Women of the Empire

Life and Labor in the Achaemenid Persepolis Archives

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This book offers a comprehensive examination of the status and roles of women within the socio-economic framework of the Achaemenid Empire. Drawing primarily on the Persepolis Fortification and Treasury Archives, it foregrounds the documentary evidence as a lens through which the lives, labor, and agency of women—both within royal institutions and beyond—can be critically assessed. Women of the Empire explores a range of thematic issues across its chapters, highlighting the diverse contexts in which women appear in administrative records and reconstructing their participation in the imperial economy.

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Yazdan Safaee, PhD (2024), Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck, is a postdoctoral researcher in that university. He has published a monograph and several articles on Achaemenid Persia, including a book in Persian about Darius III: The Last Great King (Tehran, 2016).
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Abbreviations

1 Introduction
 1 Research Framing: Methodological Approach and Scope of Inquiry
 2 Literature Review
 3 The Problem of Gender and Its Relevance to This Study
 4 Structure of the Present Study

2 The Persepolis Archives in Context: Constructing Questions, Confronting Problems
 1 Introduction
 2 Persepolis Fortification Archive
 3 The Persepolis Treasury Archive
 4 Other Achaemenid Archives

Part 1 The Royal Sphere



3 The Houses of Royal Women: A Socio-Economic Perspective
 1 Introduction
 2 Identification
 3 The Administrated House
 4 Display and Representation
 5 Other Royal Women

Part 2 The Non-royal Sphere



4 Women at Work: Specialization and Qualification
 1 Introduction
 2 Chiefs
 3 Distinct Female Task Forces
 4 Distinct Specialized Task Forces
 5 Concluding Remarks

5 Ordinary Women: Laborers, Gender, and Ration
 1 Introduction
 2 Gender and Age: Ration Analysis
 3 Gender and Hierarchy
 4 Family
 5 Concluding Remarks

6 Conclusions and Contributions
 1 Concluding Remarks
 2 Reframing Gender through the Persepolis Fortification Archives

Bibliography
Index Locorum
Index Nominum
Index Verborum
This book will be of interest to scholars and students in Ancient Near Eastern studies, Achaemenid history, gender studies, and economic history. It will also appeal to researchers in archival studies, Iranian studies, and comparative imperial systems. By foregrounding women’s roles in the Persepolis archives, it offers valuable insights for those exploring the intersection of gender, power, and administration in ancient empires.
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