BECK index

Assyrian, Neo-Babylonian, and Persian Empires

by Sanderson Beck

Assyrian Empire 967-664 BC
Assyrian Empire 664-609 BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire
Zarathushtra
Persian Empire to 500 BC
Persian-Greek Wars 550-404 BC
Persian-Greek Wars 404-323 BC
Parthian Empire
Mani and Manichaeism
Sasanian Persia 224-531
Sasanian Persia 531-651

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Sumer, Babylon, and Hittites

The twelfth to the ninth centuries BC in Mesopotamia are considered a dark age because very little is known about that time period. From the thirteenth century BC to the middle of the sixth century is called the iron age with increasing use of that new technology. A powerful Elamite kingdom led by Shutruk-nahhunte and his son Kutir-nahhunte conquered several hundred settlements and captured Babylon, ending the Kassite dynasty and taking away the statue of Marduk in 1157 BC. Kutir-nahhunte died about 1140 BC and was succeeded as king of Elam by his brother Shilkhak-Inshushinak, who used Babylonian tribute to build up their capital of Susa. Shilkhak launched military campaigns against Aramaean settlements to the west and north along the Tigris River. The 46-year reign of Ashur-dan was ending with a struggle for power in Assyria. Ashur-resh-ishi (r. 1133-1116 BC), claimed to be the "avenger of Assyria," strengthened their defenses, rebuilt the palace, and repaired the Ishtar temple.

A new Babylonian dynasty emerged in Isin; Nebuchadrezzar I (r. 1124-1103 BC) attacked Elam and, after an early defeat and plague, triumphed and regained the statue of Marduk. However, his attacks against Assyria were successfully resisted. Both the Babylonians and the Assyrians fought against the Lullubi tribes in the eastern hills and the nomadic tribes in the western deserts. Assyrian King Tiglath-pileser I (r. 1115-1077 BC) defeated the Mushki, who were invading the Tigris valley from the north. Tiglath-pileser also led his troops to the west as far as Lebanon. However, these victories were not followed up with effective imperialistic administration as the Aramaeans were able to fight back later. Tiglath-pileser entertained himself hunting big game and claimed he killed 920 lions. He organized water projects and collected literature in the world's oldest extant library. Tiglath-pileser did attack Babylon and plunder it, but he withdrew.

For the next two centuries Assyria and Babylon co-existed. In the eleventh century BC Nebuchadrezzar I was celebrated in an epic poem; Sinleqeunnimi of Uruk produced a humanized version of the Epic of Gilgamesh; and another poet expressed the workings of divine justice, an important concept in Babylonian religion. Tiglath-pileser's son Ashur-bel-kala (r. 1074-1057 BC) fought with Babylon against the Aramaeans, but Ashurnasirpal I (r. 1050-1032 BC) could not preserve the conquests of his famous grandfather; his prayers lamented his adversity and asked for forgiveness for not teaching his subjects to reverence God sufficiently. Assyrian laws were stricter and their treatment of women worse than among the Babylonians, Hittites, and Israelites. In Assyria women could be divorced for no reason without being given any money, could be killed or maimed for adultery, and had to wear a veil outside the house, except for prostitutes who were forbidden to wear a veil.

Assyrian Empire 967-664 BC

In spite of the efforts of Assyrian kings Tiglath-pileser II (r. 967-935 BC) and Ashur-dan II (r. 934-912 BC), the Aramaeans had spread around the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. In his reign (911-891 BC) Adad-nirari II fought numerous military campaigns of expansion and made a treaty with Babylon that lasted eighty years. His son Tukulti-Ninurta II began reporting hostile attacks as justification for his campaigns and rebuilt the walls of Ashur. Continued expansion by his son Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883-859 BC) used extensive cavalry, battering rams, cruel treatment of defeated enemies, deportation, plunder of precious metals, horses, cattle, and sheep, followed by bureaucrats and annual tribute to create an empire. Ashurnasirpal rebuilt Kalakh and made it his capital; 69,574 guests attended the opening ceremonies at his new palace.

Ashurnasirpal's son Shalmaneser III (r. 858-824 BC) conquered northern Syria but was unable to take Damascus, though Israel's King Jehu paid him tribute. In Babylon Marduk-zakir-shumi called upon Shalmaneser and the Assyrians to help him establish his kingship against a challenge by his younger brother, who was defeated by Shalmaneser's army in 850 BC. Shalmaneser went on to defeat and take tribute from the Chaldeans and plunder the land of Namri. The next year Shalmaneser led an army of 120,000 against Arzashkun, the capital city of Urartu's King Aram (r. 858-844 BC) and killed 3,400 troops.

Aram was overthrown by Sarduri I, whose dynasty in Urartu lasted a quarter of a millennium. Urartu kings Menua (r. 810-785 BC) and Argishti (785-753 BC) expanded the Urartu kingdom, the latter bragging about the number of men killed and animals stolen. Urartu King Sarduri II (753-735 BC) claimed he captured 21,989 people from north of Mt. Ararat, but he was defeated by Tiglath-pileser III in 736 BC.

At the end of his reign the crown prince rebelled against Shalmaneser; the dying King turned to his younger son who became Shamsi-Adad V, won the civil war with Babylon's help, and reigned for a dozen years, ungratefully attacking Babylon and the Chaldeans. Shamsi-Adad's Queen Sammuramat, the legendary Semiramis of Greek historians, ruled as regent (or at least was influential) for her son Adad-nirari III, who in 806 BC invaded Syria and collected tribute from the Neo-Hittites, Phoenicians, Philistines, Israelites, and Edomites. After Adad-nirari III died in 783 BC, his four sons ruled in succession; but none of them were noteworthy until the fourth, Tiglath-pileser III, became king of Assyria in 745 BC, though some believe that he was not a royal son but a general who took power by force.

Tiglath-pileser III conquered the Syrian allies of Urartu at Arpad and the Medes on the Iranian plateau, declaring that he "smashed them like pots." Then he turned their lands into Assyrian provinces, reorganized the army by replacing conscription with permanent contingents from around the empire, and broke the power of the lords by reforming the administration into smaller districts directly accountable to the King. Massive deportations were used to break up regional loyalties. In 744 BC 65,000 Iranians were displaced, and later 154,000 were moved; 30,000 Syrians were sent to the Zagros mountains while 18,000 Aramaeans from the Tigris area went to northern Syria. Such policies increased the hatred of Assyria, and thus rebellions would continue in the years ahead anyway.

A siege against Urartu failed, but Tiglath-pileser III returned to the Mediterranean to defeat a Philistine revolt led by Askalon and Gaza and to collect tribute from Amon, Edom, Moab, and Judah. When Judah's King Ahaz asked for Assyrian aid against Damascus and Israel, Tiglath-pileser captured Damascus and half of Israel while establishing Hoshea as king in Samaria. When a Chaldean gained the throne of Babylon, Tiglath-pileser removed him and in 728 BC made himself king of Babylon; but he died the next year.

Tiglath-pileser's son Shalmaneser V was king of Assyria barely long enough to besiege Samaria for three years. The deportation of 27,290 Israelites was supervised by his successor Sargon II (r. 721-705 BC). Sargon may have had to struggle to get the throne because he thanked the citizens of Ashur for helping him by exempting Ashur and Harran from the taxes imposed by Tiglath-pileser, and he punished "6,300 criminals" of Ashur by sending them to Harran. Assyria's growing empire had interfered with the trade routes and made enemies of Urartu in the north and Egypt, which supported numerous rebellions in the years ahead.

Before Sargon could consolidate his power, the Chaldean Marduk-apal-iddina II (Merodach-baladan in the Bible) had taken the throne in Babylon. Assyria's first attack on Babylon was defeated by Elam. A decade later Sargon attacked the cities of Kish, Nippur, and Dur-Atkhara while the Babylonian-Elamite coalition fought a guerrilla defense from swamps, flooded areas, the hills, and the tribal peripheries. Abandoned by Elam, Marduk-apal-iddina eventually surrendered at his tribal capital of Dur-Yakin, which was destroyed. Sargon deported more than a hundred thousand Aramaeans and Chaldeans to western Asia, cooperated with the priests, stayed three years governing the area, and imported foreign captives.

Sargon II put down Egyptian-supported revolts in Syria and Palestine, and he conquered the independent city of Carchemish, making it an Assyrian province. In 714 BC after a long march through the mountains of Kurdistan, Sargon led a surprise attack on Urartu, causing their King to flee. He persuaded his army that an eclipse of the moon was not a bad omen for them but for their enemy at Musasir, Urartu's sacred city, which they then easily plundered. Sargon had tens of thousands of workers build his own capital just north of Nineveh; but before it was finished, he was killed fighting in Iran. His son Sennacherib believed Sargon's death was a punishment from the gods and left his corpse unburied.

Sennacherib left Sargon's new city unfinished and built a huge palace at Nineveh. Marduk-apal-iddina once again assumed the throne of Babylon but was forced to withdraw when Sennacherib and the Assyrians defeated a coalition army of Babylonians, Aramaeans, and Elamites, deporting 208,000 Babylonians. Bel-ibni was appointed king of Babylon in 702 BC; but two years later when he seceded from the Assyrian empire, Sennacherib replaced him with his son Ashur-nadin-shum. In 701 BC Sennacherib defeated a coalition of Phoenicians, Palestinians, and Egyptians in Syria. Judah’s King Hezekiah bought off Sennacherib with 300 talents of silver and 30 of gold. When Sennacherib came back, probably late in his reign, Hezekiah, advised by Isaiah, did not surrender; the Assyrians withdrew the siege probably because of a plague, though the number of 185,000 Assyrian dead in the Biblical account could be an exaggeration.

Sennacherib ordered the building of a fleet of ships in Nineveh, and in 694 BC they attacked Elam on the Persian Gulf. However, the Elamites counter-attacked, took the throne of Babylon, and the war went on for seven years. After a great battle, which the Assyrians claimed was a victory although it probably was not, Sennacherib ordered the destruction of Babylon and even plundered its temples, a serious offense to Assyrians, who shared many religious beliefs with the Babylonians. Then a myth was developed that the god Marduk himself was brought before a tribunal for his transgressions, and in the Babylonian creation story Enuma Elish Marduk was replaced by Ashur. In 681 BC Sennacherib was assassinated in a temple of Ninurta at Nineveh, probably by his eldest sons. Many believed that Sennacherib had mistreated the god Ninurta as well as Marduk and that his death was a divine punishment, a belief ironically he had held about his own father's death.

Appointed by the imperial council and supported by the army, a younger son of Sennacherib named Esarhaddon became King while his older brothers fled to Urartu. Esarhaddon ordered the rebuilding of Babylon, the restoration of its gods, and made a peace treaty with Elam, although later his messengers, attempting to collect taxes from the impoverished Babylonians, were pelted with clods. In the north Esarhaddon fought off the Cimmerians and then made peace with them by giving his daughter in marriage to the Scythian chief Bartuta. When Sidon revolted in 677 BC, he tore down the Phoenician city, beheaded its king, deported the inhabitants, and gave Sidon's territory to its rival city of Tyre.

