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Now the nature of this road1 is as I will show. All along it are the king's road stations and very good resting places, and the whole of it passes through country that is inhabited and safe. Its course through Lydia and Phrygia is of the length of twenty stages, and ninety-four and a half parasangs.

1 “The royal road from Sardis to Susa is far older than the Persian empire,” say How and Wells. Evidence points to the existence of a Hittite capital in Cappadocia, to connect which with Sardis on the one hand and Assyria on the other was the purpose of the road.

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load focus Notes (W. W. How, J. Wells)
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Sardis (Turkey) (2)
Susa (Iran) (1)
Phrygia (Turkey) (1)
Lydia (Turkey) (1)
Cappadocia (Turkey) (1)

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