Download In the name of God Empire of PERSIA PERSIAN TIMELINE 2000

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Pontus (region) wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek warfare wikipedia , lookup

Ionian Revolt wikipedia , lookup

Battle of the Eurymedon wikipedia , lookup

Second Persian invasion of Greece wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
In the name of God
Empire of PERSIA
PERSIAN TIMELINE
2000-1800 BC, Aryan migration from Southern Russia to Near East
Persia's earliest known kingdom was the proto-Elamite Empire followed by
The Medes
Deioces, 728BC - 675BC
Phraortes (Kashtariti?), 675BC - 653BC
Scythian interregnum
Cyaxares, 625BC - 585BC
Astyages, 585BC - 550BC
Iranian Amazing Collection
628 BC, Birth of Zartosht, Zoroaster, the Persian Prophet
Achaemenid Dynasty
Achaemenes
Teispes
Cyrus I
Cambyses I (Kambiz)
Cyrus the Great, Start of Achaemenid Empire, 559BC -530BC
Kambiz II, 530BC - 522BC
Smerdis (the Magian), 522BC
Darius I the Great, 522BC - 486BC
Xerxes I (Khashyar), 486BC - 465BC
Artaxerxes I , 465BC - 425BC
Xerxes II, 425BC - 424BC (45 days)
Darius II, 423BC - 404BC
Artaxerxes II, 404BC - 359BC
Artaxerxes III, 359BC - 339BC
Arses, 338BC - 336BC
Darius III, 336BC - 330BC
Hellenistic Period
Alexander (III), 330BC - 323BC
Philip III (Arrhidaeus), 323BC - 317BC
Alexander IV, 317BC - 312BC
Seleucids
Seleucus I, 312BC - 281BC
Antiochus I Soter, 281BC - 261BC (coregent)
Seleucus, 280BC - 267BC (coregent)
Antiochus II Theos, 261BC - 246BC
Sleucus II Callinicus, 246BC - 238BC
The early history of man in Iran goes back well beyond the Neolithic period, it begins to get more
interesting around 6000 BC, when people began to domesticate animals and plant wheat and barley.
The number of settled communities increased, particularly in the eastern Zagros mountains, and
handmade painted pottery appears. Throughout the prehistoric period, from the middle of the sixth
millennium BC to about 3000 BC, painted pottery is a characteristic feature of many sites in Iran.
Iranian Amazing Collection
The Persian Empire is the name used to refer to a number of historic dynasties that have ruled the
country of Persia (Iran). Persia's earliest known kingdom was the proto-Elamite Empire, followed
by the Medes; but it is the Achaemenid Empire that emerged under Cyrus the Great that is usually
the earliest to be called "Persian." Successive states in Iran before 1935 are collectively called the
Persian Empire by Western historians.
The name 'Persia' has long been used by the West to describe the nation of Iran, its people, or its
ancient empire. It derives from the ancient Greek name for Iran, Persis. This in turn comes from a
province in the south of Iran, called Fars in the modern Persian language and Pars in Middle
Persian. Persis is the Hellenized form of Pars, based on which other European nations termed the
area Persia. This province was the core of the original Persian Empire. Westerners referred to the
state as Persia until March 21, 1935, when Reza Shah Pahlavi formally asked the international
community to call the country by its native name. Some Persian scholars protested this decision
because changing the name separated the country from its past. It also caused some Westerners to
confuse Iran with Iraq; so in 1959 his son Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi announced that both
Persia and Iran can be used interchangeably.
The Persian Empire dominated Mesopotamia from 612-330 BC. The Achaemenid Persians of
central Iran ruled an empire which comprised Iran, Mesopotamia, Syria, Egypt, and parts of Asia
Minor and India. Their ceremonial capital was Persepolis in southern Iran founded by King Darius
the Great. Persepolis was burned by Alexander the Great in 331 B.C. Only the columns, stairways,
and door jambs of its great palaces survived the fire. The stairways, adorned with reliefs
representing the king, his court, and delegates of his empire bringing gifts, demonstrate the might of
the Persian monarch.
