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Cyrus
Cyrus and the establishment of the Persian Empire
Life and Legend
of Cyrus
Conquests of Cyrus
II
The Rise of
Persia Under Cyrus
The Legacy of
Cyrus II
Darius
Darius
the Great
Darius I
Darius
The Administrator
Xerxes
Xerxes I
Xerxes the Great

Cylinder seal and inscription of
Cyrus the Great from Babylon
I am Cyrus, king of the world,
great king, mighty king, king of Babylon, king of the land of Sumer and
Akkad, king of the four quarters, son of Cambyses, great king, king of
Anshan, grandson of Cyrus, great king, king of Anshan, descendant of
Teispes, great king, king of Anshan, progeny of an unending royal line,
whose rule Bel and Nabu cherish, whose kingship they desire for their
hearts' pleasures.
When I, well-disposed, entered Babylon, I established the seat of
government in the royal palace amidst jubilation and rejoicing. Marduk,
the great God, caused the big-hearted inhabitants of Babylon to...me. I
sought daily to worship him. My numerous troops moved about undisturbed
in the midst of Babylon.
I did not allow any to terrorize the land of Sumer and Akkad. I kept in
view the needs of Babylon and all its sanctuaries to promote their well
being. The citizens of Babylon... I lifted their unbecoming yoke. Their
dilapidated dwellings I restored. I put an end to their misfortunes.
At my deeds Marduk, the great Lord, rejoiced, and to me, Cyrus, the king
who worshipped, and to Cambyses, my son, the offspring of my loins, and
to all my troops, he graciously gave his blessing, and in good spirit is
before him we/glorified/exceedingly his high divinity....
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Persia
The International History Project, 2004
Edited By: Robert Guisepi
The History Of the Ancient Persian Empire
From Rise To Fall
A history of the
Persians including their empire, rulers like Cyrus, Darius and Xerxes as
well as their cities, rise and fall
Persia,
conventional European designation of the country now known as Iran. This
name was in general use in the West until 1935, although the Iranians
themselves had long called their country Iran. For convention's sake the
name of Persia is here kept for that part of the country's history
concerned with the ancient Persian Empire until the Arab conquest in the
7th century AD.
An Overview of the The Persian Empire
Cyrus
the Persian was the greatest conqueror in the history of the
ancient Near
East. In 550 B.C. he ended Persian vassalage to the Medes by
capturing
Ecbatana and ousting the Median dynasty. The Medes readily accepted their
vigorous new ruler, who soon demonstrated that he deserved to be called "the Great."
When King Croesus of Lydia moved across the Hals River in 547 B.C. to pick
up some of the pieces of the Median empire, Cyrus defeated him and annexed
Lydia, including those Greek cities on the coast of Asia Minor
that were
under the nominal control of Lydia. Then he turned east,
establishing
his power as far as the frontier of India. Babylon and its empire
was next on
his list. Following the death of Cyrus, his son Cambyses conquered
Egypt. The
next ruler, Darius I (522-486 B.C.), added the Punjab region in
India and
Thrace in Europe. He also began a conflict with the Greeks that
continued
intermittently for more than 150 years until the Persians were
conquered by
Alexander the Great. Long before this event the Persian nobility
had forgotten
Cyrus the Great's answer to their suggestion that they "leave
this small
and barren country of ours" and move to fertile Babylonia:
Do
so if you wish, but if you do, be ready to find
yourselves no longer governors but governed; for soft
lands breed soft men; it does not happen that the same
land brings forth wonderful crops and good fighting men. ^29
[Footnote 29:
Herodotus History 9.122, trans. A. R. Burn, Persia and the West
(New York:
St. Martin's Press, 1962), p. 61.]
Persian Government
Although
built upon the Assyrian model, the Persian administrative system
was far more
efficient and humane. The empire was divided into twenty
provinces, or
satrapies, each ruled by a governor called a satrap. To check
the satraps,
a secretary and a military official representing the "Great King,
King of
Kings" were installed in every province. Also, special inspectors,
"the Eyes and
Ears of the King," traveled throughout the realm.