These measures enabled Esarhaddon to pursue his major ambition of conquering Egypt. His first attempt failed, but in 671 BC the Assyrian army besieged revolting Tyre on the way to capturing Memphis. The Ethiopians were deported; the collection of tribute from Egypt's 22 provinces was organized; and the worship of Ashur was instituted. However, two years later the Ethiopian King of Egypt, Taharqa, who had fled to the south, organized a rebellion. Esarhaddon was on his way back to Egypt when he died in 669 BC. Three times the superstitious Esarhaddon had substituted temporary "kings" so that he could pretend to be a peasant and escape bad omens such as a lunar eclipse, which astronomers could predict. Putting to death the substitutes at the end of their term and attempting to fool the gods insulted his religion. Esarhaddon did make it clear in his treaties with vassals that when he died, the crown prince designate Ashurbanipal was to be obeyed.

The best educated and most literate of Assyria's kings, Ashurbanipal ruled for 42 years during the height and greatest decline of the empire. He began by sending an army to Egypt to recapture Memphis. Once again Taharqa fled to Thebes, and twenty-two native kings and governors appointed by Esarhaddon who had fled the rebellion were reinstalled. However, when their conspiracy with Taharqa was discovered, they were exiled to Assyria and executed there, except for Necho, who was set up in Sais to rule Egypt. When Taharqa died, his nephew Tanutamen marched from Thebes to Memphis, where in 664 BC he killed Necho and defeated the Egyptian princes of the Delta. When the Assyrian army returned, Tanutamen retreated from Memphis to Thebes, from which he fled when it was destroyed by Ashurbanipal's army. Necho's son Psamtik was appointed ruler in Sais. According to Herodotus a decade later Psamtik aided by Ionian mercenaries expelled the Assyrians from Egypt while Assyria was battling Elam.

Assyrian Empire 664-609 BC

Tyre was besieged until its ruler Baal submitted and offered his daughter and nieces and much treasure to the Assyrians. Elam had attacked Babylon in 664 BC; but eleven years later when Ashurbanipal would not surrender the Elamite King's rivals, another attack by the Elamites was defeated by the Assyrian army. The King of Elam was killed in battle, and Ashurbanipal replaced him with his rivals. In 651 BC Ashurbanipal's brother Shamash-shum-ukin, who was King of Babylon, tried to form an alliance with Phoenicians, Philistines, Judah, Arabs, Chaldeans, Elamites, and even Lydia and Egypt, closing the gates of Sippar, Babylon, and Barsippa to the Assyrians. Ashurbanipal besieged Babylon for two years until Shamash-shum-ukin set fire to his own palace and perished. Ashurbanipal made Kandalanu (possibly another name for himself) king of Babylon and then attacked the Arabian rebels in the desert. So many camels were captured that the price of a camel in Assyria dropped to less than one shekel.

By 639 BC Elam was completely devastated as its capital at Susa was destroyed and plundered. Salt and thorny weeds were scattered on their land, and Elam's 3,000-year-old civilization would never rise again. Ashurbanipal marched in triumph with three Elamite princes and a king of Arabia harnessed to his chariot. Jews, Aramaeans, and Lydians had been subjugated, and Assyria was rich with plundered booty. Yet the annals of Assyria came to an end in 639 BC; apparently they did not like recording their defeats. Within thirty years the Assyrian empire would be no more.

The Medes attacked Assyria, but the northern Scythians saved Nineveh and forced the Medes to pay them tribute for 28 years. When Ashurbanipal (and Kandalanu) died in 627 BC, his son Ashur-etil-ilani fought a civil war with his brother Sin-shar-ishkun. The Chaldean Nabopolassar took the throne of Babylon in 626 BC and according to one chronicle fought with Sin-shar-ishkun for two years before the latter became King of Assyria in 623 BC. For a dozen years Babylon and Assyria fought each other. The Medes led by Cyaxares tipped the balance and in 616 BC attacked Nineveh but were beaten back by the Scythians. However, in the next two years the Medes conquered Arrapkha and Ashur. When the Medes joined with the Babylonians to attack Nineveh, Assyria's attempted alliance with Egypt was too late. By the end of 612 BC Nineveh and the major cities of Assyria had been destroyed. Ashur-uballit II replaced the dead Sin-shar-ishkun and retreated to Harran; but two years later this city was destroyed, and by 609 BC the remaining Assyrian army capitulated.

Probably the most significant piece of Assyrian literature was the epic of "Erra and Ishum." Ashurbanipal and his scholars certified this work, which was probably written or given its final form around 700 BC when Assyrians were attacking Babylon. Its fierce warlike qualities typify the most salient feature of Assyrian culture. Even the hero Ishum, who finally manages to lessen the war-making somewhat, is referred to as a "pious slaughterer whose hands are adept at carrying his furious weapons and making his fierce axes flash!"1 The seven gods express the love of battle when they speak to Erra, whose heart already was urging him to make war.

Why do you stay in town like a feeble old man?
How can you stay at home like a lisping child?
Are we to eat women's bread,
like one who has never marched on to the battlefield?
Are we to be fearful and nervous as if we had no experience of war?
To go on to the battlefield is as good as a festival for young men!
Anyone who stays in town, be he a prince,
will not be satisfied with bread alone;
He will be vilified in the mouths of his own people, and dishonored.
How can he raise his hand against one who goes to the battlefield?
However great the strength of one who stays in town,
How can he prevail over one who has been on the battlefield?2

Nevertheless Ishum reprimands Erra for planning evil for the gods in plotting to overthrow countries and destroy their people, asking him to turn back. Bragging of his powers and explaining that Marduk has neglected his word, Erra promises to overwhelm the people of Marduk (Babylonians). Yet the setting up of weapons of the privileged men is described as an abomination to the gods Anu and Dagan. Ishum asks Erra if he does not fear Marduk and says that he has changed his divine nature and become like a human. He has taken his weapons into Babylon like a braggart to seize the city. He has ensnared them in a net and destroyed them.

The army saw you and donned their weapons.
The governor, who had treated Babylon well, became enraged,
Directed his troops to loot like enemy looters,
Incited the leader of the army to crime,
"You are the man whom I shall send to that city!
You shall respect neither god nor man.
Put young and old alike to death.
You shall not leave any child, even if he still sucks milk.
You shall pillage the accumulated wealth of Babylon."3

The great lord Marduk saw and cried, "Woe!" clutching at his heart. An insolent governor was set over them who would not treat them kindly. The warrior Erra put to death the just and unjust. The people abandoned justice and turned to atrocities. Erra declares that the Subartians, Assyrians, Elamites, Kassites, Suteans, Gutians, and Lullubeans have not even spared their own kind as brother even slays brother until an Akkadian shall rise up and fell them all and shepherd the rest. Ishum pleaded with Erra that he rest, and finally Erra was placated and left a remnant. This poem portrays the bitterness of the battles between the Assyrians and Babylonians at this time.

Another pessimistic literary work is a dialog between a master and his servant in which the master proposes to ride to the palace, to dine, to hunt, to lie in wait for his adversary, to build a house, to remain silent, to start a rebellion, to love a woman, to sacrifice to his god, to give food to his country, to help his country, and finally to kill his servant and then himself, but each time he changes his mind and negates the plan, except for the last. Then the servant asks if his master would want to live even three days without him.

Assyrian civilization was focused around its powerful king with a militaristic hierarchy supported by officials, artisans, farmers, and slaves. The king was chief judge, lawmaker, commander-in-chief of the army, and head of the religion, although he was not deified himself. Established traditions and customs stabilized the culture and the king. The only revolutions in Assyrian history were by powerful generals or palace officials as the social hierarchy was never seriously challenged. Governors and priests, in fact any official, could be directly ordered by the king. Kings and officials need not be literate because they all were assisted by scribes. Offices and professions tended to be hereditary, or appointments were based on patronage. Aramaeans did rise to high positions, but the process took generations.

Social classes were rigidly determined by one's position in the hierarchy. Captives in war and debtors were made slaves, though the latter could marry a free person, testify in court, conduct business, and own property. Women were entirely dependent on their male relations, raised the children and cared for the home, and were not even allowed to associate with males who were not relatives. If a man lived with a widow for two years, they were considered married. Adultery could be punished by the husband killing both or mutilating the wife and castrating her lover; though if he did not punish the wife, the lover could not be punished either. Homosexuality, which was tolerated in Babylon, was punished by the Assyrians. The king maintained a harem of women and eunuchs. Foreign princes and nobles were also kept in the Assyrian court to assure treaties.

Laws operated primarily by the decisions of the king and officials based on precedents. Contracts were made on tablets. Prostitution was allowed but not common; drunkenness was discouraged; theft was limited; and violence and murder were usually settled by private vendetta. A few people were imprisoned but usually for political reasons. The economy was primarily based on agriculture, supplemented by crafts, trade, and tribute and plunder from war, though the movement of wealth from the periphery of the empire to the center tended to cause misery and rebellions. All land was considered the property of the god as represented by the king, but in fact temples, wealthy lords, and private individuals did own land or held it in exchange for performing some service to the state.

In war the Assyrians excelled in developing siege engines, and numerous horses were requisitioned for their chariots and cavalry. Cities were persuaded to submit, and excessive cruelty of those who resisted was calculated to make others submit more readily. As the empire grew, more foreign troops filled the ranks of the army. Hunting of lions, wild bulls, and elephants was so popular that elephants became extinct in the area.

Most of the gods were adopted from the Babylonians except for Ashur, the supreme god. Ishtar was the only goddess if one does not count the consorts of the gods; but she too could be warlike. The use of divination for guidance regarding the future was used extensively by Assyrian kings. Astrological astronomers made detailed observations and attempted to correlate human events with celestial signs. Their calendar became quite accurate when they figured out they could add seven lunar periods every nineteen years; they could predict eclipses. Astrology still allowed for divine and human initiative.

Medical theory was based primarily on the belief that disease was a punishment inflicted by the gods on humans for their sins, although dust, dirt, food and drink, as well as contagion were taken into consideration. Physicians attempted to diagnose the symptoms and might prescribe drugs, poultices, enemas, or a change in diet. Libraries of cuneiform tablets were kept, and Ashurbanipal in particular gave instructions to gather any tablet that could be found. Assyrian society was fairly stable itself, but continued conquest and the imperial exploitation of other peoples eventually brought about its inevitable reaction.

Neo-Babylonian Empire

The Chaldean dynasty, founded by Nabopolassar when he became King of Babylon in 626 BC, was to rule over the empire they took over from the Assyrians when they defeated their army in 609 BC. This King had declared his son Nebuchadrezzar crown prince when the renovation of the palace was celebrated early in his reign. Father and son were together when the last Assyrian king surrendered at Harran. From there Nabopolassar went to Babylon while Nebuchadrezzar seized and burned forts and gathered much booty for three months. Then the King marched up the Euphrates to set up garrisons against the expected Egyptian attacks while the prince raised support for this war from the temple authorities. When the Egyptians did invade, killing intervening Judah king Josiah along the way, Nebuchadrezzar took command of the army. In a battle in which Greek mercenaries fought on both sides he defeated the Egyptians at Carchemish in 605 BC, allowing "not a single man to escape to his country." He was in the west asserting control over this part of the empire when Nabopolassar died. Nebuchadrezzar immediately marched through the desert and was crowned king in Babylon three weeks later.