The first record of the Persians comes from an Assyrian inscription from c. 844 BC that calls them
the Parsu (Parsuash, Parsumash) and mentions them in the region of Lake Urmia alongside another
group, the Madai (Medes). For the next two centuries, the Persians and Medes were at times
tributary to the Assyrians. The region of Parsuash was annexed by Sargon of Assyria around 719
BC. Eventually the Medes came to rule an independent Median Empire, and the Persians were
subject to them.
The First Persian State: Achaemenid Persia (648 BC-330 BC)
The Achaemenids were the first line of Persian rulers, founded by Achaemenes (Hakaimanish),
chieftain of the Persians around 700 BC.
Around 653 BC, the Medes came under the domination of the Scythians, and the son of
Achaemenes, a certain Teispes, seems to have led the nomadic Persians to settle in southern Iran
Iranian Amazing Collection
around this time -- eventually establishing the first organized Persian state in the important region
of Anshan as the Elamite kingdom was permanently destroyed by the Assyrian ruler Ashurbanipal
(640 BC).
The kingdom of Anshan and its successors continued to use Elamite as an official language for
quite some time after this, although the new dynasts spoke Persian, an Indo-Iranian tongue.
Teispes' descendants branched off into two lines, one line ruling in Anshan, while the other ruled
the rest of Persia. Cyrus II the Great united the separate kingdoms around 559 BC.
Cyrus the Great (559-529 BC)
"I am Cyrus, who founded the empire of the Persians.
Grudge me not therefore, this little earth that covers my body."
Iranian Amazing Collection
At this time, the Persians were still tributary to the Median Empire ruled by Astyages.
Cyrus rallied the Persians together, and in 550 BC defeated the forces of Astyages, who was then
captured by his own nobles and turned over to the triumphant Cyrus, now Shah of the Persian
kingdom.
As Persia assumed control over the rest of Media and their large Middle Eastern empire, Cyrus led
the united Medes and Persians to still more conquest. He took Lydia in Asia Minor, and carried his
arms eastward into central Asia.
Finally in 539 BC, Cyrus marched triumphantly into the ancient city of Babylon. After this victory,
he set the standard of the benevolent conqueror by issuing the Cyrus Cylinder. In this declaration,
the king promised not to terrorize Babylon nor destroy its institutions and culture.
The Cyrus Cylinder is an artifact of the Persian Empire, consisting of a declaration inscribed
on a clay barrel. Upon his taking of Babylon, Cyrus the Great issued the declaration,
containing an account of his victories and merciful acts, as well as a documentation of his
royal lineage. It was discovered in 1879 in Babylon, and today is kept in the British
Museum.
Iranian Amazing Collection
The royal history given on the cylinder is as follows: The founder of the dynasty was King
Achaemenes (ca. 700 BC) who was succeeded by his son Teispes of Anshan. Inscriptions
indicate that when the latter died, two of his sons shared the throne as Cyrus I of Anshan and
Ariaramnes of Persia. They were succeeded by their respective sons Cambyses I of Anshan
and Arsames of Persia. Cambyses is considered by Herodotus and Ctesias to be of humble
origin. But they also consider him as being married to Princess Mandane of Media, a
daughter of Astyages, King of the Medes and Princess Aryenis of Lydia. Cyrus II was the
result of this union.
Cyrus was killed during a battle against the Massagetae or Sakas.
Cambyses II
Cyrus' son, Cambyses II, was next in line to rule. When Cyrus conquered Babylon in 539 BC he
was employed in leading religious ceremonies (Chronicle of Nabonidus), and in the cylinder which
contains Cyrus's proclamation to the Babylonians his name is joined to that of his father in the
prayers to Marduk. On a tablet dated from the first year of Cyrus, Cambyses is called king of Babel.
But his authority seems to have been quite ephemeral; it was only in 530 BC, when Cyrus set out
on his last expedition into the East, that he associated Cambyses on the throne, and numerous
Babylonian tablets of this time are dated from the accession and the first year of Cambyses, when
Cyrus was "king of the countries" (i.e. of the world). After the death of his father in the spring of
528 BC, Cambyses became sole king. The tablets dated from his reign in Babylonia run to the end
of his eighth year, i.e. March 521 BC. Herodotus (3. 66), who dates his reign from the death of
Cyrus, gives him seven years five months, i.e. from 528 to the summer of 521.
