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Easton's Bible Dictionary

 

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Shushan
        a lily, the Susa of Greek and Roman writers, once the capital of
        Elam. It lay in the uplands of Susiana, on the east of the
        Tigris, about 150 miles to the north of the head of the Persian
        Gulf. It is the modern Shush, on the northwest of Shuster. Once
        a magnificent city, it is now an immense mass of ruins. Here
        Daniel saw one of his visions (Dan. 8); and here also Nehemiah
        (Neh. 1) began his public life. Most of the events recorded in
        the Book of Esther took place here. Modern explorers have
        brought to light numerous relics, and the ground-plan of the
        splendid palace of Shushan, one of the residences of the great
        king, together with numerous specimens of ancient art, which
        illustrate the statements of Scripture regarding it (Dan. 8:2).
        The great hall of this palace (Esther 1) "consisted of several
        magnificent groups of columns, together with a frontage of 343
        feet 9 inches, and a depth of 244 feet. These groups were
        arranged into a central phalanx of thirty-six columns (six rows
        of six each), flanked on the west, north, and east by an equal
        number, disposed in double rows of six each, and distant from
        them 64 feet 2 inches." The inscriptions on the ruins represent
        that the palace was founded by Darius and completed by
        Artaxerxes.
Bibliography Information
Easton, Matthew George. M.A., D.D., "Biblical Meaning for 'Shushan' Eastons Bible Dictionary".
bible-history.com - Eastons; 1897.

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