Chapter 7:

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Chapter 7:. The Empires of Persia. The Persian Empire. Persian Empires. Contemporary Iran Four major dynasties Achaemenids (558-330 BC) Seleucids (323-283 BC) Parthians (247 B.C.-224 AD) Sasanids (224-651 AD). Achaemenid Empire (558-330 B.C.). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 7:

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The Persian Empire

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Persian Empires

• Contemporary Iran• Four major dynasties

– Achaemenids (558-330 BC)– Seleucids (323-283 BC)– Parthians (247 B.C.-224 AD)– Sasanids (224-651 AD)

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Achaemenid Empire (558-330 B.C.)

• Migration of Medes and Persians from Central Asia, before 1000 BC– Indo-Europeans

• Capitalized on weakening Assyrian and Babylonian empires

• Cyrus (r. 558-530 BC) founder of dynasty– “Cyrus the Shepherd”

• Peak under Darius (r. 521-486 BC)– Ruled Indus to the Aegean– Capital Persepolis

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Cyrus the Great

580 – 529 B.C.

A tolerant ruler he allowed different cultures within his empire to keep their own institutions. The Greeks called him a “Law-Giver.” The Jews called him “the anointed of the Lord.” (In 537, he allowed over 40,000 to return to Palestine).

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Tomb of Cyrus the Great

Iranian artists rendition of Cyrus

the Great

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The Cyrus Cylinder, sometimes described as the

"first charter of human rights"

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Darius I (the Great)

As portrayed on a Greek vase

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Darius the Great (526 – 485 B.C.)

Built Persepolis. He extended the Persian Empire to the Indus River in northern India. (2 mil. sq. mi.) Built a canal in Egypt.

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Persepolis

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Persepolis

Gate of Xerxes at Persepolis

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Persepolis

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Persepolis

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Ancient Persepolis

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Persepolis

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The People of Persepolis

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Persian Archers & Soldiers

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Darius the Great (526 – 485 B.C.) Established a tax-collecting

system. Divided the empire into districts called SATRAPIES. Built the great Royal Road system. Established a complex postal system. Created a network of spies called “the King’s eyes and ears.”

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Achaemenid Administration: The Satrapies

• 23 Administrative divisions• Satraps Persian, but staff principally local• System of spies, surprise audits

– Minimized possibilities of local rebellion• Standardized currency for taxation

purposes• Massive road building, courier serviADs

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Technologies

• Qanat: System of underground canals– Avoided excessive loss to evaporation– System began in Persia but spread

throughout the world• Extensive road-building

– Persian Royal Road• 1,600 miles, some of it paved

– Courier service

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Qanat System

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Qanat System

By 400 B.C. Persian engineers had already mastered the technique of storing ice in the middle of summer in the desert in naturally cooled

refrigerators called yakhchal (meaning ice pits) which were connected to qanats..

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Qanat System

Wind tower and qanat used for cooling.

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Persian “Royal Road”

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Decline of the Achaemenid Empire

• Policy of toleration under Cyrus, Darius– Rebuilding of Temple in Jerusalem

• Xerxes (486-465 BC) attempts to impose Persian stamp on satrapies

• Increasing public discontent– revolts begin with Ionian Greeks leading to

the Persian Wars

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Xerxes I

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Persian Wars (500-479 B.C.)• Rebellious Greeks in Ionia• Peninsular Greeks join in• Persians defeated at Marathon (490 B.C.),

retreated, ending the first phase of the Persian Wars

• Upon the death of Darius, his son Xerxes I assembled one of the largest militaries ever to invade Greece again in 480 B.C.

• In 479 B.C. at the Battle of Plataea, the Persians were defeated for the final time in Greece.

• Further Greek revolts took place of the next 25 years.

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Seleucid Empire• Alexander the Great conquers the

Achaemenid Empire (334-331 B.C.) at the Battle of Guagemala

• Alexander burns Persepolis to the ground• Alexander the Great dies suddenly • Generals divide empire, best part goes to

Seleucus (r. 305-281 B.C.)• Attacked by rebellion in India, invasion of

Parthians

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The Achaemenid and Selucid Empires, 558-83 B.C.

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Parthian Empire

• Seminomadic Parthians drive Seleucus out of Iran

• Federated governmental structure• Especially strong cavalry

– Alfalfa fed horses grew larger than steppe ponies and enabled heavy armor

• Weakened by ongoing wars with Romans• Fell to internal rebellion of feuding satraps

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Sasanid Empire (224-651 AD)

• Claimed desADnt from Achaemenids• Continual conflicts with Rome, Byzantium

in the west, Kush in the east• Overwhelmed by Arab conquest in 651• Persian administration and culture

absorbed into local Islamic culture

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The Parthian and Sasanid Empires, 247 B.C.-651 AD

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Persian Society

• Early steppe traditions– Warriors, priests, peasants– Family/clan kinship very important

• Creation of bureaucrat class with empire– Tax collectors– Record keepers– Translators

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Slave Class

• Largest slave class of any society at that point in history

• Prisoners of war, conquered populations• Debtors• Children, spouses also sold into slavery• Principally domestic servitude

– Some agricultural labor, public works

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Persian Economy

• Several areas exceptionally fertile• Long-distance trade benefits from Persian

road-building• Goods from India especially valued• Each region provided a variety of finished

and raw goods• Coined money from the Lydians

reinforADd economy

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Zoroastrianism

• Early Aryan influences on Persian religious traditions

• Zarathustra (late 7th-early 6th c. B.C.)• Prophet of Ahura Mazda, against Angra

Mainu • Priests of Zarathustra known as Magi• Oral teachings until Sasanid period

composed Gathas

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Zarathustra [Zoroaster], 6c B.C.:

Good Thoughts, Good Deeds, Good Words

“Tree of Life”

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Dualistic Battle of Good vs. Evil

Ahura Mazda“Holy Spirit”

Ahriman“Destructive

Spirit”

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Zend-Avesta(The “Book of Law”)

The “Sacred Fire” the force to fight evil.

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Fortunes of Zoroastrianism

• Under Alexander: Massacre of Magi, burning Zoroastrian temples

• Weak Parthian support• Major revival under Sasanids, persecution

of non-Zoroastrians• Discrimination under Islam

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Extent of Zoroastrianism

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Zoroastrianism

Faravahar, or Guardian Spirit: The depiction of the human soul before birth and after death.

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Other Religious Groups in the Persian Empire

• Judaism, Christianity & Islam later influenced by Zoroastrianism– Omnipotent God responsible for creation of all– Dualism– Good will prevail over evil– Humans must strive for good, followed by judgment: reward

or punishment• Major Mesopotamian communities of Jews• Composition of the Talmud, c. 500 AD– “constitution of Judaism”

• Buddhism, Christianity and Manichaeism also survived