Imperial
post roads connected the important cities. Along the Royal Road
between
Sardis and Susa there was a post station every fourteen miles, where
the king's
couriers could obtain fresh horses, enabling them to cover the
1600-mile
route in a week. "Nothing mortal travels so fast as these Persian
messengers,"
wrote Herodotus. "These men will not be hindered..., either by
snow, or
rain, or heat, or by the darkness of night." ^30 These words were at
one time used
as the motto of the United States Postal Service.
[Footnote 30:
Herodotus History 8.88, trans. G. Rawlinson.]
The
Persian empire was the first to attempt to govern many different
racial groups
on the principle of equal responsibilities and rights for all
peoples. So
long as subjects paid their taxes and kept the peace, the king did
not interfere
with local religion, customs, or trade. Indeed, Darius was
called the
"shopkeeper" because he stimulated trade by introducing a uniform
system gold
and silver coinage on the Lydian model.
Persian Religion And Art
The
humaneness of the Persian rulers may have stemmed from the ethical
religion
founded by the prophet Zoroaster, who lived in the early sixth
century B.C.
Zoroaster sought to replace what he called "the lie" -
ritualistic,
idol-worshiping cults and their Magi priests - with a religion
centered on
the sole god Ahura-Mazda ("Wise Lord"). This "father of Justice"
demanded
"good thoughts of the mind, good deeds of the hand, and good words of the tongue"
from those who would attain paradise (a Persian word). The new religion made
little progress until first Darius and then the Magi adopted it. The Magi
revived many old gods as lesser deities, added much ritual, and replaced
monotheism with dualism by transforming what Zoroaster had called the principle or
spirit of evil into the powerful god Ahriman (the model for the Jewish
Satan), rival of Ahura-Mazda, "between which each man must choose for himself." The
complicated evolution of Zoroastrianism is revealed in its holy writ, the
Avesta ("The Law"), assembled in its present form between the fourth and sixth
centuries A.D. Zoroastrian eschatology - "the doctrine of final things" such
as the resurrection of the dead and a last judgment - influenced later
Judaism. Following the Muslim conquest of Persia in the seventh century A.D.,
Zoroastrianism died out in its homeland. It exists today among the Parsees in
India.
In art
the Persians borrowed largely from their predecessors in the
Fertile
Crescent, particularly the Assyrians. Their most important work was in
palace
architecture, the best remains of which are at Persepolis. Built on a
high terrace,
the royal residence was reached by a grand stairway faced with
beautiful
reliefs. Instead of the warfare and violence that characterized
Assyrian
sculpture, these reliefs depict hundreds of soldiers, courtiers, and
representatives of twenty-three nations of the empire bringing gifts to
the
king for the
festival of the new year.
THE FIRST EMPIRE
The Iranian plateau was
settled about 1500BC by Aryan tribes, the most important of which were
the Medes, who occupied the northwestern portion, and the Persians, who
emigrated from Parsua, a land west of Lake Urmia, into the southern
region of the plateau, which they named Parsamash or Parsumash. The
first prominent leader of the Persians was the warrior chief Hakhamanish,
or Achaemenes, who lived about 681BC. The Persians were dominated by the
Medes until the accession to the Persian throne in 550 BC of Cyrus the
Great. He overthrew the Median rulers, conquered the kingdom of Lydia in
546BC and that of Babylonia in 539BC and established the Persian Empire
as the preeminent power of the world. His son and successor, Cambyses
II, extended the Persian realm even further by conquering the Egyptians
in 525BC. Darius I, who ascended the throne in 521BC, pushed the Persian
borders as far eastward as the Indus River, had a canal constructed from
the Nile to the Red Sea, and reorganized the entire empire, earning the
title Darius the Great. From 499 to 493BC he engaged in crushing a
revolt of the Ionian Greeks living under Persian rule in Asia, and then
launched a punitive campaign against the European Greeks for supporting
the rebels. His forces were disastrously defeated by the Greeks at the
historic Battle of Marathon in 490BC. Darius died while preparing a new
expedition against the Greeks; his son and successor, Xerxes I,
attempted to fulfill his plan but met defeat in the great sea engagement
the Battle of Salamís in 480BC and in two successive land battles in
the following year.
