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Achaemenian
DYNASTY, also called ACHAEMENID, Persian HAKHAMANISHIYA (550-330 BC),
ancient Iranian dynasty whose kings founded and ruled the Achaemenian
Empire. Achaemenes (Persian Hakhamanish), the Achaemenians' eponymous
ancestor, is presumed to have lived early in the 7th century BC, but little
is known of his life. From his son Teispes two lines of kings descended.
The kings of the older line were Cyrus I, Cambyses I, Cyrus II the Great,
and Cambyses II. After the death of Cambyses II (522 BC) the junior line
came to the throne with Darius I. The dynasty became extinct with the
death of Darius III, following his defeat (330 BC) by Alexander the Great.
Probably the greatest of the Achaemenian rulers were Cyrus II (reigned
559-c. 529 BC), who actually established the empire and from whose reign
it is dated; Darius I (522-486), who excelled as an administrator and
secured the borders from external threats; and Xerxes I (486-465), who
completed many of the buildings begun by Darius. During the time of Darius
I and Xerxes I, the empire extended as far west as Macedonia and Libya
and as far east as the Hyphasis (Beas) River; it stretched to the Caucasus
Mountains and the Aral Sea in the north and to the Persian Gulf and the
Arabian Desert in the south.
The Achaemenian rule of conquered peoples was generally liberal; the empire
itself was divided into provinces (satrapies), each administered by a
satrap who underwent frequent inspections by officials reporting directly
to the king. Royal inscriptions were usually trilingual, in Old Persian,
Elamite, and Akkadian; Aramaic, however, was employed for imperial administration
and diplomatic correspondence. Building activity was extensive during
the height of the empire, and of the several Achaemenian capitals, the
ruins at Pasargadae and at Persepolis (qq.v.) are probably the most outstanding.
Achaemenian sculptured reliefs and a great number of smaller art objects
present a remarkably unified style for the period. Metalwork, especially
in gold, was highly developed, and a variety of carefully executed examples
survive. The rise of the Persians under Cyrus II. The ruling dynasty of
the Persians settled in Fars in southwestern Iran (possibly the Parsumash
of the later Assyrian records) traced its ancestry back to an eponymous
ancestor, Haxamanish, or Achaemenes. There is no historical evidence of
such a king's existence. Traditionally, three rulers fall between Achaemenes
and Cyrus II: Teispes, Cyrus I, and Cambyses I. Teispes, freed of Median
domination during the so-called Scythian interregnum, is thought to have
expanded his kingdom and to have divided it on his death between his two
sons, Cyrus I and Ariaramnes. Cyrus I may have been the king of Persia
who appears in the records of Ashurbanipal swearing allegiance to Assyria
after the devastation of Elam in the campaigns of 642-639 BC, though there
are chronological problems involved with this equation. When Median control
over the Persians was supposedly reasserted under Cyaxares, Cambyses I
is thought to have been given a reunited Persia to administer as a Median
vassal. His son, Cyrus II, married the daughter of Astyages and in 559
BC inherited his father's position within the Median confederation. Cyrus
II certainly warranted his later title, Cyrus the Great. He must have
been a remarkable personality, and certainly he was a remarkable king.
He united under his authority several Persian and Iranian groups who apparently
had not been under his father's control. He then initiated diplomatic
exchanges with Nabonidus of Babylon (556-539 BC), which justifiably worried
Astyages. Eventually, he openly rebelled against the Medes, who were beaten
in battle when considerable numbers of Median troops deserted to the Persian
standard.
Thus, in 550 BC, the Median Empire became the first Persian Empire, and
the Achaemenid kings appeared on the international scene with a suddenness
that must have frightened many. Cyrus immediately set out to expand his
conquests. After apparently convincing the Babylonians that they had nothing
to fear from Persia, he turned against the Lydians under the rule of the
fabulously wealthy Croesus. Lydian appeals to Babylon were to no avail.