It was quite natural that, after Cyrus had conquered Asia, Cambyses should undertake the conquest
of Egypt, the only remaining independent state of the Eastern world.
Iranian Amazing Collection
Before he set out on his expedition he killed his brother Bardiya (Smerdis), whom Cyrus had
appointed governor of the eastern provinces. The date is given by Darius, whereas the Greek
authors narrate the murder after the conquest of Egypt. The war took place in 525, when Amasis
had just been succeeded by his son Psammetichus III. Cambyses had prepared for the march
through the desert by an alliance with Arabian chieftains, who brought a large supply of water to
the stations.
King Amasis had hoped that Egypt would be able to withstand the threatened Persian attack by an
alliance with the Greeks.But this hope failed the Cypriot towns and the tyrant Polycrates of Samos,
who possessed a large fleet, now preferred to join the Persians, and the commander of the Greek
troops, Phanes of Halicarnassus, went over to them. In the decisive battle at Pelusium the Egyptians
were beaten, and shortly afterwards Memphis was taken. The captive king Psammetichus was
executed, having attempted a rebellion. The Egyptian inscriptions show that Cambyses officially
adopted the titles and the costume of the Pharaohs, although we may very well believe that he did
not conceal his contempt for the customs and the religion of the Egyptians.
From Egypt Cambyses attempted the conquest of Kush, i.e. the kingdoms of Napata and Meroe,
located in the modern Sudan. But his army was not able to cross the deserts after heavy losses he
was forced to return. In an inscription from Napata (in the Berlin museum) the Nubian king
Nastesen relates that he had beaten the troops of Kembasuden, i.e. Cambyses, and taken all his
ships (H. Schafer, Die Aethiopische Kِnigsinschrift des Berliner Museums, 1901).
Another expedition against the Siwa Oasis failed likewise, and the plan of attacking Carthage was
frustrated by the refusal of the Phoenicians to operate against their kindred.
Death of Cambyses
Meanwhile in Persia a usurper, the Magian Gaumata, arose in the spring of 522, who pretended to
be the murdered Bardiya (Smerdis) and was acknowledged throughout Asia. Cambyses attempted
to march against him, but, seeing probably that success was impossible, died by his own hand
(March 521). This is the account of Darius, which certainly must be preferred to the traditions of
Herodotus and Ctesias, which ascribe his death to an accident. According to Herodotus (3.64) he
died in the Syrian Ecbatana, i.e. Hamath; Josephus (Antiquites xi. 2. 2) names Damascus; Ctesias,
Babylon, which is absolutely impossible.
According to Herodotus, Cambyses sent an army to threaten the Oracle of Amun at the Siwa Oasis.
The army of 50,000 men was halfway across the desert when a massive sandstorm sprung up,
burying them all. Although many Egyptologists regard the story as a myth, people have searched
for the remains of the soldiers for many years. These have included Count Laszlo de Almasy (on
whom the novel The English Patient was based) and modern geologist Tom Brown. Some believe
Iranian Amazing Collection
that in recent petroleum excavations, the remains may have be uncovered. A 2002 novel by Paul
Sussman The Lost Army Of Cambyses recounts the story of rival archaeological expeditions
searching for the remains.
Darius I - Darius the Great (521-486 BC)
The Stone Tablets of Darius the Great
The Persian Rosetta Stone
Seal of Darius the Great
Iranian Amazing Collection
The empire then reached its greatest extent under Darius I. He led conquering armies into the Indus
River valley and into Thrace in Europe. His invasion of Greece was halted at the Battle of
Marathon.
Darius I, who ascended the throne in 521 BC, 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.'
