The excavators found a large number of business documents written on clay tablets and, buried in the temple's foundations, the Cyrus Cylinder.
The Cyrus Cylinder bears striking similarities to older Mesopotamian royal inscriptions.
The Cyrus Cylinder has been displayed in the British Museum since its formal acquisition in 1880.
According to the bible and implications from the Cyrus Cylinder, the exiled population of Judea was allowed to return to Jerusalem.
After this victory, he set the standard of the benevolent conqueror by issuing the Cyrus Cylinder.
Some additional detail is provided by one of the few documents to have survived from Cyrus's lifetime, the Cyrus Cylinder.
The Cyrus Cylinder served in the official logo as the symbol for the event.
In it was displayed the Cyrus Cylinder, which the Shah promoted as "the first human rights charter in history".
The main display is occupied by a copy of the Cyrus Cylinder (the original is in the British Museum).
King of Persia, who declared the first charter of human rights in the world, also known as the Cyrus Cylinder.