Khuzestan was once inhabited by a people known as the Elamites, who spoke neither
Indo-European languages (like the
Medes and
Persians of the
Iranian plateau) nor
Semitic languages (like the peoples of the
Mesopotamian city-states). The
Elamite language was not related to any
Iranian languages, but may have been part of a larger group known as
Elamo-Dravidian. Archaeologists and historians have documented various Elamite dynasties ranging from approximately 2700 BCE to 644 BCE. The boundaries of Elam shifted throughout history, but Elam usually included present-day Khuzestan and areas of the Iranian plateau now part of the Iranian province of
Fars. Elamite kings sometimes ruled as far afield as
Babylon; sometimes they were completely subjugated by the
Babylonians and
Assyrians, and vice versa, as was the case for numerous dynasties that ruled Iran. The core region of Elam appears to have been the rugged mountainous area in the
Zagros Mountains. The lowlands of Susiana in the west and the southeastern Zagros around
Kerman province, with sites such as
Tepe Sialk,
Tepe Yahya,
Tal-i-Iblis, and
Shahdad, were more on the periphery. In the eastern region, there was also an indigenous population. The main economy of Elam was based on agriculture and nomadic
pastoralism, while trade with lowland Mesopotamia (especially in metals, timber, and precious stones) also played a role from the 4th millennium BCE onwards. During the
Proto-Elamite period, Susa was the lone major settlement in Susiana. In the following
Old Elamite period, during the late 3rd millennium BCE,
Tepe Musian (14 hectares) on the
Deh Loran plain was the only other large town in Khuzestan. Then, early in the 2nd millennium BCE, Susa expanded to a size of 85 hectares and became a major political, commercial, and cultural city. Houses were built of mud brick and arranged around courtyards, and in many cases the dead were buried in tombs underneath the courtyard or the floors. Tombs like these continued to be made in Susan houses until the middle of the 1st millennium BCE. At the same time, towns and villages appeared in the lowlands as well as in the valleys in the neighboring highlands. This, combined with texts from Susa, suggests that there was a high level of agricultural development in the region then, with canals for irrigation. During the
Middle Elamite period, the Elamite kings successfully invaded Mesopotamia, and the increased use of the Elamite language in documents and inscriptions along with new artistic and architectural forms indicates their power at this time. Finds at the major sites in Khuzestan from this period attest to royal sponsorship of metalworking and other technologies. There was a growing interregional trade to accommodate the demand for luxury objects at royal courts and religious sanctuaries. Increased populations in major cities may indicate a contraction in settled agriculture, with pastoralism, trade, and plunder playing a more important role in the economy. The main archaeological site from the first part of this period is
Haft Tepe, 25 km southeast of Susa. Known as Kabnak, this site includes a funerary temple complex with vaulted underground tombs and two mud-brick terraces that may represent the eroded bases of
ziggurats. A fragmentary stele indicates that the complex was maintained by the 16th-century BCE king
Tepti-ahar. Adjoining the larger terrace was a workshop area including a double-chambered kiln. This area made objects from metal, bone, shell, and mosaic. Ceramics were also made here, including painted clay funerary heads which first appear here and then continue to appear throughout the period. The main site during the second part of the Middle Elamite period is
Chogha Zanbil, which was anciently known as Āl Untaš Napiriša or Dūr Untaš. It had a ziggurat and several surrounding temples, which may have been used as a sanctuary for deities throughout the realm. There was also a royal quarter with three monumental palaces, each with large courts surrounded by long halls and storerooms. The site of Chogha Zanbil may not have been extensively inhabited. Terracotta figurines are characteristic of Elamite art during the late 2nd millennium BCE, suggesting a possible continuity of religious beliefs during this time. Sculptures of beds and nude women supporting their breasts with their hands are common during this period but do not appear to have remained common after around 1000 BCE. Sculptures of hump-backed bulls are also found at several sites, including Susa, Haft Tepe, and Chogha Zanbil. Rock-cut sanctuaries in the highlands, such as
Kūl-e Fara and
Šekāfta Salmān near
Izeh in eastern Khuzestan, also suggest continuity of religious beliefs. Both sanctuaries have later inscriptions indicating that the area was ruled by a king named
Hanni, who ruled over a state named
Aapir. Susa went into a rapid decline at the end of the 2nd millennium BCE. Famines appear to have had "disastrous effects" on the surrounding rural population at that time. Elamite groups may have been pushed to the valleys of eastern Khuzestan from the west by new ethnic groups (or already-present ones that had previously been subordinate). Eastern Khuzestan appears to have increased in both importance and population during this period. The only excavated site in this area is
Tall-i Ghazir near
Ramhormoz, surrounded by the Bakhtiari mountains. Around the late 8th century BCE, Susa appears to have recovered and enjoyed a period of renewed prosperity. By this time, at least two other cities,
Madaktu and
Khidalu, had come to play important political roles. Historians differ as to whether the Elamites could be considered "Iranian". On the one hand, the Elamites spoke a non-
Iranian language and were culturally closer to the established civilizations of
Sumer and
Akkad than they were to the tribes of the Iranian plateau. On the other hand, the Elamites linked the old civilizations of Mesopotamia and the new peoples of the plateau, and their version of Mesopotamian civilization was a formative influence on the first indisputably Persian empire of the
Achaemenids. Elam was one of the first conquests of the new Persian empire; Elamite scribes kept the Persians' records, writing them down in Elamite cuneiform. Hence one contemporary historian, Elton Daniel, states that the Elamites are "the founders of the first Iranian empire in the geographic sense". (
The History of Iran, 2001, p. 26). If the Elamites are considered proto-Persians, then Khuzestan would have been one of the cradles of Persian civilization. Many experts such as Sir
Percy Sykes in fact called the Elamites "the earliest civilization of Persia" (
A History of Persia, p38), and
Ibn Nadeem in his book
al-Fehrest ("الفهرست"), mentions that all the Median and Persian lands of antiquity spoke one language. In his book, which is the most accredited account of spoken languages of Iran during the early Islamic era, Ibn Nadeem quotes the 8th century scholar
Abdullah Ibn al-Muqaffa as having counted
Khuzi among the Iranian languages and for having identified it as the unofficial language of the royalty of Iran. In 644 BCE, the Assyrian king
Ashurbanipal conquered Elam and destroyed their capital at
Susa. For a time, the area was ruled from northern Mesopotamia. The area then seems to have re-established its independence. It was known as
Susiana and ruled from
Susa. It managed to remain independent of the burgeoning
Median Empire. ==The Achaemenid Empire==