He then took Cilicia, thus cutting the routes over which any help might
have reached the Lydians. Croesus attacked and an indecisive battle was
fought in 547 BC on the Halys River. Since it was late in the campaigning
season, the Lydians thought the war was over for that year, returned to
their capital at Sardis, and dispersed the national levy. Cyrus, however,
kept coming. He caught and besieged the Lydians in the citadel at Sardis
and captured Croesus in 546 BC. Of the Greek city-states along the western
coast of Asia Minor, heretofore under Lydian control, only Miletus surrendered
without a fight. The others were systematically reduced by the Persian
armies led by subordinate generals. Cyrus himself was apparently busy
elsewhere, possibly in the east, for little is known of his activities
between the capture of Sardis and the beginning of the Babylonian campaign
in 540 BC. Nowhere did Cyrus display his political and military genius
better than in the conquest of Babylon. The campaign actually began when
he lulled the Babylonians into inactivity during his war with Lydia, which,
since it was carried to a successful conclusion, deprived the Babylonians
of a potential ally when their turn came. Then he took maximum advantage
of internal disaffection and discontent within Babylon. Nabonidus was
not a popular king. He had paid too little attention to home affairs and
had alienated the native Babylonian priesthood. Second Isaiah, speaking
for many of the captive Jews in Babylon, was undoubtedly not the only
one of Nabonidus' subjects who looked to Cyrus as a potential deliverer.
With the stage thus set, the military campaign against Babylon came almost
as an anticlimax. The fall of the greatest city in the Middle East was
swift; Cyrus marched into town in the late summer of 539 BC, seized the
hands of the statue of the city god Marduk as a signal of his willingness
to rule as a Babylonian and not as a foreign conquerer, and was hailed
by many as the legitimate successor to the throne. In one stride Cyrus
carried Persian power to the borders of Egypt, for with Babylon came all
that it had seized from the Assyrians and had gained in the sequel. Little
is known of the remainder of Cyrus' reign. The rapidity with which his
son and successor, Cambyses II, initiated a successful campaign against
Egypt suggests that preparations for such an attack were well advanced
under Cyrus. But the founder of Persian power was forced to turn east
late in his reign to protect that frontier against warlike tribes who
were themselves in part Iranians and who threatened the plateau in the
same manner as had the Medes and the Persians more than a millennium earlier.
One of the recurrent themes of Iranian history is the threat of peoples
from the east. How much Cyrus conquered in the east is uncertain. What
is clear is that he lost his life in 529 BC, fighting somewhere in the
region of the Oxus and Jaxartes rivers. The Achaemenid dynasty. Cambyses.
On the death of Cyrus the Great the empire passed to his son, Cambyses
II (529-522 BC). There may have been some degree of unrest throughout
the empire at the time of Cyrus' death, for Cambyses apparently felt it
necessary secretly to kill his brother, Bardiya (Smerdis), in order to
protect his rear while leading the campaign against Egypt in 525 BC. The
pharaoh Ahmose II of the 26th dynasty sought to shore up his defenses
by hiring Greek mercenaries, but was betrayed by the Greeks. Cambyses
successfully managed the crossing of the hostile Sinai Desert, traditionally
Egypt's first and strongest line of defense, and brought the Egyptians
under Psamtik III, son and successor of Ahmose, to battle at Pelusium.