Darius (Greek form Dareios) is a classicized form of the Old Persian Daraya-Vohumanah,
Darayavahush or Darayavaush, which was the name of three kings of the Achaemenid Dynasty of
Persia: Darius I (the Great), ruled 522-486 BCE, Darius II (Ochos), ruled 423-405/4 BCE, and
Darius III (Kodomannos), ruled 336-330 BCE. In addition to these, the oldest son of Xerxes I was
named Darius, but he was murdered before he ever came to the throne, and Darius, the son of
Artaxerxes II, was executed for treason against his own father.
According to A. T. Olmstead's book History of the Persian Empire, Darius the Great's father
Vishtaspa (Hystaspes) and mother Hutaosa (Atossa) knew the prophet Zarathustra (Zoroaster)
personally and were converted by him to the new religion he preached, Zoroastrianism.
Iranian Amazing Collection
The empire of Darius the Great extended from Egypt in the west to the Indus River in the east. The
major satrapies or provinces of his Empire were connected to the center at Persepolis, in the Fars
Province of present-day Iran. The Royal Road connected 111 stations to each other. Messengers
riding swift horses informed the king within days of turmoil brewing in lands as distant as Egypt
and Sughdiana.
One of the most awe-inspiring monuments of the ancient world, Persepolis was the ceremonial
capital of the Achaemenian empire. It was built during the reign of Darius I, known as Darius the
Great (522-485 BC), and developed further by successive kings. The various temples and
monuments are located upon a vast platform, some 450 metres by 300 metres and 20 metres in
height. At the head of the ceremonial staircase leading to the terrace is the 'Gateway of All Nations'
built by Xerxes I and guarded by two colossal bull-like figures.
Darius was the greatest of all the Persian kings. He extended the empires borders into India and
Europe. He also fought two wars with the Greeks which were disastrous.
Darius established a government which became a model for many future governments:
Iranian Amazing Collection







Established a tax-collection system;
Allowed locals to keep customs and religions;
Divided his empire into districts known as Satrapies;
Built a system of roads still used today;
Established a complex postal system;
Established a network of spies he called the "Eyes and Ears of the King."
Built two new capital cities, one at Susa and one at Persepolis.
The Persian Wars
Iranian Amazing Collection
In the 5th century BC the vast Persian Empire attempted to conquer Greece. If the Persians had
succeeded, they would have set up local tyrants, called 'satraps', to rule Greece and would have
crushed the first stirrings of democracy in Europe. The survival of Greek culture and political ideals
depended on the ability of the small, disunited Greek city-states to band together and defend
themselves against Persia's overwhelming strength. The struggle, known in Western history as the
Persian Wars, or Greco-Persian Wars, lasted 20 years -- from 499 to 479 BC.
Persia already numbered among its conquests the Greek cities of Ionia in Asia Minor, where Greek
civilization first flourished. The Persian Wars began when some of these cities revolted against
Darius I, Persia's king, in 499 BC.
Athens sent 20 ships to aid the Ionians. Before the Persians crushed the revolt, the Greeks burned
Sardis, capital of Lydia. Angered, Darius determined to conquer Athens and extend his empire
westward beyond the Aegean Sea.
Iranian Amazing Collection
In 492 BC Darius gathered together a great military force and sent 600 ships across the Hellespont.
A sudden storm wrecked half his fleet when it was rounding rocky Mount Athos on the
Macedonian coast.
Two years later Darius dispatched a new battle fleet of 600 triremes. This time his powerful galleys
crossed the Aegean Sea without mishap and arrived safely off Attica, the part of Greece that
surrounds the city of Athens.
The Persians landed on the plain of Marathon, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) from Athens. When
the Athenians learned of their arrival, they sent a swift runner, Pheidippides, to ask Sparta for aid,
but the Spartans, who were conducting a religious festival, could not march until the moon was full.
Meanwhile the small Athenian army encamped in the foothills on the edge of the Marathon Plain.
The Athenian general Miltiades ordered his small force to advance. He had arranged his men so as
to have the greatest strength in the wings. As he expected, his center was driven back. The two
wings then united behind the enemy. Thus hemmed in, the Persians' bows and arrows were of little
use. The stout Greek spears spread death and terror. The invaders rushed in panic to their ships. The
Greek historian Herodotus says the Persians lost 6,400 men against only 192 on the Greek side.
