace of Artaxerxes III, the Imperial Treasury, the Royal Stables, and the Chariot House.
Bas-relief on the staircase of the palace.
The Apadana Palace[edit]
Darius I built the greatest palace at Persepolis on the western side of platform.
This palace was called the Apadana.
The palace had a grand hall in the shape of a square, each side 60 metres (200xc2xa0ft) long with seventy-two columns, thirteen of which still stand on the enormous platform.
Foundation tablets of gold and silver were found in two deposition boxes in the foundations of the Palace.
Gold foundation tablets of Darius I for the Apadana Palace, in their original stone box.
May Ahuramazda protect me and my royal house!xe2x80x94xe2x80x89DPh inscription of Darius I in the foundations of the Apadana Palace[41]
At the western, northern and eastern sides of the palace, there were three rectangular porticos each of which had twelve columns in two rows of six.
Darius ordered his name and the details of his empire to be written in gold and silver on plates, which were placed in covered stone boxes in the foundations under the Four Corners of the palace.
The external front views of the palace were embossed with carvings of the Immortals, the Kings' elite guards.
Apadana Palace coin hoard[edit]
The Apadana hoard is a hoard of coins that were discovered under the stone boxes containing the foundation tablets of the Apadana Palace in Persepolis.
[43] The deposit did not have any Darics and Sigloi, which also suggests strongly that these coins typical of Achaemenid coinage only started to be minted later, after the foundation of the Apadana Palace.
Next to the Apadana, second largest building of the Terrace and the final edifices, is the Throne Hall or the Imperial Army's Hall of Honor (also called the Hundred-Columns Palace).
(6) She was the first, after the king, to hurl her blazing torch into the palace.
As the others all did the same, immediately the entire palace area was consumed, so great was the conflagration.
The king was the first to throw a firebrand upon the palace, then the guests and the servants and courtesans.
The palace had been built largely of cedar, which quickly took fire and spread the conflagration widely.
(7) But when they came to the vestibule of the palace, they saw the king himself piling on firebrands.
Cleitarchus speaks of her as having been the cause for the burning of the palace at Persepolis.
Diodorus Siculus says that the rock at the back of the palace containing the royal sepulchers is so steep that the bodies could be raised to their last resting-place only by means of mechanical advantage.
On this terrace, successive kings erected a series of architecturally stunning palatial buildings, among them the massive Apadana palace and the Throne Hall (xe2x80x9cHundred-Column Hallxe2x80x9d).