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Cyrus Cylinder,
The First Charter of Human Rights |
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y 546 B.C., Cyrus had
defeated Croesus, the Lydian king of fabled wealth, and had
secured control of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor, Armenia, and
the Greek colonies along the Levant. Moving east, he took
Parthia (land of the Arsacids, not to be confused with Parsa,
which was to the southwest), Chorasmis, and Bactria. He besieged
and captured Babylon in 539 and released the Jews who had been
held captive there, thus earning his immortalization in the Book
of Isaiah. When he died in 529, Cyrus's kingdom extended as far
east as the Hindu Kush in present-day Afghanistan.
His successors were less successful. Cyrus's unstable son,
Cambyses II, conquered Egypt but later he died in July, 522
B.C., as the result of either an accident or suicide during a
revolt led by a priest, Gaumata, who usurped the throne by
pretending to be Bardiya (Cambyses' brother, who had been
assassinated secretly before Cambyses started out for his
Egyptian campaign in 525 B.C.) until overthrown in 522 by a
member of a lateral branch of the Achaemenid family,
Darius I (also known as Darayarahush or Darius the
Great). Darius attacked the Greek mainland, which had supported
rebellious Greek colonies under his aegis, but as a result of
his defeat at the Battle of Marathon in 490 was forced to
retract the limits of the empire to Asia Minor.
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The Achaemenids thereafter consolidated areas firmly under their
control. It was Cyrus and Darius who, by sound and farsighted
administrative planning, brilliant military maneuvering, and a
humanistic worldview, established the greatness of the
Achaemenids and in less than thirty years raised them from an
obscure tribe to a world power.

The Perspolis, Capital of Achaemenid
Empire
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Pasargad, Tomb of Cyrus the Great
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The quality of the Achaemenids as rulers began to disintegrate,
however, after the death of Darius in 486. His son and
successor, Xerxes, was chiefly occupied with suppressing revolts
in Egypt and Babylonia. He also attempted to conquer the Greek
Peloponnesus, but encouraged by a victory at Thermopylae, he
overextended his forces and suffered overwhelming defeats at
Salamis and Plataea. By the time his successor, Artaxerxes I,
died in 424, the imperial court was beset by factionalism among
the lateral family branches, a condition that persisted until
the death in 330 of the last of the Achaemenids, Darius III, at
the hands of his own subjects.
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A relief of Persian soldier on the walls
of Perspolis, the capital of the Achaemenid Empire |
The Achaemenids were enlightened despots who allowed a
certain amount of regional autonomy in the form of the satrapy
system. A satrapy was an administrative unit, usually organized
on a geographical basis. A satrap (governor) administered the
region, a general supervised military recruitment and ensured
order, and a state secretary kept official records. The general
and the state secretary reported directly to the central
government. The twenty satrapies were linked by a
2,500-kilometer highway, the most impressive stretch being the
royal road from Susa to Sardis, built by command of Darius.
Relays of mounted couriers could reach the most remote areas in
fifteen days. Despite the relative local independence afforded
by the satrapy system however, royal inspectors, the "eyes and
ears of the king," toured the empire and reported on local
conditions, and the king maintained a personal bodyguard of
10,000 men, called the Immortals.
The language in greatest use in the empire was Aramaic. Old
Persian was the "official language" of the empire but was used
only for inscriptions and royal proclamations.
Darius revolutionized the economy by placing it on a silver and
gold coinage system. Trade was extensive, and under the
Achaemenids there was an efficient infrastructure that
facilitated the exchange of commodities among the far reaches of
the empire. As a result of this commercial activity, Persian
words for typical items of trade became prevalent throughout the
Middle East and eventually entered the English language;
examples are, bazaar, shawl, sash, turquoise, tiara, orange,
lemon, melon, peach, spinach, and asparagus. Trade was one of
the empire's main sources of revenue, along with agriculture and
tribute. Other accomplishments of Darius's reign included
codification of the data, a universal legal system upon which
much of later Iranian law would be based, and construction of a
new capital at Persepolis, where vassal states would offer their
yearly tribute at the festival celebrating the spring equinox.
In its art and architecture, Persepolis reflected Darius's
perception of himself as the leader of conglomerates of people
to whom he had given a new and single identity. The Achaemenid
art and architecture found there is at once distinctive and also
highly eclectic. The Achaemenids took the art forms and the
cultural and religious traditions of many of the ancient Middle
Eastern peoples and combined them into a single form. This
Achaemenid artistic style is evident in the iconography of
Persepolis, which celebrates the king and the office of the
monarch.
Achaemenian Kings:
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Achaemenes
Teispes
Cyrus I
Cambyses I
Cyrus II, The Great

Cambyses II
Smerdis, (the Magian)
Darius I, The Great

Xerxes I
Artaxerxes I
Xerxes II
Darius II
Artaxerxes II
Artaxerxes III
Arses
Darius III
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550 - 529 B.C.
529 - 522 B.C.
522 B.C.
522 - 486 B.C.
486 - 465 B.C.
465 - 425 B.C.
425 - 424 B.C.
424 - 405 B.C.
405 - 359 B.C.
359 - 338 B.C.
338 - 336 B.C.
336 - 330 B.C.
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