Thus ended the battle of Marathon (490 BC), one of the decisive battles of the world.
Darius planned another expedition, but he died before preparations were completed. This gave the
Greeks a ten-year period to prepare for the next battles. Athens built up its naval supremacy in the
Aegean under the guidance of Themistocles.
In 480 BC the Persians returned, led by King Xerxes, the son of Darius. To avoid another
shipwreck off Mount Athos, Xerxes had a canal dug behind the promontory. Across the Hellespont
he had the Phoenicians and Egyptians place two bridges of ships, held together by cables of flax
and papyrus. A storm destroyed the bridges, but Xerxes ordered the workers to replace them. For
seven days and nights his soldiers marched across the bridges.
On the way to Athens, Xerxes found a small force of Greek soldiers holding the narrow pass of
Thermopylae, which guarded the way to central Greece. The force was led by Leonidas, king of
Sparta. Xerxes sent a message ordering the Greeks to deliver their arms. "Come and take them,"
replied Leonidas.
For two days the Greeks' long spears held the pass. Then a Greek traitor told Xerxes of a
roundabout path over the mountains. When Leonidas saw the enemy approaching from the rear, he
dismissed his men except the 300 Spartans, who were bound, like himself, to conquer or die.
Leonidas was one of the first to fall. Around their leader's body the gallant Spartans fought first
with their swords, then with their hands, until they were slain to the last man.
Iranian Amazing Collection
The Persians moved on to Attica and found it deserted. They set fire to Athens with flaming arrows.
Xerxes' fleet held the Athenian ships bottled up between the coast of Attica and the island of
Salamis. His ships outnumbered the Greek ships three to one. The Persians had expected an easy
victory, but one after another their ships were sunk or crippled.
Crowded into the narrow strait, the heavy Persian vessels moved with difficulty. The lighter Greek
ships rowed out from a circular formation and rammed their prows into the clumsy enemy vessels.
Two hundred Persian ships were sunk, others were captured, and the rest fled. Xerxes and his forces
hastened back to Persia.
Soon after, the rest of the Persian army was scattered at Plataea (479 BC). In the same year Xerxes'
fleet was defeated at Mycale. Although a treaty was not signed until 30 years later, the threat of
Persian domination was ended.
Darius was killed in a coup led by other family members. At the time, he was preparing a new
expedition against the Greeks. His son and successor, Xerxes I, attempted to fulfill his plan.
Enthroned in Peresepolis, the magnificent city that he built, Darius I firmly grasps the royal scepter
in his right hand. In the left, he is holding a lotus blossom with two buds, the symbol of royalty.
Iranian Amazing Collection
Tomb of Darius
Iranian Amazing Collection
Xerxes
Xerxes was king of Persia from 486-465 BCE. His real name was Ahasuerus.
'Xerxes' is the Greek transliteration of the Persian throne name 'Khshayarsha' or 'Khsha-yar-shan',
meaning 'ruler of heroes'. In the Hebrew Bible, the Persian king Ahasuerus in Greek probably
corresponds to Xerxes I.
Xerxes I The Great, was the son of Darius I The Great and Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus the Great.
He was appointed successor to his father in preference to his eldest half-brother, who were born
before Darius had become king.
After his accession in October 485 BC he suppressed the revolt in Egypt which had broken out in
486 BC, appointed his brother Achaemenes as henchman (or khshathrapavan, satrap) bringing
Egypt under a very strict rule.
His predecessors, especially Darius, had not been successful in their attempts to conciliate the
ancient civilizations. This probably was the reason why Xerxes in 484 BC abolished the Kingdom
of Babel and took away the golden statue of Bel (Marduk, Merodach), the hands of which the
legitimate king of Babel had to seize on the first day of each year, and killed the priest who tried to
hinder him.
Iranian Amazing Collection
Therefore Xerxes does not bear the title of King of Babel in the Babylonian documents dated from
his reign, but King of Persia and Media or simply King of countries (i.e. of the world). This
proceeding led to two rebellions, probably in 484 BC and 479 BC.
