The Persian Empire
The Persian Empire
The new masters of the ancient world belonged to a particularly handsome race.
This 5th-cent. B.C. glazed brick frieze is from the harem of Xerxes, the royal
household at Persepolis. Their beards are carefully arranged in little curls
in Persian fashion. At the heart of the imperial Persian army was the elite
bodyguard known as the Ten Thousand Immortals, whose ranks included Medes, Elamites
and Persians.
As the policy of Assyrian and Babylonian kings had been to deport conquered
peoples to other parts of the empire, the Persian policy was the opposite and
much more humane. They would send captives back to their land, as mentioned on the
fired clay Persian "Cyrus Cylinder" as follows:
". . . to Ashur and Susa, Agade, Ashnunnak, Zamban, Meturnu, Deri, with the
territory of the land of Gutium, the cities on the other side of the Tigris . . .
the gods who dwelt in them, I brought back to their places . . . all their
inhabitants I collected and restored them to their dwelling places . . . I
liberated those who dwelt in Babylon from the yoke that chafed them . . . I am Cyrus,
king of all things, the great king . . . king of all the earth . . ."
He also declares that he made good the wrong done by his predecessors by
sending captives home, helping in the rebuilding of their temples and the return of
their gods. This edict included the Jews. No doubt God had ordained Cyrus, who
was a noble and just monarch, to issue a decree releasing the Jews. The
remarkably powerful prophesy of Isaiah is captivating in the light of history for it was written 150 years before
Cyrus:
Isa 44:28-45:1
Who says of Cyrus, 'He is My shepherd, and he shall perform all My pleasure,
saying to Jerusalem, "You shall be built," and to the temple, "Your foundation
shall be laid." "Thus says the LORD to His anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand
I have held-- to subdue nations before him and loose the armor of kings, to
open before him the double doors, so that the gates will not be shut . . ."
Persia was the mountainous plateau to the east of the lower Tigris-Euphrates
Valley. The Persian empire was larger than the Babylonian and Assyrian empires,
extending eastward to India and reaching westward to Greece. Its capitals were
Persepolis and Susa. As a world empire it lasted 200 years (536-331 B.C.)
The Persian Kings were:
Cyrus (538-529 B.C.) Conquered Babylon and allowed the Jews to return.
Cambyses (529-522 B.C.) Stopped work on the Temple.
Darius I (521-485 B.C.) Authorized completion of the Temple.
Xerxes (Ahasuerus) (485-465 B.C.) Esther was his Queen.
Artaxerxes I (465-425 B.C.) Authorized Nehemiah to rebuild Jerusalem.
Xerxes II (424 B.C.)
Darius II (423-405 B.C.)
Artaxerxes II (405-358 B.C.)
Artaxerxes III (358-338 B.C.)
Arses (338-335)
Darius III (335-331 B.C.) He was defeated by Alexander the Great (331 B.C.) at the
famous battle of Arbela, near Nineveh. This was the fall of Persia and the rise of
Greece.
Alexander's marching army
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