Persepolis
mentioned only in 2 Macc. 9:2, was the capital of Persia proper, and the occasional residence of the Persian court from the time of Darius Hystaspes, who
seems to have been its founder, to the invasion of Alexander. Its wanton destruction by that conqueror is well known. Its
site is now called the Chehl-Minar, or Forty Pillars. Here, on a platform hewn out of the solid rock the sides of which face
the four cardinal points, are the remains of two great palaces, built respectively by Darius Hytaspes and his son Xerxes,
besides a number of other edifices, chiefly temples. They are of great extent and magnificence, covering an area of many acres.