A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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clearly proven the pitfalls and biases of the material in that respect (Henkelman 2008: pp. 79–85). For example, attempts to estimate the population of Fars or even only the number of workers involved in the “Persepolis economy” are highly problematic. First, we see only a part of the administrative‐economic system, and we have no idea how large this part really was. Second, the numbers of the workers mentioned in the Elamite “Fortification Tablets” from Persepolis that have been published so far are also problematic; not even in combination with later historians' praise of the fertility and population density of Persis do they enable us to estimate the size of the population of the core province of the empire. The groups of workers mentioned in the texts are not separate units; thus, certain (anonymous) workers might appear in different groups on different occasions. The manual workers and craftsmen employed there were actually members of a special labor force, recruited from all over the empire to serve the king in Fars. The proportion of men to women indicates no more than that some of these workers must have lived in family groups (against Aperghis' view of an underfeeding of male workers (Aperghis 2000; see Tuplin 2008: 319 f). The ratio of different generations does not match other ancient demographic patterns, and an assessment of living and work spaces minimizes the numerical data's meaningfulness. But by looking at a special case (special rations for mothers) (Brosius 1996: pp. 171–178) and at Greek testimonies of the royal policy of reproduction (Hdt. 1.135 f; Str. 15.3.17), it becomes obvious that Persian rulers were interested in the greatest possible number of potential soldiers, officials, and workers (Briant 2002: 277 ff).

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