Nebuchadrezzar II returned to Syria to collect tribute from Damascus, Tyre, Sidon, and Jerusalem while destroying rebellious Ascalon. In 601 BC the kings of Egypt and Babylon fought a great open battle that was costly for both sides. Egypt retreated from Asia. The Babylonians had to spend a year re-equipping and retraining themselves while Jehoiakim of Judah abrogated the obligations that had been imposed by Babylon. The Babylonians raided the Arabs in the desert and got the Aramaeans, Moabites, and Ammonites to invade Judah. Then Nebuchadrezzar besieged Jerusalem and captured the city and its King in 597 BC. Zedekiah was appointed as regent, and 3,000 Jews were deported to Mesopotamia. Encouraged by Egyptian operations against Gaza, Tyre, and Sidon, Zedekiah revolted against Babylonian hegemony. Nebuchadrezzar besieged Jerusalem again as he had a decade before, and after eighteen months Zedekiah was captured trying to escape. His sons were killed, and he was blinded and deported with thousands of Jews. Jerusalem was looted; its walls were broken down; and the temple was destroyed.

Less is known of the later years of Nebuchadrezzar's reign. In 585 BC he mediated a truce between the Medes and the Lydians, and it was said that his siege of Tyre lasted thirteen years. He did claim to have pacified Lebanon so that he could exploit its timber, and he invaded Egypt in 568 BC. Nebuchadrezzar II had Babylon rebuilt and ruled for 43 years until his death in 562 BC. He claimed to have been a just king and to have suppressed bribery to please the god Marduk and better all peoples.

Nebuchadrezzar's son Amel-Marduk ruled for only two years, but according to Jeremiah 52:31-32 he released Judah's King Jehoiachin from prison and gave him a seat of honor in Babylon. A leading official and landowner named Neriglissar, who had married Amel-Marduk's sister, organized a conspiracy that overthrew the King. Neriglissar led military campaigns against Piriddu in Cilicia but died in 556 BC. His son ruled only three months before he was slain in turn by a conspiracy led by Nabonidus, who was chosen king.

Nabonidus may have helped mediate the peace between the Medes and Lydians in 585 BC. His mother was devoted to the moon god Sin at Harran, lived to be over one hundred, and was given a queen's funeral in 547 BC. Nabonidus continued the effort of Neriglissar to defend Syria from northern invasion, bringing 2,850 captive slaves back to Babylon to rebuild its walls and restore the temple of Sin at Harran. By divination he decided to dedicate his daughter as a priestess at Ur. Although he did shift religious emphasis to Sin, he still provided supplies to the temples of Marduk and Nabu. While campaigning in Amanus he gathered plants for Babylon's famous hanging gardens that Nebuchadrezzar had built. Nabonidus spent ten years at Tema in the Arabian desert putting down a rebellion and controlling the region, not even leaving to attend his mother's funeral. While he was away, his son Belshazzar ruled in Babylon.

Finally after a drought, divination and abundant rainfall showed favorable omens, and Nabonidus returned to Babylon. Sin was restored to his temple at Harran, and Nabonidus celebrated the New Year's festival in Babylon, taking the hand of the statue of Bel (Marduk) to show his divine kingship. Then Cyrus II of Persia launched a victorious attack on Babylonian Opis. Nabonidus fled, and two days later Persian forces, having redirected the water, charged into Babylon through the dry channels; then Guti’s Governor Gubaru entered the city without a battle. Belshazzar was killed, and Nabonidus surrendered. The holy places were protected, and two weeks later Cyrus entered Babylon proclaiming peace to all the people and giving audience to the rulers of the former Chaldean empire. Cyrus claimed that he was fulfilling the will of Marduk, reaffirmed the privileges of Babylon, ordered exiled deities returned, and decreed that the Jews would be allowed to return to their country.

These privileges were granted to citizens of sacred cities such as Babylon, Sippar, Nippur, and Borsippa as the Assyrians had done with Ashur and Harran. These urban dwellers believed that their cities were protected by the god of their temple and that if the King violated justice, he and the land would be punished, as indicated in the following Akkadian text from the seventh century BC:

If a king does not heed justice,
his people will be thrown into chaos, and his land will be devastated.
If he does not heed the justice of his land, Ea, king of destinies,
will alter his destiny and will not cease from hostilely pursuing him.
If he does not heed his nobles, his life will be cut short.
If he does not heed his adviser, his land will rebel against him.
If he heeds a rogue, the status quo in his land will change....
If the sons of Nippur are brought to him for judgment,
but he accepts a present and improperly convicts them,
Enlil, lord of the lands,
will bring a foreign army against him to slaughter his army,
whose prince and chief officers will roam the streets like fighting cocks.
If he takes the silver of the sons of Babylon
and adds it to his own coffers,
or if he hears a lawsuit involving men of Babylon
but treats it frivolously,
Marduk, lord of heaven and earth, will set his foes upon him,
and he will give his property and wealth to his enemy.
If he imposes a fine on the sons of Nippur, Sippar, or Babylon,
or if he puts them in prison,
the city where the fine was imposed will be completely overturned
and a foreign enemy will make his way into their prison.
If he mobilized the whole of Sippar, Nippur, and Babylon,
and imposed forced labor on the people,
exacting from them corvée at the herald's proclamation,
Marduk, prince of the gods, the prince, the councilor,
will turn his land over to his enemy
so that the troops of his land will do forced labor for his enemy,
for Anu, Enlil, and Ea, the great gods, who dwell in heaven and earth,
in their assembly affirmed the freedom
of those people from those obligations.4

The people's sense of their own rights and power are seen in a letter that warned Assyrian King Esarhaddon by quoting the opening and closing lines from this text. This is the same Esarhaddon whose tax collectors were pelted with clods. Another document has Esarhaddon claiming that he restored this lost protection and privilege to the people of Babylon, including tax exemption.

Because of the survival of cuneiform clay tablets much is known of Babylonian business transactions during this period. Citizens of these cities, who were exempt from military conscription and corvée, met in assemblies, but after attainment of the empire royal power dominated the assemblies. Nabonidus may have done much to stop judges from taking bribes and not defending the poor, robbing of the weak, usury, violence, and even the taking of fields. These assemblies often settled minor civil and criminal cases. In 594 BC the Borsippa assembly executed and confiscated the property of a general for plotting against Nebuchadrezzar. The local governor usually presided over the assembly. Only free men were in the assemblies that excluded foreigners as well as slaves and women, though poor artisans were included.

Many aliens lived in Babylonia, intermarrying and being assimilated or forming their own self-governing communities. There were Elamites, Persians, Medes, Cilicians, Jews, Ionians, and most numerous of all, Egyptians. Conflicts over ethnicity or religious differences were not apparent. Most aliens worshiped their own gods and the Babylonian gods as well with the notable exception of the Jews.

The King appointed judges to administer the laws. Polygamy was rare, and the husband had to pay the first wife compensation unless she was childless. Women could engage in contracts and own property, though they were rarely witnesses to contracts. Seals or thumbnail impressions were used as signatures. Loans were secured with either fields, houses, slaves, children, cattle, money, or other possessions; these might be exploited in place of interest, which was usually 20% annually. A debtor might have to work off the debt but could not be made a slave, though his children could. This desperate measure rarely occurred except during starvation due to famine, a long siege, or a devastating war. The time limit for slavery in Hammurabi's code had been abolished. These laws were still copied though, and the thirty-fold payment for stolen temple and palace property was still in effect.

The state got revenue from taxes, and the temples received tithes, which averaged about ten percent of income. The Eanna temple of Uruk owned more than 5,000 cattle and over a 100,000 sheep. Those who could not pay the tithe might borrow it or even give their children to the temple as slaves. Scribes served not only government administration but as business accountants as well. In 553 BC Nabonidus appointed a royal commissioner in the Eanna temple to make sure that the state got its taxes from the temple. Temples also had to provide services to the palace, and the King began to regulate temple rations to slaves, salaries, and rental rates. Such policies may have induced the priests to prefer Cyrus to their own king.

Barley and dates were the largest crops, and people were often paid in these. The state owned and controlled the canals used for irrigation. The owner of the land usually received one-third of the crop, leaving two-thirds for the lessee. Most craftsmen worked for the temples or the wealthy, who could afford to train slaves. Most farmers worked on land belonging to the state, temples, or the wealthy.

The King usually gave prisoners of war over to the temples to be used as slaves. However, the 10,000 Jews and their women and children that were deported in 597 BC were not enslaved but settled near Nippur to work land that had been neglected. There was a limit to how many slaves could be absorbed into the economy effectively. Slaves could earn and own property including even other slaves, but they could not buy their own freedom. Only their master could free them, and successful slaves were usually kept. The wages of the slave went to the master, removing the incentive the free worker had to work hard, thus making slavery less productive.

Babylon was the busiest center of trade at this time connecting Egypt, Phoenicia, and Syria to Cyprus, Asia Minor, and Elam. Weighed silver was the primary currency as there were no minted coins. In the sixth century BC while most people were suffering hardship, powerful capitalists arose, particularly the Egibi family in Babylon, with fortunes in real estate, slaves, money-lending, commerce, agriculture, and banking. These inequities were probably factors in Babylon's loss of political autonomy.

Persian Empire to 500 BC

Zarathushtra

Zarathushtra is said to have lived 258 years before Alexander. Since Alexander had taken over the Persian empire by 330 BC when Darius III died, and as Zarathushtra was about forty years old when he converted King Vishtapa and lived to be 77, the approximate dates of his life are 628-551 BC. Other traditions hold that he was born long before that, and some scholars believe he lived between 1400 and 1200 BC. It is also possible that there could have been more than one Zarathushtra. Little is known about the life of Zarathushtra, who was called Zoroaster by the Greeks, but his influence on Iranian religion was very great. The name Zarathushtra has been translated as "he of the golden Light," and legend indicates that as a child he glowed with radiant light.

The Aryans, who settled in Iran and those who invaded India, shared a common religion originally, as indicated by a Mitannian treaty with Hittites from the 14th century BC which acknowledged the Vedic gods Mitra, Varuna, Indra, and the two Nasatyas. The names Mitra and Varuna were often linked together in the Hindu Vedas as a dual compound. The Iranian god Ahura shared the characteristics of the early Varuna, and Zarathushtra added the attribute of wisdom (Mazda) and declared that the one true God is Ahura Mazda. Apparently when the split occurred between the Hindus and the Iranians, they eventually demonized some of each other gods and spirits. The divinities the Hindus call devas became evil spirits or devils to the Iranians and Zarathushtra, while the Hindus called evil spirits asuras.

