home   :    index    :    picture archive   :   Iran   :    photos by Marco Prins; text Jona Lendering ©

Susia (Tus)

Unless otherwise indicated, pictures on this page © Marco Prins and Jona Lendering. Photos can be downloaded and used for non-commercial purposes, but you have to acknowledge Livius.
Susia (modern Tus, 25 kilometers northwest of the holy city of Mashad in Iran) was situated in either the eastern part of the satrapy of Parthia or western Aria. In the gardens of the mausoleum of Firdausi (below), one can see the rather disappointing remains of the ancient citadel of Susia, which are usually dated to the Sasanian age. Perhaps they are older, because from literary sources, we know that the town was already in existence in the Achaemenid period. Here you can see the site on a satellite photo.
Until it was eclipsed by Mashad, Susia must have been an important city, where the Silk road forked. Coming from Rhagae (Tehran) in the west, one could either go to Margiana and Bactria in the northeast, and from there to China; or to the southeast, to Drangiana and the valley of the river Indus. In the autumn of 330 BCE, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great accepted the surrender of Susia, and for the first time showed himself to his soldiers in an oriental dress.

According to Pliny the Elder, Susia was famous for the quality of its hemlock (Natural History 25.154).

Susia is also the town where the famous mystic Al-Ghazali was born in 1058 and died in 1111. Not far from his tomb, which is incorrectly called the tomb of caliph Harun ar-Rashid, is the lovely mausoleum of Iran's national poet Firdausi (934-1020), the author of the Shahname, the "epic of kings", which also mentions Alexander. This is Firdausi's statue (a copy can be seen in the Villa Borghese park in Rome); inside the mausoleum, which is inspired by Achaemenid architecture, are fine sculptures by Feryedun Sedighi.
 home   :   index    :    Iran