Document Type : Research Paper

Author

University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran

10.22059/jhss.2025.397014.473817

Abstract

Abstrac:

This study examines the Imittu system (fixed/assessed estimation) in date palm garden contracts in Achaemenid Babylonia and attempts to analyze its function in the economic and administrative management of royal estates. Using cuneiform text analysis methods and examining three Imittu contracts from the Musayev collection dated to the 21st year of Darius I (501 BCE), this research investigates the structure and function of this contractual system. The study employs comparative methods and quantitative analysis to calculate crop yields, garden areas, and wages. The research seeks to answer how the Imittu system operated in managing royal estates and what role it played in the economic-administrative structure of Achaemenid Babylonia; furthermore, it examines how the relationship between estimated yield and garden areas, along with additional obligations, was determined. The findings indicate that the Imittu system was a complex and efficient system for managing agricultural estates, following a three-tiered management structure. The estimated yield (ranging from 18 to 100 kur) was proportional to garden areas (from 0.56 to 3.128 kur of land), and additional obligations such as silver payments were calculated accordingly. This system also demonstrates the successful integration of Babylonian administrative traditions with the managerial needs of the Achaemenid Empire.

Keywords: Achaemenid Empire, Babylonia, Imittu System, Date.

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