According to tradition Zarathushtra was born smiling or laughing as the third of five sons in the Spitama family in the pastoral Median town of Rhages near what is now Tehran. He was initiated into the priesthood at age fifteen. He left home on a spiritual quest when he was twenty and at thirty recognized the Wise Lord (Mazda Ahura) when Good Thought (Vohu Manah) came to him and asked him who he was. Zarathushtra declared that he was a foe to the Liar and a supporter of what is right. Zarathushtra criticized aggressive violators of order as followers of the Lie, and his teachings were opposed by the religious authorities. Zarathushtra was tempted to give up his new faith but continued on with great determination. For ten years he wandered around with very few followers.

Traveling east as he preached, Zarathushtra struggled for two years to convert a Chorasmian prince named Vishtapa. Opposed by greedy Karpan priests and critical of their corruption, intoxicated orgies, and animal sacrifices, Zarathushtra was put in prison until he was aided by Vishtapa's consort Hutaosa; then Vishtapa accepted the new faith and promoted it actively. The court of Vishtapa was drawn into the religion, Zarathushtra marrying a daughter of one of the nobles whose brother married Zarathushtra's daughter by his first wife. The new religion was promulgated so actively that two holy wars were fought in its defense, and in the second one Zarathushtra was killed at the age of 77 while attending a fire ceremony.

The teachings of Zarathushtra were passed down through the ancient poetry of the Gathas. Zarathushtra declared that there is one God, the Wise Lord he called Ahura Mazda, transforming the polytheism of the Aryan religion into monotheism. This God he identified as the creator and governor of the universe through the Holy Spirit. The most important characteristic of God is Asha, which means truth or what is right (justice, law). This God is profoundly ethical, rewarding the thoughts, words, and actions of the good, and bringing recompense to those of the evil. All spirits and beings are free to choose between the good and evil. The twenty names Zarathushtra gave to God are I am, Giver of Herds, Strong One, Perfect Holiness, All-Good, Understanding, Having Understanding, Knowledge, Having Knowledge, Blessing, Causing Blessing, Lord, Most Beneficent, Not Harming, Unconquerable, Truthful, All-Seeing, Healing, Creator, and Wise (or Omniscient).

Zarathushtra taught that God has seven major attributes. Spenta Mainyu is the Holy Spirit through which everything is created. God communicated to Zarathushtra through the Vohu Manah or Good Mind. Asha Vahishta means best order or justice. The Khshathra Vairya, which obviously has the same etymology as the Kshatriya or ruling caste of India, means Absolute Power, Desirable Dominion, and the Ultimate Paradise to be established on Earth in the end time which came to be called the kingdom or sovereignty of heaven by Jesus. Yasna 41:2 states, "May we be granted thy good government (khshathra) for ever and ever, O Wise Lord. May a good governor, whether it be a man or a woman, rule over us in the two worlds."5 The two worlds refer to the spiritual and material worlds. Armaiti means Devotion and Piety and came to be associated with the sustaining nurturing of Mother Earth. Haurvatat is Wholeness, Health, and Perfection. The seventh attribute Ameretat is Immortality.

Because God allows free choice, some spirits, who were originally created by the one God, chose badly and became Druj or the spirit of Deceit that can lead people astray. All thoughts, words, and actions have their consequences for good or bad. The Yazata or Adorable Ones give rewards to the good. The Guardian Spirit of humanity is called Sraosha, who along with Mithra and Rashnu, judges the souls after death. Sraosha also has a sister called Ashi Vanguhi, which means Holy Blessing or Good Reward of Deeds. She also protects married life and guards the chastity of women while abhorring the unfaithful wife. Mithra listens to appeals and represents contracts. He and Rashnu represent truth and light, and the sin of deceiving Mithra can even affect one's family.

For Zarathushtra fire was a symbol of the divine flame and pure truth that glows in the heart of every being. Xerxes, who found an ever-burning lamp in the temple of Athere Polias at Delos, spared the sanctuary out of respect for Zarathushtran fire worship. The Holy Spirit is the highest next to God, but it is opposed by the Evil Spirit and its offspring, the daevas, providing a constant challenge for humans to choose wisely. The human soul (urvan) and spirit (fravashi) use the faculties of knowing energy (khratu), wisdom and consideration (chisti), intelligence and perception (ushi), mind (manas), consciousness and memory (bodha), practical conscience (ahu), free will (kama), speech (vachas), and action (shyaothna) as well as the instrument of the living body (tanu). Above all these is daena, the gift of vision or revealed religion.

In addition to the strong mandates to tell the truth and be just, Zarathushtra also taught practical things like tilling the soil, raising grain, growing fruits, rooting out weeds, reclaiming wasteland, irrigating barren ground, and treating animals kindly, especially cows who serve farmers. He severely castigated the Turanian nomads, who after killing cattle as sacrifices went out on violent raids, destroying fields and produce.

After death the soul comes to the Bridge of the Separator, and all one's actions, words, and thoughts are evaluated in terms of good and evil. The good are able to cross the bridge into the heavenly world, but the bad fall down below. However, Gatha 49:11 makes it clear that Zarathushtra originally taught that such souls come back to Earth by reincarnation, though this concept was later dropped from the religion.

But among evil rulers, evil doers, evil speakers,
among evil egos, evil thinkers, and followers of Untruth,
Souls do come back by reason of dim insight;
truly they are dwellers in the Abode of Untruth.6

This makes sense because Zarathushtra taught that eventually all souls will be purified and brought out of hell when the world enters a new cycle free of all evil and misery, ever young and rejoicing with all souls, enjoying ineffable bliss and glory. This is also referred to as the Resurrection (Ristakhez), another idea that greatly influenced Judeo-Christian religion. The essence of the teachings of Zarathushtra can ultimately be summed up in three words, "BE LIKE GOD."

Through missionaries the religion of Zarathushtra spread rapidly throughout the Persian empire. Darius I showed in his own proclamations that survived in inscriptions how much he was influenced by Zarathushtra's emphasis on truth and justice. At Behistun Darius declared that Ahura Mazda helped him because he was not disloyal and did not follow the Lie. He did not do wrong but walked in justice. He wronged neither the weak nor the powerful. He was warned not to befriend those who do wrong but punish them. In the Naqshi-i Rustama inscription Darius praised Ahura Mazda, who created the Earth, sky, humans, human happiness, and who bestowed wisdom on him. He declared that the weak should not have wrong done to them by the powerful nor the reverse. He claimed that he controlled his anger by his thinking power. Darius also wrote that he rewards those who cooperate and punishes those who do harm according to the damage they have done.

Persian Empire to 500 BC

The civilization on the Iranian plateau is very ancient; copper was smelted there about 5500 BC, and Elam in the lowlands lagged only slightly behind Sumer in the development of hieroglyphic writing 5,000 years ago. However, the Elamites adopted the written language of Akkadian as the most universal language of the area for two millennia. An overlord in Susa ruled over vassal princes. The oldest written document of a treaty found so far was between the Akkadian Naram-Sin and an Elamite king about 43 centuries ago. Much of what is known about Elamite civilization comes to us from Sumerian, Babylonian and Assyrian records. The cities of Susa and Anshan were important links for trade and communication between Mesopotamia and the Harrapan culture of the Indus valley. Elam overthrew the Third dynasty of Ur in the 21st century BC; three centuries later they were conquered by Babylon's Hammurabi, but they were able to defeat his son.

In the 17th century BC when the Kassites began to take over Babylon, they also dominated Elam. Aryans came through Iran on their way to India bringing Indo-Iranian languages in the first half of the second millennium BC. Elam clashed with Assyria in the thirteenth century BC but reached its height of power in the twelfth century BC when Shutruk-nahhunte I overthrew the Kassites in Babylon, and his son took the statue of Marduk to Susa. King Shilkhak-Inshushinak invaded Assyria as far as Ashur and besieged Babylon, establishing a brief Elamite empire, which used the proto-Elamite script in its inscriptions. However, before the twelfth century was over, Babylon's Nebuchadrezzar I defeated the Elamites and took Marduk's statue back. For the next three centuries little is known of Elamite culture. Assyrian military campaigns against Elam in the eighth century BC increased in the seventh century, climaxing in 639 BC when Ashurbanipal's armies destroyed Susa and sowed the land with salt. Elam continued to exist for another century but never rose to power again.

The name Iran derives from the word "Aryan," and in the first half of the first millennium BC Iranian-speaking peoples moved gradually into the area of the Zagros mountains, the largest groups being the Medes and the Persians. More effective use of iron tools and irrigation from the ninth to the seventh centuries BC enabled the Iranians to farm more successfully and increase population in the plains. The Aryans brought horses and chariots, and their use of cavalry stimulated the Assyrians to do the same. The Assyrian King Tiglath-pileser III conquered and deported 65,000 Medes, replacing them on the plateau with Aramaeans. Urartu led by its King Rusas I tried to fight back against the Assyrians, and the semi-legendary first king of the Medes, Daiukku, was said to have united dozens of tribal chiefs to join the effort. According to Herodotus Daiukku had been made king because of his reputation for making fair judgments. Assyria's Sargon II defeated dozens of Median chiefs and settled 30,000 captured Israelis in the towns of the Medes in the late eighth century BC. From the northwest came Scythians and Cimmerians, who devastated Urartu so badly that Rusas committed suicide.

While Assyrian King Sennacherib was busy fighting Babylon, Elam, Egypt, and Judea, the Medes rallied around Khshathrita (called Phraortes by Herodotus), the son of Daiukku. With Cimmerians as allies and Persians as vassals they attacked Nineveh in 653 BC but were defeated; Khshathrita was killed. The Scythians took advantage of this opportunity by invading and subjugating the Medes for 28 years. Herodotus told how the next Median king Cyaxares killed the drunken Scythian chieftains at a banquet and went on to recover Median power. The prophet Nahum indicated that the growing hatred of the Assyrian nobility, priests, military, administrators, and merchants was going to bring about the downfall of that empire. Adopting the specialized military units that had been used by the Urartians and Assyrians for more than a century, the Medes marched west and took Arrapkha in 615 BC, surrounded Nineveh the next year, and then went on to take Ashur by storm. Nineveh fell in 612 BC with help from the Babylonians. The Assyrian empire was divided between the Medes and the Babylonians.

Babylon ruled over the fertile crescent while Media controlled the north and east. The Medes came into conflict with Lydia, the major power in Asia Minor, and fought with them for five years before an eclipse of the sun stimulated them to agree to a truce mediated by Babylonians in 585 BC. That same year Astyages succeeded as Median King and ruled for 35 years. Perhaps influenced by Zarathushtra, Astyages was reluctant to engage in continual conquest and thus alienated the ambitious aristocracy. A plot of the nobles was organized by Hypargus, and border tribes were incited to rebel by Oebares and others. After Persian King Cyrus II revolted, Babylonian King Nabonidus took back Harran in 553 BC while the Medes were defeating Cyrus, who was forced to retreat. Faced with the Persian revolt and the betrayal of the aristocracy, Astyages was captured; the royal city of Ecbatana had to submit to Cyrus, according to Ctesias because Cyrus threatened to torture his daughter Amytis, whom Cyrus later married.

