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 46 History of Art in Antiquity. base. Towards the plain facing these escarps, rises a tower whose funereal purpose scarcely admits of any doubt; its close resemblance to the fragments that still exist near Meshed-i- Motghab has already been referred to. Lastly, in this same province, and south of Shiraz, between it and the sea, on one of the lower grades of the plateau, both at Sarvistan, Ferash-Abad, and FerQz-Abad, the still imposing re- mains which until quite recently were considered as works of the Sassanidae are encountered, along with scanty fragments of the Achaemenidae. It has been sought to prove that they all belong to the latter. We shall have to discuss the reasons advanced in support of the hypothesis^ and examine whether facts and indica- tions invoked in its favour do not admit of another explanation. Digiiizea by