The forays of Xerxes were
the last notable attempt at expansion of the Persian Empire. During the
reign of Artaxerxes I, the second son of Xerxes, the Egyptians revolted,
aided by the Greeks; although the revolt was finally suppressed in
446BC, it signaled the first major assault against, and the beginning of
the decline of, the Persian Empire.
BACKGROUND
Between 560 and 500 BC the
eastern Mediterranean and the Near East underwent great political
changes. Under Cyrus the Great Persia grew into the largest empire the
Near East had ever seen. Centered on the Persian homeland on the
northeastern shore of the Persian Gulf, it stretched from present-day
Pakistan in the east to the Balkan Peninsula in the west and from the
Persian Gulf in the south to Central Asia in the north.
In the same period, a
number of small city-states consisting of an urban center and its
surrounding territory had developed over a large part of the Greek
mainland and the islands of the Aegean Sea. For the most part they were
governed by local aristocracies, but the city-state of Athens had
already begun a series of changes that would lead to the emergence of
democratic government. Politically, the most important was Sparta, on
the Peloponnesian peninsula. It had become the strongest land power in
Greece and controlled an alliance of other city-states that extended
over much of southern Greece. However, in terms of population,
resources, and organization, the Greek states were no match for the
immense empire they were to fight.
The
wars between them had important consequences. Politically, they ended
Persia’s expansion to the west and led to its loss of control of the
western coast of Asia Minor (present-day Asian Turkey). The struggles
deeply affected the Greeks. Sparta and Athens emerged as the leading
powers, eventually dominating the Greek world. Athens became the
dominant Greek sea power and created an empire that extended over the
eastern and northern coasts of the Aegean. Culturally, the wars made the
Greeks much more conscious of their identity as a separate, and in their
minds, superior people.
THE FIRST PHASE OF THE
PERSIAN WARS
In 521 BC the Persian king
Darius I crushed all resistance to his accession to the throne after a
brief but bloody civil war. While playing a central role in reorganizing
the empire, he also worked to secure and expand its outer borders. In
513 BC the Persians captured the major Greek islands of Khíos, Sámos,
and Lésvos. Also in 513 BC Darius himself crossed over to Europe and
conquered the area between the Danube and the Aegean coast to the
borders of Macedonia. Many historians believe that these gains were part
of the normal process of imperial expansion and that Darius eventually
intended the conquest of Greece and the Aegean.
In
499 BC his forces attempted to capture the island of Náxos as a first
step towards dominating the central Aegean. This attempt failed and it
helped to precipitate a revolt of the Ionian Greeks living along the
coast of Asia Minor. This revolt, caused by dissatisfaction with
economic and political conditions under the Persians, lasted from 499 to
493 BC. The revolt was at first successful but the Ionians were
eventually thwarted by a crucial defeat at sea and the immense
superiority of Persian numbers and organization.
Athens
and the lesser mainland state of Eretria had provided naval help to the
Ionian rebels during the revolt. This intervention convinced Darius that
Greece itself must be subdued to guarantee Persian security in the west.
In 492 BC the Persians launched an expedition to gain control of the
central Aegean and to punish Athens and Eretria for assisting the Ionian
rebels. After initial successes in northern Greece the Persians moved
against Athens but were turned back when most of the ships were lost in
a storm. In the summer of 490 BC a second Persian expedition sacked
Eretria and then landed at Marathon less than 40 km (25 mi) northeast of
Athens. The Athenians had appealed for help to other Greek states and
especially to Sparta, but in the deciding battle faced the Persian force
almost alone. Due to the strategy of Athenian general Miltiades, the
force of about 10,000 Greek infantrymen defeated a much more numerous
enemy. The battle showed the decisive superiority of the heavier armored
Greek infantry over their Persian opponents in close combat.