The Egyptians lost and retired to Memphis; the city fell to the Persians
and the Pharaoh was carried off in captivity to Susa. Three subsidiary
campaigns were then mounted, all of which are reported as failures: one
against Carthage, but the Phoenician sailors, who were the backbone of
the Persian navy, declined to sail against their own colony; one against
the oasis of Amon (in the Egyptian desert west of the Nile), which, according
to Herodotus, was defeated by a massive sandstorm; and one led by Cambyses
himself to Nubia. This latter effort was partly successful, but the army
suffered badly from a lack of proper provisions on the return march. Egypt
was then garrisoned at three major points: Daphnae in the east delta,
Memphis, and Elephantine, where Jewish mercenaries formed the main body
of troops. In 522 BC news reached Cambyses of a revolt in Iran led by
an impostor claiming to be Bardiya, Cambyses' brother. Several provinces
of the empire accepted the new ruler, who bribed his subjects with a remission
of taxes for three years. Hastening home to regain control, Cambyses died--possibly
by his own hand, more probably from infection following an accidental
sword wound. Darius, a leading general in Cambyses' army and one of the
princes of the Achaemenid family, raced homeward with the troops in order
to crush the rebellion in a manner profitable to himself. Cambyses has
been rather mistreated in the sources, thanks partly to the prejudices
of Herodotus' Egyptian informers and partly to the propaganda motives
of Darius I. Cambyses is reported to have ruled the Egyptians harshly
and to have desecrated their religious ceremonies and shrines. His military
campaigns out of Egypt were all reported as failures. He was accused of
suicide in the face of revolt at home. It was even suggested that he was
mad. There is, however, little solid contemporary evidence to support
these charges. Darius I. Darius I, called the Great, tells the story of
the overthrow of Bardiya and of the first year of his own rule in detail
in his famous royal inscription cut on a rock face at the base of Bisitun
mountain, a few miles east of modern Bakhtaran. Six leading Achaemenid
nobles assisted in slaying the false Bardiya and together proclaimed Darius
the rightful heir of Cambyses. Darius was a member of the Achaemenid royal
house. His great-grandfather had been Ariaramnes, son of Teispes, who
had shared power in Persia with his brother Cyrus I.
Ariaramnes' son, Arsames, and his grandson, Hystaspes (Darius' father),
had not been kings in Persia, as unified royal power had been placed in
the hands of Cambyses I by Cyaxares. Neither is named a king in Darius'
own inscriptions. Hystaspes was, however, an important prince of the blood,
who at the time of revolt of the false Bardiya had apparently been the
governor of Parthia. Darius himself was in the mold of Cyrus the Great--a
powerful personality and a dynamic ruler. It took more than a year (522-521
BC) of hard fighting to put down revolts associated with Bardiya's claim
to the throne and Darius' succession to power. Almost every province of
the empire was involved in the conflict, including Persia and, most particularly,
Media. A balanced policy of clemency backed by the swift and thorough
punishment of any captured rebel leader, in combination with a well-coordinated
and carefully timed distribution of loyal forces, eventually brought peace
to the empire and undisputed power to Darius. He then turned his attention
to the organization and consolidation of his inheritance, and it was for
this role--that of lawgiver and organizer--that he himself, to judge from
his inscriptions, most wished to be remembered. Such activities, however,
did not prevent Darius from following an active expansionist policy. Campaigns
to the east confirmed gains probably made by Cyrus the Great and added
large sections of the northern Indian subcontinent to the list of Persian-controlled
provinces. Expansion in the west began about 516 BC when Darius moved
against the Hellespont as a first step toward an attack on the Scythians
along the western and northern shores of the Black Sea. The real strategic
purpose behind this move probably was to disrupt and if possible to interrupt
Greek trade with the Black Sea area, which supplied much grain to Greece.
Crossing into Europe for the first time, Darius campaigned with comparatively
little success to the north of the Danube. He retreated in good order,
however, with only limited losses, and a bridgehead across the Hellespont
was established. Perhaps in part in response to these developments, perhaps
for more purely internal reasons, the Ionian Greek cities on the west
coast of Asia Minor revolted against Persian rule in 500 BC. The Persians
were apparently taken by surprise, and at first the rebellion prospered.
The Ionians received some limited assistance from the Athenians and in
498 BC felt strong enough to take the offensive. With one hand Darius
negotiated; with the other he assembled a counterattack. The first Persian
military efforts proved only partially successful, however, and the Ionians
enjoyed another respite in the years 496-495 BC. A renewed Persian offensive
in 494 BC was successful. The Greek fleet was badly beaten off Miletus,
and the Persian land army began a systematic reduction of the rebel cities.