Cyrus II inherited a Persian kingdom in the Median empire from his father Cambyses I in 559 BC. The mother of Cyrus was a daughter of the Median King Astyages. Herodotus, who delighted in relating stories of how oracles and dreams unexpectedly came true, wrote that because of a dream Astyages tried to have Cyrus murdered when he was a baby; but Hypargus did not want to kill him and left it to another who saved the child. When the boy was found to be acting like a king, he was discovered and returned to his true mother and father. This ironic story may have been fabricated to justify Cyrus for overthrowing his grandfather.

As a vassal king in Anshan, Cyrus ruled from his capital at Parsagarda and united seven Persian princes into a royal council under his leadership. Cyrus initiated diplomatic relations with Babylon’ King Nabonidus and was able to win over Hypargus and much of the Median aristocracy when he revolted against Astyages and took over the Median empire in 550 BC. Cyrus bypassed the fortresses of Babylon and marched north to capture the Assyrian cities of Arbela and Ashur, whose gods' statues had been taken to Babylon. Harran, the city sacred to Nabonidus, must also have fallen as Cyrus proceeded on to invade Cilicia, Cappadocia, and Armenia. In each of these cases Cyrus allowed native kings to retain power under his rule as he established satrapies.

Croesus, who held the regional power as king of Lydia, formed an alliance with Egypt's Amasis, Babylon's Nabonidus, and the Spartans who wanted to defend the Greek city states in Asia. Believing the Delphic oracle, which declared he would destroy a great empire, Croesus refused to be a king under Persian sovereignty. Croesus crossed the Halys River, which divided the empires, and began to devastate the Syrian lands in Cappadocia and enslave the inhabitants not driven out. The Median general Hypargus suggested placing camels in the front line which intimidated the Lydians' horses and enabled the Persians to win a victory and take Sardis after a two-week siege. Herodotus told how Croesus was saved from being burned to death by rain and a reprieve from Cyrus. The great empire Croesus destroyed was his own Lydian empire. Croesus blamed Apollo for his defeat, saying, "No one is fool enough to choose war instead of peace—in peace sons bury fathers, but in war fathers bury sons."7 Yet he had chosen war.

Since Miletus was the only Greek city state to surrender, the others were conquered by the Persian army led by Hypargus; then the islanders surrendered. Cyrus once again was able to use local disaffection for another easy victory over a Mesopotamian power, this time Babylon, winning over their general Gobryas, who took Uruk in 546 and Babylon in 539 BC, becoming satrap of the new province of Babirush. Nabonidus was severely criticized by Persian propaganda. The Akkadian gods were returned to their temples as Cyrus tried to legitimize his taking the kingship of Babylon. Business went on without much change under Persian rule, but the Jews were allowed to return to their homeland under generous conditions that allowed them to take the precious utensils that had been stolen from their temple a half century before by the Babylonians. Cyrus had been heralded as the Lord's anointed by Jewish prophets.

Cyrus also expanded the Persian empire greatly in the east to the edge of India; but if he was influenced by the new religion of Zarathushtra, it did not quell his desire for imperial conquest. Near the Jaxartes River he ran into the Massagetae led by Queen Tomyris, who sent him the following message:

King of the Medes, I advise you to abandon this enterprise,
for you cannot know if in the end it will do you any good.
Rule your own people, and try to bear the sight of me ruling mine.
But of course you will refuse my advice;
as the last thing you wish for is to live in peace.8

In 529 BC a bloody battle was fought, destroying most of the Persian army and killing Cyrus.

Eight years before his death Cyrus had made his son Cambyses King of Babylon while a second son Bardiya administered the eastern provinces. When Cambyses II succeeded his father, he had his brother Bardiya secretly assassinated and then invaded Egypt. With the advice of a defecting Greek general, Cambyses was able to get Bedouin help in crossing the desert. In a battle in which Greek mercenaries fought on both sides the Egyptian forces of Psamtik III fled to Memphis, which then fell to the Persians. From Egypt Cambyses tried to attack Carthage, but his Phoenician allies refused to fight against their own colony. According to Herodotus a venture against a Libyan oasis failed because of a sandstorm. Cambyses did manage to invade Nubia, but the Persians suffered great losses on their return. Greek accounts of Cambyses’s atrocities in Egypt probably reflect Egyptian resentment for the Persian domination they suffered until 402 BC. In 522 BC a man saying he was Bardiya rose up and tried to rule in Persia; Cambyses headed home but died on the way.

Darius, a prince and governor of Parthia who had commanded the ten thousand immortals against Egypt, led a group of seven Persian nobles, maintained control of the army, and put down the revolt, killing the false Bardiya two months after the death of Cambyses, though it took two years to put down the various revolts in the empire. Darius sent forces led by Otanes to help Syloson, the exiled brother of Polycrates, to retake the island of Samos. He appointed Zerubbabel governor of Judah, and when the order of Cyrus to restore the temple was discovered, Darius supported that project. In 519 BC Darius himself crossed the Caspian Sea and led the invasion of the eastern Scythians, and the following winter he marched to Egypt, where he sought wise men and reinstated the former Egyptian laws. He also ordered the digging of a canal 150 feet wide from the Nile River to the Gulf of Suez.

After seizing a great empire, Darius endeavored to judge it by establishing laws. The empire was divided into twenty provinces, each ruled by a Persian satrap and a commander-in-chief. The Persians were exempted from taxation, and India's gold provided nearly a third of the total annual tribute valued at 14,500 talents of silver. Inspectors called "the ears of the king" kept him informed and had their own armed forces. The laws were intended to keep the stronger from destroying the weak. Judges were appointed for life unless they were removed for miscarriage of justice. Darius claimed that he loved what is right and hated lies and what is wrong, that he was not angry but restrained those who were angry. Those who injured he punished. Those who did not speak the truth he did not trust, believing that anyone who lies destroys. He even withdrew a death sentence when he realized that he had violated his own law not to execute anyone for only one crime; but in weighing the man's services against his crime he ended up making him a governor. However, the death penalty was used for offenses against the state or the royal family, and mutilation was common for lesser crimes.

Darius encouraged trade and economic development in a number of ways. He standardized weights and measures and coinage on a bimetallic system of gold and silver that had been introduced by Croesus in Lydia. Darius created a network of roads including a royal highway from Susa to Sardis in Lydia. He commended the satrap of Asia Minor and Syria for transplanting fruit trees from beyond the Euphrates. Sesame spread to Egypt, and rice was planted in Mesopotamia. Generally large estates were worked by serfs and war-captured slaves who belonged to the land. Industry not only produced luxury goods made from precious metals, but also trade of useful tools, household products, and inexpensive clothing raised the living standards of many people. However, the empire did have to be supported, and there were taxes on ports, internal trade, and sales as well as on estates, fields, gardens, flocks, and mines. The wages of skilled workers, laborers, and even women and children were strictly regulated.

The Indus valley had been subdued and made into the satrapy of Hindush by 513 BC when Darius crossed the Bosphorus and led an attack against the European Scythians. With the vassal help of hundreds of Greek ships the Persians defeated the Getae and got the Thracians to submit. However, the Scythians destroyed their own land and while retreating harassed the Persian army with arrows from horsemen. King Darius fled back to Asia but left behind 800,000 soldiers led by Megabazus, satrap of Dascyleium, to continue the fighting. The next year Libya was conquered after a nine-month siege of Barca while Megabazus was taking the towns of Thrace one by one and deporting their warriors to Phrygia. Envoys demanded of Macedonia's Amyntas earth and water, the sign of submission, and he complied. Darius appointed his brother Artaphrenes satrap in Sardis to oversee the Greek cities of Ionia, and he replaced Megabazus with Otanes, who controlled the grain trade through the straits, cutting off the Scythians from Greek art treasures, Milesian business, and threatening the food supply of the European Greeks. Megabazus strengthened this blockade by capturing the islands of Lemnos and Imbros.

Persian-Greek Wars 500-404 BC

Neo-Babylonian Empire

In 500 BC the Greek Ionian cities revolted and burned Sardis. The war went on sporadically until the Persians defeated the Greek fleet off Miletus in 494 BC. Most of the men in Miletus were killed, and the women and children were enslaved. The next spring Chios, Lesbos, and Tenedos were taken along with mainland cities. Handsome boys were made eunuchs, and beautiful girls were put in the royal harem. Cities and temples were burned. Only the historian Hecataeus, who had opposed the revolt, was spared. The Ionian cities that had been allowed local autonomy before were now brought under imperial administration. Private wars between cities were no longer allowed but were arbitrated. A census was taken, and the taxation imposed on the weakened cities was burdensome. Darius appointed his son-in-law Mardonius, who according to Herodotus, ejected irresponsible despots from Ionian cities and set up democracies. The Persians took gold-rich Thasos even though it had not been hostile, after which much of the Persian fleet and over 20,000 men were destroyed by a storm off Athos. At the same time a Thracian tribe of Brygi inflicted heavy losses on the Persian army on land while wounding Mardonius, who eventually subdued them before retreating to Asia.

In 490 BC Darius sent envoys to Greek cities demanding the earth and water of submission. The trading island of Aegina cooperated, but Sparta and Athens were determined to resist. The Persian attack was led by Datis. When the people of Naxos fled to the interior, the city was burned. Eretrians were divided but decided only to defend themselves, not to attack. After the Persians had assaulted Eretria for six days, two democrats betrayed the city, hoping their party would gain power; but the Persians made the moral mistake of destroying the temples and enslaving the people. This stimulated the Athenians to attack the Persians on the plain of Marathon, defeating them so badly that the Persians fled for home.

In Egypt, where graft had been rampant, Darius instituted a new code of laws. Suffering under a heavy Persian garrison and severe taxes, Egyptians complained that the great building projects in Persepolis, Susa, and Ecbatana had been financed by Egyptian wealth. The Egyptian satrap Aryandes was executed for violating Persian coining laws, probably for melting down royal coins with the King's image and selling the bullion at an enormous profit, which was considered treason. Upset by the heavy taxation imposed to raise money for the war against Greece, in 486 BC a revolt erupted in Egypt and was soon followed by the death of Darius.

His oldest son by Queen Atossa, Xerxes, who had been administering Babylon as viceroy for twelve years, became king of the Persians and the Medes and spent his first royal year putting down the Egyptian revolt. Xerxes inflicted more severe treatment than his predecessors had there and also in Babylon after their satrap Zopyrus was killed in a revolt in 482 BC that was ruthlessly defeated. Not only were the Babylonian fortifications demolished and the temples destroyed, but the great, solid-gold statue of Marduk was removed and melted down. No longer could anyone take the hand of Bel to show their divine-approved rulership at the Babylonian New Year's festival. Babylon was incorporated into the Assyrian satrapy, which had to provide a thousand talents of silver and 500 boys for eunuchs. Even the name Babylonian was banned, and after this time they were known as Chaldeans.