XERXES’ INVASION
This failure led Darius to
begin preparing a much larger force for a second and final invasion. But
rebellion in Egypt and other events delayed matters. In 486 BC Darius
died and was succeeded by his son Xerxes I. After reconquering Egypt
Xerxes was ready to take up his father’s plans for Greece. The army he
assembled was far larger than any the Greeks had seen before. Estimated
in the millions by Greek historian Herodotus, it probably actually
consisted of between 200,000 and 300,000 infantry and cavalry and more
than 700 warships. The size of this force, the need for steady supplies,
and the rugged nature of the Greek landscape led the Persians to develop
a strategy that depended on cooperation between the army and the fleet.
The army would provide bases for the fleet while the fleet would allow
the army to bypass obstacles on land. In the spring of 480 BC the
immense expedition set out from Sardis in western Asia Minor.
The Greeks were not united
in their attitude toward the Persian invasion. Many of the states saw
their position as helpless and were ready to surrender. Those determined
to resist met in the fall of 481 BC and made an alliance to fight the
invasion. In May 480 BC Sparta was given command on land and sea despite
the fact that the Athenians provided the majority of ships. After an
initial failure to hold the Persians the Greeks decided to meet the
invader on land at Thermopylae and at sea at Artemisium in central
Greece. This was the strategic point to meet a combined sea and land
attack by much larger forces, as the approaches to it by both land and
sea were narrow and difficult and would favor Greek infantry and the
heavier and slower Greek ships. The Persian army far outnumbered the
Greek force of between 6000 and 7000 infantrymen. After several days of
battle by both land and sea the Persians surrounded the Greek position
at Thermopylae. Though most of the Greeks escaped, the commander,
Spartan king Leonidas I, and most of his fellow Spartans died. The Greek
navy was now in a helpless position and withdrew south.
The
road to central Greece now lay open and Xerxes advanced south, sacking
Athens and occupying its territory. The Greek fleet had withdrawn and
lay at anchor at Salamís, an island close to Athens. The Greek leaders
were divided on what to do as the Persian fleet took up a position just
outside the narrows that separate Salamís from the Athenian coast. The
Spartans and other southern Greeks advocated withdrawing but the
Athenians under the command of their general Themistocles successfully
opposed a retreat and prepared to face the Persians. The Greek fleet
numbered about 378 warships and faced a Persian force of about the same
size. In late September 480 BC, as the Persian fleet attacked through
the narrow straits, the Greek ships pretended to scatter at its
approach. The Persians, with their ranks thrown into confusion by the
narrowness of the straits and the feigned Greek retreat, were decisively
defeated by the ramming of the heavier Greek ships.
This
battle proved decisive for the outcome of the war, destroying any hope
that the Persians could continue their combined strategy of attack by
land and sea. Their navy had suffered heavily and its morale was broken.
Xerxes, afraid that his defeat might be followed by another rebellion of
the Ionian Greeks, returned home but left his army behind under his
general Mardonius. Mardonius spent the following winter trying to split
the Greek coalition by offering the Athenians amnesty if they allied
with Persia against Sparta. After this attempt failed Mardonius decided
to bring the Greeks to battle in the early spring of 479 BC.
He
first recaptured Athens to draw out the Athenians, who pressured the
Spartans into helping them fight back. Mardonius then moved his forces
north to southern Boeotia (in present-day central Greece) near the town
of Plataea. The sides were evenly matched with about 110,000 men. After
maneuvers on both sides lasting more than a week the battle was fought
and the Persian force was destroyed. This defeat marked the complete
failure of the invasion, and the surviving Persians withdrew suffering
further heavy losses. By the next year the Greeks were successfully
attacking the Persians on their own territory in Asia Minor.
VICTORIOUS GREECE
The Persians were never
again able to threaten another invasion. The Greeks moved to the
offensive and over the next decades liberated the islands of the Aegean
and large areas along the western and northern coasts from Persian
control. The most important direct result of the wars was to establish
Athens as the dominant Greek naval power. This gave Athens the
opportunity to create an extensive empire over the newly won territories
that had no parallel in earlier Greek history. A new political order
emerged among the Greek states centered on the two great powers of
Athens and Sparta that was to have a profound effect on later Greek
history. Another effect of the wars was to produce the first large scale
Greek historical work, the History of Herodotus, written in the
second half of the 5th century BC. It serves as the most important
source for the events of the wars and for evidence of the wars’ effect
on the Greek intellect and culture.
ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND
THE SELEUCIDS
Many revolts took place in
the next century; the final blow was struck by Alexander the Great, who
added the Persian Empire to his own Mediterranean realm by defeating the
troops of Darius III in a series of battles between 334 and 331BC.
Alexander effected a temporary integration of the Persians into his
empire by enlisting large numbers of Persian soldiers in his armies and
by causing all his high officers, who were Macedonians, to wed Persian
wives. His death in 323BC was followed by a long struggle among his
generals for the Persian throne. The victor in this contest was Seleucus
I, who, after conquering the rich kingdom of Babylon in 312BC, annexed
thereto all the former Persian realm as far east as the Indus River, as
well as Syria and Asia Minor, and founded the Seleucid dynasty. For more
than five centuries thereafter, Persia remained a subordinate unit
within this great realm, which, after the overthrow of the Seleucids in
the 2nd century BC, became the Parthian Empire.
THE SASSANIDS
In AD 224 Ardashir I, a
Persian vassal-king, rebelled against the Parthians, defeated them in
the Battle of Hormuz, and founded a new Persian dynasty, that of the
Sassanids. He then conquered several minor neighboring kingdoms, invaded
India, levying heavy tribute from the rulers of the Punjab, and
conquered Armenia. A particularly significant accomplishment of his
reign was the establishment of Zoroastrianism as the official religion
of Persia. Ardashir was succeeded in 241 by his son Shapur I, who waged
two successive wars against the Roman Empire, conquering territories in
Mesopotamia and Syria and a large area in Asia Minor. Between 260 and
263 he lost his conquests to Odenathus, ruler of Palmyra, and ally of
Rome. War with Rome was renewed by Narses; his army was almost
annihilated by Roman forces in 297, and he was compelled to conclude
peace terms whereby the western boundary of Persia was moved from the
Euphrates River to the Tigris River and much additional territory was
lost. Shapur II (ruled 309-379) regained the lost territories, however,
in three successive wars with the Romans.
The next ruler of note was
Yazdegerd I, who reigned in peace from 399 to 420; he at first allowed
the Persian Christians freedom of worship and may even have contemplated
becoming a Christian himself, but he later returned to the
Zoroastrianism of his forebears and launched a 4-year campaign of
ruthless persecution against the Christians. The persecution was
continued by his son and successor, Bahram V, who declared war on Rome
in 420. The Romans defeated Bahram in 422; by the terms of the peace
treaty the Romans promised toleration for the Zoroastrians within their
realm in return for similar treatment of Christians in Persia. Two years
later, at the Council of Dad-Ishu, the Eastern church declared its
independence of the Western church.
Near the end of the 5th
century a new enemy, the barbaric Ephthalites, or "White
Huns," attacked Persia; they defeated the Persian king Firuz II in
483 and for some years thereafter exacted heavy tribute. In the same
year Nestorianism was made the official faith of the Persian Christians.
Kavadh I favored the communistic teachings of Mazdak (flourished 5th
century), a Zoroastrian high priest, and in 498 was deposed by his
orthodox brother Zamasp. With the aid of the Ephthalites, Kavadh was
restored to the throne in 501. He fought two inconclusive wars against
Rome, and in 523 he withdrew his support of Mazdak and caused a great
massacre of Mazdak's followers. His son and successor, Khosrau I, in two
wars with the Byzantine emperor Justinian I, extended his sway to the
Black Sea and the Caucasus, becoming the most powerful of all Sassanid
kings. He reformed the administration of the empire and restored
Zoroastrianism as the state religion. His grandson Khosrau II reigned
from 590 to 628; in 602 he began a long war against the Byzantine Empire
and by 619 had conquered almost all southwestern Asia Minor and Egypt.
Further expansion was prevented by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius, who
between 622 and 627 drove the Persians back within their original
borders. The last of the Sassanid kings was Yazdegerd III, during whose
reign (632-651) the Arabs invaded Persia, destroyed all resistance,
gradually replaced Zoroastrianism with Islam, and incorporated Persia
into the caliphate.
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