About 492 BC Mardonius, a son-in-law of Darius, was made special commissioner
to Ionia. He suppressed local tyrants and returned democratic government
to many cities. In time the wounds caused by the revolt and its suppression
healed, and by 481 BC Xerxes was able to levy troops in this region with
little trouble. By 492 BC Mardonius had also recovered Persian Thrace
and Macedonia, first gained in the campaign against the Scythians and
lost during the Ionian Revolt. There followed the Persian invasion of
Greece that led to Darius' defeat at the Battle of Marathon late in the
summer of 490 BC. The "Great King" was forced to retreat and to face the
fact that the Greek problem, which had probably seemed to the Persians
a minor issue on the western extremity of the empire, would require a
more concerted and massive effort. Thus began preparations for an invasion
of Greece on a grand, coordinated scale. These plans were interrupted
in 486 BC by two events: a serious revolt in Egypt, and the death of Darius.
Xerxes I. Xerxes (486-465 BC), Darius' eldest son by Queen Atossa, was
born after his father had come to the throne; he had been designated official
heir perhaps as early as 498 BC, and while crown prince he had ruled as
the King's governor in Babylon. The new king quickly suppressed the revolt
in Egypt in a single campaign in 485 BC. Xerxes then broke with the policy
followed by Cyrus and Darius of ruling foreign lands with a fairly light
hand and, in a manner compatible with local traditions, ruthlessly ignored
Egyptian forms of rule and imposed his will on the rebellious province
in a thoroughly Persian style. Plans for the invasion of Greece begun
under Darius were then still further delayed by a major revolt in Babylonia
about 482 BC, which also was suppressed with a heavy hand. Xerxes then
turned his attention westward to Greece. He wintered in Sardis in 481-480
BC and thence led a combined land and sea invasion of Greece. Northern
Greece fell to the invaders in the summer of 480, the Greek stand at Thermopylae
in August of 480 came to nought, and the Persian land forces marched on
Athens, taking and burning the Acropolis. But the Persian fleet lost the
Battle of Salamis, and the impetus of the invasion was blunted. Xerxes,
who had by then been away from Asia rather long for a king with such widespread
responsibilities, returned home and left Mardonius in charge of further
operations. The real end of the invasion came with the Battle of Plataea,
the fall of Thebes (a stronghold of pro-Persian forces), and the Persian
naval loss at Mycale in 479 BC. Of the three, the Persian loss at Plataea
was perhaps the most decisive. Up until Mardonius was killed, the issue
of the battle was probably still in doubt, but, once leaderless, the less
organized and less disciplined Persian forces collapsed. Time and again
in later years this was to be the pattern in such encounters, for the
Persians neversolved the military problem posed by the disciplined Greek
hoplites. The formation of the Delian League, the rise of Athenian imperialism,
troubles on the west coast of Asia Minor, and the end of Persian military
ambitions in the Aegean followed rapidly in the decade after Plataea.