Urged on by the war party led by Mardonius, Xerxes amassed a huge army formed from 46 nations and commanded by 29 Persian generals to launch an attack against Greece. Gold raiment marked the 10,000 immortals, elite Persian and Median soldiers allowed to bring their concubines and servants on the march. The navy of 1,200 ships was mostly furnished by the Phoenicians, Egyptians, Anatolians, and by Dorian, Aeolian, and Ionian Greeks. Half of the Persian imperial army was used—about 180,000 men. So confident were they that when they caught three men in Sardis spying for the Greek allies, they showed them the vast army and let them go make their report.

However, the Persians suffered losses when they met determined resistance from 300 Spartans at the Thermopylae pass, though eventually the Spartans were killed. The Thebans surrendered and were branded. The army of Xerxes then burned deserted Plataea and Thespiae before entering Athens and burning the acropolis. In the major naval battle at Salamis the imperial navy lost 200 ships, the Greek allies only 40. Xerxes reacted by executing the Phoenician captains, causing the Phoenicians and Egyptians to go home. Xerxes then went back to Sardis, leaving Mardonius in command. At Plataea both armies had been promised victory by seers if they stayed on the defensive. Mardonius refused to retire and use bribery. When the allies were withdrawing, which might have broken up the coalition, the Persians attacked, causing the desperate Greeks to fight. Mardonius himself entered the battle and was slain along with his guard of a thousand Persians. This and news of the Persian defeat at the island of Mycale caused the imperial army to withdraw from Europe.

Xerxes retired to his harem and used bribery and diplomacy to try to win over the Greeks, who formed the Delian league led by Athens which attacked Thrace in 476 BC, driving Persian imperialism out of Europe except at Doriscus. Xerxes in his romantic affairs aroused the jealousy of the Queen, who at the New Year's feast requested the woman be mutilated. The victim's family fled and was going to raise a revolt, but they were overtaken and killed. Another Achaemenid prince violated a virgin from a prominent family and was ordered to circumnavigate Africa; but when he returned without matching the Phoenician feat, he was impaled. In 466 BC two hundred Greek ships invaded Caria and shot arrows into besieged Phasaelis, persuading them to pay ten talents and join the war to liberate Greek cities. Xerxes sent a navy, but eighty ships were delayed at Cyprus and captured after the battle at the Eurymedon. The Persian threat against Europe had been replaced by Greek influence in Asia Minor.

In 465 BC Xerxes was assassinated in the royal bedchamber by a conspiracy led by Artabanus, Megabyzus, and the eunuch chamberlain Aspamitres. Artabanus was able to persuade 18-year-old Artaxerxes that his older brother Darius, who hated Xerxes for seducing his wife, had killed their father, causing Artaxerxes to murder his brother Darius. When Artabanus tried to get rid of Artaxerxes, he was betrayed by Megabyzus and killed after wounding the young King. The eunuch Aspamitres was tortured to death. Hystaspis, another brother of the new King, revolted in Bactria and was defeated by Artaxerxes, who then made sure that all his brothers were killed. Artaxerxes ruled the Persian empire for forty years, collecting annual taxes that totaled about 10,000 talents plus nearly half as much again from India. Little value from this ever went back to the satrapies that provided it except in payment to imperial soldiers from their countries. Taxes were so heavy that many had to borrow money at 40% interest until they were ruined and lost their land to the original owners, who were also being taxed. Many revolts resulted from this oppression.

In Egypt Inaros, a son of Psamtik of the Saite line, drove out the tax collectors and requested aid from Athens in 460 BC. The satrap Achaemenes was killed, and most of Memphis was taken. While this revolt continued, Ezra was given permission by Artaxerxes to take the written law of the Jews from Babylon to Jerusalem. Persian money aided Sparta in defeating Athens at Tanagra in 457 BC, and a pacified Judah allowed safe passage of the Persian army led by Syrian satrap Megabyzus on its way to Egypt, where it drove the Athenians out of Memphis, capturing 6,000 Greeks. Inaros and the Greeks were taken to Persia, and several years later the Queen ordered him and fifty Greeks executed. Some Greeks were still holding out in the Nile Delta when Cimon of Athens attacked Cyprus with 200 ships, but the Persians successfully resisted this and the ships that were sent to Egypt.

In 449 BC a peace treaty was made between Athens and Persia which confirmed what had been the situation before the long war. Persia acknowledged the autonomy of the Greek cities in Asia while the Athenians renounced attempts to liberate others there as long as the Persian King would recognize the autonomy of his vassal Greek cities and their low tribute amount from before the war. A demilitarized zone was proclaimed around the borders between the two empires. Athens also agreed not to support rebellions in Egypt and Libya. However, when the Queen had the Greeks and Inaros executed, Megabyzus, upset that his pledge had been violated, revolted in Syria. After redeeming his honor in two victories against the empire, Megabyzus agreed to return to loyalty provided he remain satrap. This Syrian revolt may have stimulated rebellious feelings in Jerusalem, where the walls were being rebuilt. Artaxerxes ordered this building stopped and the work destroyed; but later his cupbearer Nehemiah with the help of wine persuaded the King to allow him to go to Jerusalem to rebuild the city, and Nehemiah was even given an armed guard for his journey.

Herodotus recited his History in Athens in 445 BC, as Pericles made a thirty years' peace with Sparta and moved toward challenging the Persian empire by accepting a large present of gold and grain from Libyan rebel Psamtik and establishing tribute districts from cities in Caria, Ionia, Hellespont, and the islands. When democratic Miletus appealed to Athens after having been defeated by oligarchic Samos, Pericles in 441 BC sent an expedition to re-establish the democracy. The oligarchs driven out turned to Pissouthnes, the satrap of Sardis, who allowed 700 mercenaries to be hired to recover the island and capture the Greek garrison for the satrap. Samos, however, was taken over by the Athenians when Phoenician ships failed to defend it. Thus the peace treaty was broken. Persia regained some cities, and Pericles countered with imperial gains in the Black Sea area.

Megabyzus, who on a hunt had saved Artaxerxes from a charging lion, was exiled for killing an animal before his master; his son Zopyrus, aided by Athenians, assaulted Caunus and was killed. Megabyzus eventually was invited back to the King's table; but when he died, his wife Amytis, the King's sister, became the mistress of a Greek physician, who, when it was discovered, was buried alive for polluting the royal blood, Amytis dying the same day.

Jews complained of the Persian taxes, but Nehemiah, who as governor was supported by the imperial bureaucracy, blamed the rich Jews and said he loaned money without interest. Nehemiah's criticism of the wealthy probably led to his recall by Artaxerxes in 433 BC, but he returned to Jerusalem again to institute reforms such as forbidding commerce on the Sabbath. Meanwhile a plague spread from Ethiopia through Egypt and into Athens and the Persian empire that further oppressed the overtaxed. The Persian court sent the great beauty Thargelia and courtesans to gather information from lusty Athenian statesmen.

When Artaxerxes and his Queen died on the same day in 424 BC, Xerxes II became King but was killed a month and a half later while sleeping after heavy drinking at a festival. Secydianus, the assassin, was a son of Artaxerxes by a Babylonian concubine; but he was replaced by a different Babylonian concubine's son, who raised an army in Babylon and declared himself Darius II, promising Secydianus half the kingdom but half a year later causing his death; other conspirators in the assassination of the King were put to death or committed suicide. His sister and wife Parysatis became an influential queen especially on behalf of Cyrus, who was the next son born to them. Darius II began by renewing the treaty with the Athenians, but continued imperial taxation caused more fields to go out of cultivation and only be used for grazing.

In 413 BC Pissouthnes in Sardis revolted; Persian forces led by Tissaphernes compelled him to surrender, and Darius II ordered him killed. When Darius' own son Amorges rebelled in Caria with Athenian aid, Darius decided to help the Spartans fight the Athenians. Governing Sardis now, Tissaphernes started collecting taxes from the Greek cities and offered to support Spartan troops in Asia. Clazomenae, Teos, Lebedos, Ephesus, Phocaea, and Cyrene accepted Persian garrisons and paid their owed tribute. Persia signed a treaty with Sparta through Tissaphernes, agreeing to wage war together against Athens. However, in Sparta politicians refused to ratify a treaty that recognized Persian territory that had belonged to ancestors of the Persian King. When the Spartan ambassador Lichas demanded this change in 411 BC, Tissaphernes left in a rage. Meanwhile the Athenian Alcibiades, who had gone over to the Spartan side, persuaded Tissaphernes to delay most payments to the Spartans because a triumphant Sparta would challenge Persian imperialism. In a third treaty Sparta acknowledged Persian taxes in Asia while excluding them from Europe and the islands, and Tissaphernes agreed to pay for Spartan ships. Miletus and Cnidus reacted to this Spartan abandonment by driving the Persian garrisons out.

Darius II had to contend with a revolt by the Medes which he put down and palace intrigues that included a eunuch who tried to make himself king but failed. In Egypt a revolt was motivated by the desire to destroy the Jewish temple at Elephantine that was offensive because of its animal sacrifices. In 409 BC the Athenians invaded Asia and burned the grain in Lydia. The Queen got her 16-year-old son Cyrus appointed commander of the Persian forces in Asia Minor, and he began paying Sparta what had been promised; but he kept the Spartan general Callicratidas waiting two days while he drank. Cyrus also had two sons of the King's sister executed for showing their hands in his presence. Recalled to his ill father, Cyrus turned his money over to Lysander; this enabled the Spartans to win the battle at Aegospotami and cut off grain supplies from Russia, starving Athens into surrender in 404 BC.

Persian-Greek Wars 404-323 BC

By the time Darius II had died in 404 BC, Egypt had revolted and was lost to the Persian empire. Artaxerxes II began his rule by cruelly executing Udiastes for having assassinated Teriteuchmes. Cyrus was caught plotting to murder the new King at his coronation; but their mother pleaded for her favorite, and Cyrus was allowed to return to his satrapy. Cyrus was able to win over the Ionian cities abandoned by the Spartans except for Miletus, which was held by Tissaphernes after they banished their aristocrats. The exiles were received by Pharnabazus, giving Cyrus a reason to gather an army that included 13,000 Greek mercenaries to besiege Miletus. As Cyrus and his army headed east, the mercenaries demanded more money. At Cunaxa near Babylon Cyrus met the Persian army that might otherwise have been used to reconquer Egypt. Cyrus wounded Artaxerxes but was then killed. The next year the Queen-mother Parysatis poisoned Queen Stateira and was banished to her native Babylon, but later the forgiving Artaxerxes recalled his mother.

Tissaphernes succeeded Cyrus as margrave of Anatolia, but ungrateful Sparta, roused by accounts of the ten thousand mercenaries' escape from Persia, sent Thibron to liberate Asian Greek cities. He incorporated into his army the mercenaries, who had made it to the Black Sea after their generals were killed. Accused of allowing his troops to plunder their allies, Thibron was replaced by Dercylidas, who made a truce with Tissaphernes and attacked Pharnabazus. He was supported by the Dardanian widow Mania and her Greek mercenaries until she was murdered by her son-in-law Meidias. He allied himself with Spartan Dercylidas and used Mania's treasure to pay 8,000 soldiers for a year. The Spartan army plundered Bithynia, and agreeing to another truce, Pharnabazus returned to the King to urge a naval war. Five hundred ships were to be built at Cyprus and put under the command of Athenian Admiral Conon and the satrap.