Darius had left to his son the task of punishing the Greeks for their interference in the Ionian
rebellion and the victory of Marathon. From 483 Xerxes prepared his expedition with great care: a
channel was dug through the isthmus of the peninsula of Mount Athos; provisions were stored in
the stations on the road through Thrace; two bridges were thrown across the Hellespont.
Xerxes concluded an alliance with Carthage, and thus deprived Greece of the support of the
powerful monarchs of Syracuse and Agrigentum. Many smaller Greek states, moreover, took the
side of the Persians, especially Thessaly, Thebes and Argos.
A large fleet and a numerous army (some have claimed that there were over 2,000,000) were
gathered. In the spring of 480 Xerxes set out from Sardis. At first Xerxes was victorious
everywhere. The Greek fleet was beaten at Artemisium, Thermopylae stormed, Athens conquered,
the Greeks driven back to their last line of defence at the Isthmus of Corinth and in the Saronic
Gulf.
But Xerxes was induced by the astute message of Themistocles (against the advice of Artemisia of
Halicarnassus) to attack the Greek fleet under unfavourable conditions, instead of sending a part of
his ships to the Peloponnesus and awaiting the dissolution of the Greek armament.
The Battle of Salamis (September 28, 480) decided the war. Having lost his communication by sea
with Asia, Xerxes was forced to retire to Sardis; the army which he left in Greece under Mardonius
was in 479 beaten at Plataea. The defeat of the Persians at Mycale roused the Greek cities of Asia.
Of the later years of Xerxes little is known. He sent out Satapes to attempt the circumnavigation of
Africa, but the victory of the Greeks threw the empire into a state of slow apathy, from which it
could not rise again. The king himself became involved in intrigues of the harem and was much
dependent upon courtiers and eunuchs. He left inscriptions at Persepolis, where he added a new
palace to that of Darius, at Van in Armenia, and on Mount Elvend near Ecbatana. In these texts he
merely copies the words of his father. In 465 he was murdered by his vizier Artabanus who raised
Artaxerxes I to the throne.
In the Bible, in the Book of Ezra, Xerxes I is mentioned by the name 'Ashverosh' (Ahasuerus in
Greek). It is noted that, during his reign, as in the reign of his predecessor Darius and his successor
Artaxerxes, the Samaritans wrote to the Persian king full of accusations against the Jews.Ahasuerus
also appears as the King in the Book of Esther, and is traditionally identified with Xerxes.
Iranian Amazing Collection
In the story told in this Biblical book, Ahasuerus dismisses his Queen consort Vashti and then
chooses the Jewess Esther as his queen. The king's minister Haman, feeling insulted by Esther's
cousin Mordecai, convinces Ahasuerus to decree the destruction of all the Jews in the Persian
Empire, but Mordecai and Esther manage to reverse their fate through their influence with the King.
Neither Vashti nor Esther are known from other sources. According to Herodotus, the Queen
consort of Xerxes was actually Amestris, daughter to Otanes. Most historians consider the 'Book of
Esther' to be a historical fiction, and assume that the events depicted therein did not actually occur.
Artaxerxes continued building work at Persepolis. It was completed during the reign of Artaxerxes
III, around 338 BC. In 334 BC, Alexander the Great defeated the Persian armies of the third Darius.
He marched into Iran and, once there, he turned his attention to Persepolis, and that magnificent
complex of buildings was burnt down. This act of destruction for revenge of the Acropolis, was
surprising from one who prided himself on being a pupil of Aristotle. This was the end of the
Persian Empire.
Xerxes's Hall of the 100 Columns is the most impressive building in the complex. It is also the most
crowded--a jumble of fallen columns, column heads, and column bases.
The Gate of Xerxes at Perespolis shows that the Winged Lion was placed at the corner of one
entrance. When you stood in front of the gate you saw a lion with four legs and when you were
inside the gate you also saw a lion with four legs.
Iranian Amazing Collection
Iranian Amazing Collection
www.irane7000saale.com
Iranian Amazing Collection