Xerxes probably lost interest in the proceedings and sank deeper and deeper
into the comforts of life in his capital cities of Susa, Ecbatana, and
Persepolis. Harem intrigues, which were steadily to sap the strength and
vitality of the Achaemenid Empire, led to the assassination of the Great
King in 465 BC. Artaxerxes I to Darius III. The death of Xerxes was a
major turning point in Achaemenid history. Occasional flashes of vigour
and intelligence by some of Xerxes' successors were too infrequent to
prevent eventual collapse but did allow the empire to die gradually. It
is a tribute to Cyrus, Cambyses, and Darius that the empire they constructed
was as resilient as it proved to be after Xerxes. The three kings that
followed Xerxes on the throne-- Artaxerxes I (465-425 BC), Xerxes II (425-424
BC), and Darius II Ochus (423-404 BC)--were all comparatively weak individuals
and kings, and such successes as the empire enjoyed during their reigns
were mainly the result of the efforts of subordinates or of the troubles
faced by their adversaries. Artaxerxes I faced several rebellions, the
most important of which was that of Egypt in 459 BC, not fully suppressed
until 454 BC. An advantageous peace (the Peace of Callias) with Athens
was signed in 448 BC, whereby the Persians agreed to stay out of the Aegean
and the Athenians agreed to leave Asia Minor to the Achaemenids. Athens
broke the peace in 439 BC in an attack on Samos, and in its aftermath
the Persians made some military gains in the west. Xerxes II ruled only
about 45 days and was killed in a drunken stupor by the son of one of
his father's concubines. The assassin was himself killed by Darius II,
who rose to the throne through palace intrigue. Several revolts marred
his reign, including one in Media, which was rather close to home. The
major event of these three reigns was the Peloponnesian War between Sparta
and Athens that lasted, with occasional pauses, from 460 to 404 BC. The
situation was ripe for exploitation by the famous "Persian archers," the
gold coins of the Achaemenids that depicted an archer on their obverse
and that were used with considerable skill by the Persians in bribing
first one Greek state and then another. Initially, the Persians encouraged
Athens against Sparta and from this gained the treaty of Callias. Then,
after the disastrous Athenian campaign against Sicily in 413 BC, the Persians
intervened on Sparta's side. By the treaty of Miletus in 412 BC, Iran
recovered complete freedom in western Asia Minor in return for agreeing
to pay for seamen to man the Peloponnesian fleet. Persian gold and Spartan
soldiers brought about Athens' fall in 404 BC. Despite the fact that the
Persians played the two sides against each other to much advantage, they
should have done better. One observes a certain lack of control from Susa
by the king in these proceedings, and the two principal governors in Asia
Minor who were involved, Tissaphernes of Sardis and Pharnabazus of Hellespontine
Phrygia, seemed to have permitted a personal power rivalry to stand in
the way of a really coordinated Persian intervention in the Greek war.
Artaxerxes II came to the throne in 404 BC and reigned until 359 BC. The
main events of his long rule were the war with Sparta that ended with
a peace favourable to the Persians; the revolt and loss to the empire
of Egypt; the rebellion of Cyrus the Younger, brother of the king; and
the uprising known as the revolt of the satraps. Sparta, triumphant over
Athens, built a small empire of its own and was soon involved in a war
against the Persians, the principal issue again being the Greek cities
of Asia Minor. While Sparta played one Persian governor in Anatolia against
the other, the Persians spent gold in Greece to raise rebellion on Sparta's
home ground. The Persians rebuilt their fleet and placed a competent Athenian
admiral, Conon, in command. The contest continued from 400 to 387, with
Sparta forced to act on an ever-shrinking front. A revitalized Athens,
supported by Persia, created a balance of power in Greece, and eventually
Artaxerxes was able to step in, at Greek request, and dictate the so-called
King's Peace of 387-6 BC. Once again the Greeks gave up any claim to Asia
Minor and further agreed to maintain the status quo in Greece itself.