The Spartans marched into Caria, but Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus joined together to defend it and then attacked Ionia; then these two satraps and Dercylidas agreed to a truce for a year. In 396 BC Spartan King Agesilaus himself arrived, and after a three-month truce which enabled Tissaphernes to send for reinforcements, he was ordered to leave Asia. With Caria defended, Agesilaus invaded Phrygia and captured towns of Pharnabazus, whose attacks were avoided by using captives as screens. While Pharnabazus sent Persian money to stir up rebellion against Sparta in Europe, Agesilaus defeated Tissaphernes and captured their camels, the Greeks plundering much unprotected land. Forgiven and plotting once again, Parysatis arranged to have Tithraustes sent to murder Tissaphernes, which was accomplished by Ariaios and his men.

Since Agesilaus would not leave Asia without instructions from home, Tithraustes gave him 30 talents to invade Pharnabazus' satrapy of Hellespontine Phrygia again. Pharnabazus reacted by confiscating the property of Tissaphernes and giving 220 talents to the Athenian Conon. Tithraustes provided another 700 talents to his generals Ariaios and Pasiphernes for diplomatic maneuvering. By these bribes and diplomatic machinations the Greek cities of Asia were garrisoned by Persian money. Conon had to fight off mercenaries at Cyprus and then went to the winter palace at Babylon to get funds from Artaxerxes II. After ravaging Phrygia, Agesilaus was recalled to Sparta; he said it was because of the King's ten thousand golden archers, by which he meant the gold coins used for diplomacy. Obviously we know more about this west side of the Persian empire and these long wars because of Greek sources; yet the lack of business documents in this period may be because of the devastation and looting in these wars which accomplished little except destruction.

In 394 BC the Persian navy, manned by Phoenicians and Greeks, defeated the Spartan navy off Cnidus. The old alliance of Persia and Athens established democracies in numerous Asian cities under the auspices of the Persian empire. Only Abydos and Sestos resisted. The Persians and Athenians even ravaged European Laconia and established a Persian garrison on the island of Cythera, threatening the Peloponnese. The allies at Corinth were given money, and the walls of Athens were rebuilt by Conon. However, the new satrap of Sardis from Armenia, Tiribazus, now feared the Athenian Empire and had Conon imprisoned and secretly gave money to Antalcidas to build up the Spartan navy. At a peace conference in Sparta, representatives of Athens, Thebes, Corinth, and Argos agreed on a treaty, but Athens rejected it by denouncing and banishing their delegates. At the same time Tiribazus was replaced by Struthas as satrap of Ionia, and he sided with Athens against Sparta. Thibron returned from Ephesus and resumed the war; but he was slain by Struthas at a discus game, and his army was devastated by the Persian cavalry. However, Thibron's successor Diphridas held some cities loyal to Sparta and got money for mercenaries by ransoming the daughter of Struthas and her husband Tigranes.

In all this confusion many rulers showed their independence by issuing coins, including Euagoras of Cyprus, Milkyaton of Citium, Hecatomnus of Caria, and Autophradates of Lycia. Autophradates and Hecatomnus were ordered to put down the rebellion of Euagoras while the Spartan governor of Abydos regained Aeolian cities from Pharnabazus. Athenians assisted Euagoras and replaced Milkyaton and his coins. Athens even allied itself with Egypt, stimulating Artaxerxes to change sides again and to replace both Autophradates and Struthas with the pro-Spartan Tiribazus. Sparta responded by sending Antalcidas from Ephesus to Susa to meet the King. Then Tiribazus and Antalcidas used Spartan and Syracusan fleets to destroy the Athenians guarding the Hellespont, threatening Athens with the same starvation that ended the Peloponnesian War seventeen years before. Delegates soon gathered at Sardis in 386 BC and agreed to the King's Peace named after Antalcidas in which Persia retained the cities in Asia and the islands of Clazomenae and Cyprus, except that Lemnos, Lesbos, and Scyros would belong to Athens as they had before. The Persian empire had lost Egypt, but they had retained Asia.

Imperial taxation was still oppressive, stimulating many revolts and uprisings by workers that were often put down by local tyrants while newly minted coins indicated a growing wealthy class and economic development. Barred by the peace treaty from helping Cyprus, Athenian mercenaries led by Chabrias went to defend Egypt, which thus was able to resist for three years and turn away the long delayed Persian invasion to regain Egypt while Euagoras of Cyprus allied himself with Egypt and invaded Cilicia and Phoenicia, capturing Tyre. The Persian army led by Aroandas (Orontes) regained Cilicia and invaded Cyprus to restore Milkyaton at Citium. With the help of pirates, Euagoras tried to cut off their food, causing a mutiny by the Ionian mercenaries which was put down; but after losing a naval battle Euagoras had to submit, asking to be treated as a king, which was denied in 380 BC, the same year Isocrates tried and failed to raise a crusade against the Persians at the Olympic games.

When Pharnabazus complained that Chabrias' mercenary activity in Egypt violated the treaty, Athens recalled him on pain of death. Though Tiribazus was winning over mercenaries with money, the rivalry of Aroandas caused Artaxerxes II to have Tiribazus arrested; but Aroandas had to accept the terms of Euagoras at Cyprus that Tiribazus had rejected. The Cadusian revolt was so nearby that Artaxerxes took the field himself; after much suffering, a peace was made, and the Persian King only escaped on foot. Out of this frustration Artaxerxes had several nobles executed for disloyalty. With Cyprus settled, Pharnabazus prepared to invade Egypt again and enlisted Athenian General Iphicrates to lead the Greek mercenaries. In Asia Bithynia was independent, and Hecatomnus passed on his rulership of Caria to his son Mausolus in 377 BC. Three years later Artaxerxes imposed another treaty on the Greeks and with the younger Dionysius of Syracuse.

By 373 BC Pharnabazus had gathered 300 triremes, 12,000 Greeks, and countless Persians and easterners to invade Egypt. They landed on the Delta; but unable to take Memphis, they had to retreat from the flooding Nile to Asia. In 371 BC Thebes won a big victory over Sparta at Leuctra and refused to accept the latest King's Peace. A year later Jason of Pherae, who united Thessaly and aimed at conquering Persia, was assassinated. The King's money was also used to contribute to the famed oracle at Delphi, but Thebes still refused to accept the imperial terms.

Within the Persian empire revolts led by Datames and Ariobarzanes were breaking out. Needing the loyalty of Carian satrap Mausolus, Artaxerxes II punished envoys who had complained about Mausolus. When Aroandas felt he had been demoted from Armenia to Mysia, he accepted the leadership of the coalition of revolting satraps. Ordered to send tribute, Mausolus merely collected more money for himself. Aroandas' presence in Syria stimulated more rebellions there and among Lycians, Pisidians, Pamphylians, and Cilicians; even Autophradates joined him, and Artabazus was imprisoned. The Persian empire had lost half its revenues.

Djedhor, the new king of Egypt in 361 BC, known to the Greeks as Tachos, seized on this opportunity, and with the help of rivals Agesilaus of Sparta and Chabrias of Athens he joined the revolted satraps and invaded Palestine and Phoenicia. However, his brother in Egypt used resentment against taxes to put forth as king of Egypt his son Nekht-har-hebi, who had joined the satrap revolt in Syria. All kinds of rebellions were breaking out, and Nekht-har-hebi was forced by the feudal chiefs to abandon Asian conquest and return to Egypt, where he was saved from a siege by Agesilaus; but when his uncle Tachos was captured by the Persian prince Ochus and died on his return to Egypt to be a vassal king for Artaxerxes, Nekht-har-hebi ended up ruling Egypt from 359 to 340 BC. All this enabled the army of Artaxerxes to slowly advance and cross the Euphrates, and Aroandes, abandoned by the Egyptians, returned to loyalty and surrendered the other rebels with him. Autophradates also freed Artabazus and came to terms with the empire. Then Aroandes and Artabazus fought the mercenaries, and Datames was eventually murdered at a conference of the revolting satraps by Mithridates, who had also betrayed his own father Ariobarzanes to crucifixion.

Darius, the oldest son of Artaxerxes II by Queen Stateira, was executed for plotting with fifty of the King's sons by concubines to kill their father. Ochus, the youngest son of the queen, persuaded his only other brother of the queen to take poison, because he thought his father was angry at him. Arsames, another son, beloved by Artaxerxes for his wisdom, was also murdered, and the King soon died of grief in 359 BC after ruling the Persian empire for 45 years. Ochus became Artaxerxes III and ruthlessly had his relatives killed regardless of age or sex. He ordered the satraps in Asia Minor to get rid of their mercenaries, causing Artabazus to revolt and appeal to Athens when an army of 20,000 was raised against him in Phrygia. In 356 BC Mausolus organized a confederacy with Rhodes, Chios, Cos, Erythrae, and Byzantium, his coins showing himself as a Heraclean leader. Artabazus got 5,000 mercenaries from Thebes, but sensing treachery from agents bribed by the King, he fled to Philip in Macedonia. Aroandes, who had joined his revolt, held out for a while in Lydia but eventually came to terms again. Mausolus, whose magnificent funeral sculptures in Halicarnassus his wealth financed, coined the word "mausoleum" and died in 353 BC.

Ochus spent a year campaigning in Egypt, but once again the Persian army had to retire in 350 BC. However, seven years later as the captives taken at Sidon entered Babylon and Susa, Egypt finally fell to the Persian reconquest that was supported by 10,000 Greek mercenaries. Nekht-har-hebi retreated to Ethiopia and claimed to rule from there. The Greeks and Persians fought over the spoils, and Ochus carried off the leading Egyptians to Persia.

In 338 BC while Philip of Macedonia was on his way to defeating the Athenians and Thebans at Charoneia, Ochus was poisoned by his physician by order of the eunuch Bagoas. Arses, the son of Ochus, became king and refused to pay reparations to Philip for Persia's having helped Perinthus. So Philip led a Greek crusade to liberate all the Greek cities under Persian domination. Arses tried to poison Bagoas but was poisoned himself, and all his children were killed. Bagoas found a 45-year-old Achaemenid noble remaining he made Darius III but, trying to poison him too, had at last to drink his own brew.

Philip's assassination was blamed on the King of Persia by his son Alexander. Macedonian troops already in Asia were defeated by the Persian fleet at Magnesia, and Darius III was able to put down a revolt in Egypt. In 334 BC Alexander's army crossed the Hellespont into Asia at the same place Xerxes' army had come the other way 146 years before. The Greeks won a narrow victory over the Persian army at Granicus. Persians who surrendered were sent home, but Alexander had most of the captured Greek mercenaries slaughtered, sending the rest to Macedonia as slaves. Halicarnassus was burned during a siege. Alexander replaced the Persian satrap, general, and treasurer of each conquered province with Macedonians. At Issus the Greeks met the army of Darius, who fled. Parmenio then took Damascus, the Persian baggage train, and the rest of the royal family. The Phoenician cities surrendered to the Greeks except Tyre, which was destroyed after a seven-month siege. After taking Gaza, where he was wounded, Alexander was welcomed by the Egyptians glad to be rid of the hated Persians.