When Egypt revolted in 405 BC, Persia was unable to do much about it,
and from this point forward Egypt remained essentially an independent
state. Cyrus the Younger, though caught in an assassination attempt at
the time of Artaxerxes' coronation, was, nevertheless, forgiven, thanks
to the pleadings of the Queen Mother, and was returned to the command
of a province in Asia Minor. But he revolted again in 401 BC and, supported
by 10,000 Greek mercenaries, marched eastward to contest the throne. He
was defeated and killed at the Battle of Cunaxa in Mesopotamia in the
summer of 401. The Greek mercenaries, however, were not broken and, though
harried, left the field in good order and began their famous march, recorded
in the Anabasis of Xenophon, north to the Black Sea and home. Probably
no other event in late Achaemenid history revealed more clearly to the
Greeks the essential internal weakness of the Achaemenid Empire than the
escape of so large a body of men from the very heart of the Great King's
domain. Since 379 BC Greek mercenaries had been gathered together in order
to mount a campaign against Egypt. An attack in 373 failed against the
native 30th dynasty. On the heels of this failure came the revolt of the
satraps. Several satraps, or provincial governors, rose against the central
power, and one, Aroandas, a late satrap of Armenia, went so far as to
stamp his own gold coinage as a direct challenge to Artaxerxes. The general
plan of the rebels appears to have been for a combined attack. The rebel
satraps were to coordinate their march eastward through Syria with an
Egyptian attack, under the pharaoh Tachos (Zedhor), supported by Greek
mercenaries. The Egyptian attack was called off because of a revolt in
Egypt by Tachos' brother, and Artaxerxes managed to defeat the satraps
who were left alone to face the Great King's wrath. How different would
have been the wrath of Darius! Several of the satraps, including Aroandas,
were actually forgiven and returned to their governorships. In general
the impression is that, in the end, rather than fight the central authority,
the satraps were willing to return to their own provinces and plunder
there in the name of the Great King. Perhaps they saw that they actually
had more authority and more control over real events in their own provincial
territories than Artaxerxes had in his empire. Plot and counterplot, harem
intrigue, and murder brought Artaxerxes III to the throne in 359 BC. He
promptly exterminated many of his relatives who might have challenged
his rule--all to no avail, for revolts continued to rock the empire. A
fresh attempt to win back Egypt was thrown back in 351-350. This setback
encouraged revolt in Sidon and eventually in all of Palestine and Phoenicia.
Parts of Cilicia joined the rebellion but the revolt was crushed the same
year it had begun, 345 BC. Peace was achieved only temporarily; mercenaries
from Thebes and the Argives, as well as from the Greek cities of Asia
Minor, gathered for a new attempt on Egypt, which, led by Artaxerxes III
himself, succeeded in 343 BC. But the local dynasty fled south to Nubia,
where it maintained an independent kingdom that kept alive the hopes of
a national revival. Persia then misplayed its hand in Greece by refusing
aid to Athens against the rising power of Philip II of Macedon. In 339
BC Persian troops were fighting alone in Thrace against the Macedonians,
and in the following year, at the Battle of Chaeronea, Philip extended
his hegemony over all of Greece--a united Greece that was to prove impervious
to Persian gold. Artaxerxes was poisoned by his physician at the order
of the eunuch Bagoas. The latter made Arses king (338-336 BC) in hopes
of being the power behind the throne, but Arses did not bend easily to
Bagoas' will. He attempted to poison the kingmaker but was himself killed
in retaliation. Bagoas then engineered the accession of Darius III, a
45-year-old former satrap of Armenia. So many members of the royal house
had been murdered in the court intrigue that Darius probably held the
closest blood claim to the throne by virtue of being the grandnephew of
Artaxerxes II. Darius was able to put down yet another rebellion in Egypt
under Khababash in 337-336 BC, but the beginning of the end came soon
afterward, in May 334, with the loss of the Battle of Granicus to Alexander
the Great. Persepolis fell to the invader in April 330, and Darius, the
last Achaemenid, was murdered in the summer of the same year while fleeing
the conqueror. His unfinished tomb at Persepolis bears witness to his
lack of preparation. Alexander did not win his victories easily, however,
and the catalog of troubles that marked the latter part of the Achaemenid
Empire--rebellions, murders, weak kings trapped in the harem, missed chances,
and foolish policies--cannot be the whole story. The sources, mostly Greek,
are often prejudiced against the Persians and tend to view events from
but a single point of view. No government could have lasted so long, found
its way somehow through so many difficulties, and in the end actually
have fought so hard against the conqueror without having much virtue with
which to balance its vices.
Text from:
Encyclopaedia Britannica
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