Offered half the empire by Darius III, Alexander refused and crossed the Euphrates and Tigris rivers unopposed. The two armies met again at Gaugamela in 331 BC, and once again Darius deserted his army. Alexander entered Babylon and ordered the temple of Bel that had been destroyed by Xerxes rebuilt. The major capital of Susa surrendered to the Greeks without resisting, and the immense treasure accumulated by the Persian empire was found in the palace. Alexander began to train Persians by his new military methods. More treasure was found at the other main capital at Persepolis, where the men were killed, the women were enslaved, and the city was burned, perhaps in revenge for the burning of Athens in 480 BC. Alexander then went east in pursuit of the viceroy of Bactria who had imprisoned Darius. By 330 BC Darius was dead, and Alexander ruled over his former empire. Uncooperative satraps were punished, and others were retained by Alexander, who founded numerous cities named after himself. Two years were spent in putting down the resistance of the Sogdians in the north. Alexander went as far as India before his troops demanded to return; by 324 BC they were back in Susa.

Alexander married the daughter of Darius III and had 10,000 of his men marry Persian girls, hoping to breed an army for his new empire. He was already treating Persians equally with Greeks and using them in his army, and the Persian nobility was being educated by Greek teachers. The Persian treasure was coined as money and distributed. Warned that if he entered Babylon he would die, Alexander finally did and succumbed to an illness or was poisoned in 323 BC. The immense empire was divided and ruled by the Greek generals of the armies that had conquered it. The Persian empire was no more, and the Hellenistic era had begun.

Alexander married the daughter of Darius III and had 10,000 of his men marry Persian girls, hoping to breed an army for his new empire. He was already treating Persians equally with Greeks and using them in his army, and the Persian nobility was being educated by Greek teachers. The Persian treasure was coined as money and distributed. Warned that if he entered Babylon he would die, Alexander finally did and succumbed to an illness in 323 BC. The immense empire was divided and ruled by the Greek generals of the armies who had conquered it. The Persian empire was no more, and the Hellenistic era had begun. After the Macedonian conquest of the Persian empire and Alexander’s death in 323 BC, Hellenistic culture dominated this region under the Seleucid empire and Egypt under the Ptolemies. Later Roman imperialism impinged on the western part of the Mideast. Much information on that region during this period can be found in Volume 4 Greece and Rome to 30 BC in the chapter on the “Hellenistic Era” and in Volume 5 Roman Empire 30 BC to 610.

Parthian Empire

Persian historians recorded that the Arsacid dynasty of Parthia was founded by a descendant of Persian kings called Ashk or Arsaces in 247 BC. His revolt began in the north, and by 238 BC he controlled the kingdom called Parthia, invading and annexing Hyrcania. When Seleucus II invaded Media, Arsaces retreated to the territory between the Oxus and the Jaxartes, where he was protected by nomadic Aspasiacae. He established Dara (Dareium) as the Parthian capital. He was succeeded by his son Arsaces II in 217 or 214 BC. He extended Parthian territory by defeating the Seleucid Achaeus and taking the Median capital at Ecbatana; but he fled from there when Antiochus III invaded Armenia and Media in 209 BC. Arsaces II and the Parthians used guerrilla tactics; but the Seleucids managed to preserve water systems and seized Hecatompylus. Arsaces II agreed to an alliance with Antiochus III, who ventured further east into Bactria and India in imitation of Alexander’s invasions. In 191 BC Arsaces II was succeeded by his son Phriapites (Priapatius), and about 176 BC his son Phraates I became King of Parthia. He took over the Mardi and built Charax in Media Rhagiana. When the Seleucids were defeated by the Romans at the battle of Magnesia in 190 BC, they lost control of Asia Minor, Armenia, and much of Iran. In Armenia the general Artashes I (r. 189-160 BC) founded the Artashesian dynasty that lasted two centuries.

In 171 BC Phraates was succeeded by his brother Mithridates I, who was friendly to Greeks and receptive of Hellenistic culture. He expanded the Parthian empire by taking over Mesopotamia, including Elymais and Persis. When the Bactrians invaded to the east beyond the Hindu Kush, Mithridates took the opportunity to encroach on their western territory. After the Seleucid Timarchus died in 160 BC, Mithridates invaded Media and suppressed a revolt in Hyrcania. When the Bactrian King Eucratidas was murdered by his son in 148 BC, the Parthian King was able to take over Ecbatana in Bactria. Mithridates invaded Babylonia and took over Seleucia in 141 BC; after proposing peace, he treacherously attacked and captured Seleucid King Demetrius II the next year. Demetrius escaped his luxurious captivity at Hyrcania but was recaptured by Phraates II, who succeeded his father Mithridates about 138 BC. Phraates released Demetrius before attacking and defeating the Seleucid Antiochus VII Sidetes near Ecbatana in 129 BC. The Parthian empire had replaced the Seleucids but now had to face the Seleucids’ nemesis Rome.

During the early Han dynasty of China in the second century BC, the northern Huns called Xiongnu about 163 BC drove the Yuezhi nomads west into the Saka Scythians, who consequently invaded the Parthians. Apparently defections by Greeks resulted in Parthian defeats by the nomads. Artabanes II, who succeeded Phraates II in 127 BC was killed by the Saka three years later. Eventually the Saka were assimilated into the eastern portion of the Parthian empire. Mithridates II (r. 124-88 BC) was the first monarch this far west to develop communication by making a trade treaty with China in 115 BC. This Parthian King also suppressed a revolt by his Babylonian viceroy Himerus. Armenia under Artavazd I (r. 160-115 BC) also became independent of the Seleucids. He was succeeded by his son Tigran I (r. 115-95). Parthians led by Mithridates II invaded Armenia and put Tigran II on that throne in 95 BC. Tigran later took back ceded regions and some Parthian territory. After Romans took over Cilicia in 102 BC, Lucius Sulla invaded to the Euphrates River but rejected an alliance proposed by a Parthian ambassador in 92 BC. Mithridates II yielded to the Roman advance.

While Rome was fighting a series of wars against King Mithridates VI (r. 120-63 BC) of Pontus, Parthia was divided by a civil war with Gotarzes (r. 95-87 BC) ruling in the east and Orodes I (r. 90-77 BC) governing in the west. These conflicts enabled Armenia under Tigran II (r. 95-55 BC) to take upper Mesopotamia and Media Atropatene from the Parthians, and by 74 BC he ruled over what had been the Seleucid empire. In 77 BC eighty-year-old Sinatruces, brother of Mithridates II, returned from exile among the Scythians to restore order to Parthia. He was succeeded by his son Phraates III in 70 BC.

Romans led by Lucullus invaded Armenia in 69 BC, but his soldiers refused to advance into the Ararat mountains. Pompey replaced Lucullus and negotiated with Parthia’s Phraates III, granting him Corduene and Adiabene in exchange for Parthia as an ally against Armenia, which had taken them; but when Pompey later expelled the Parthians from these two provinces and gave them back to Armenia, the Parthians resented the betrayal. Two years after Pompey left, Phraates was assassinated by his two sons in 57 BC. Orodes II deposed his elder brother Mithridates III for cruelty, assigning him to govern Media Magna; but the latter revolted and fled to Gabinius, the Roman governor of Syria. However, Gabinius was lured into invading Egypt by an enormous amount of money, and Mithridates, supported by Seleucia, fled to Babylon, where he was captured and executed by Orodes.

In 55 BC Marcus Licinius Crassus led a Roman invasion across the Euphrates before returning to Syria for the winter. Armenian King Artavazd II (r. 55-35 BC) offered him 16,000 cavalry and 30,000 infantry against the Parthians. Crassus already had seven legions with 42,000 men. An Arab shaikh from Osrhoene, spying for Orodes II, persuaded Crassus to seek booty across the open steppe in 53 BC. Orodes also managed to keep the feared Armenian cavalry out by making a peace treaty with Artavazd. Orodes sent his Surena (commander-in-chief), who used the Parthian tactics of retreating and shooting arrows at the Romans, annihilating a Roman detachment led by Publius, the son of Crassus. At Carrhae the Surena offered a truce but then treacherously killed Crassus and half his men. About 10,000 Romans escaped, but an equal number were captured and settled at Margiana.

Two years later, Pacorus, son of Orodes, led a Parthian invasion of Syria, which was defended by the Cassius who later assassinated Julius Caesar. After Cassius retreated to Antioch, Pacorus began plotting against his father, who found out about it and recalled him. During Rome’s civil war between Caesar and Pompey, the latter asked for help from the Parthians but rejected it when they demanded Syria. After Caesar’s assassination, Parthians led by Bassus supported Cassius at Philippi in 42 BC, the only time the Parthians ever fought in Europe. Two years later Orodes sent forgiven Pacorus with the Roman general Labienus to invade Syria, where they took Apamea and Antioch, defeating Decidius Saxa. Tyre resisted successfully, and in Palestine the bribe of a thousand talents and 500 Jewish women enabled Antigonus to buy Parthian help that enabled him to overcome his rival uncle Hyrcanus and rule for three years. Meanwhile Labienus killed Decidius Saxa in a second battle and took over southern Asia Minor.

In 39 BC Mark Antony sent Publius Ventidius to recover Syria, and his Roman legions killed Labienus and drove Pacorus back across the Euphrates. The next year Pacorus came back across the river but was defeated and killed. Aging Orodes abdicated and let his son Phraates IV succeed him; but he had his many brothers and complaining father murdered in 37 BC. This reign of terror discouraged nobles, and the General Monaeses told Antony this was an opportunity. Antony asked for the Roman standards and prisoners taken from Crassus; but Phraates pardoned Monaeses while Antony made a secret treaty with Armenia’s Artavazd II. The latter persuaded Antony to attack lucrative Praaspa, the capital of Media Atropatene. However, Antony’s extended forces were divided, and the Parthians defeated those led by Statianus, killing 10,000 Romans and forcing Antony to make a difficult retreat. Media’s King quarreled and rebelled against Phraates, in 34 BC, offering an alliance to Antony, who then captured Artavazd with a stratagem. Antony returned the next year to help the Media King take territory from Armenia.

After Antony went back to struggle against Octavian, Parthia’s Phraates IV made an alliance with Artashes II (r. 30-20 BC), son of Artavazd, and captured the Roman garrisons in Armenia so that it could become independent of Rome, though under Parthian influence. Also in 33 BC the Parthian Tiridates revolted and was crowned king, ruling Parthia for three years before Phraates returned with a force of nomads. Tiridates fled with a son of Phraates, who became a hostage in the court of Octavian. Seven years later Emperor Augustus (Octavian) began negotiating to get back the Roman standards, which were regained when Augustus visited the region in 20 BC.

Parthia was ruled by a hereditary monarchy, and the King was crowned by the hereditary military commander called the Surena. Many followed a nomadic life on horses, and there was no standing army beside the royal guard. Polygamy was common, and women were subordinate. Little is known about Parthian culture because they left behind little writing. They followed the Zoroastrian religion primarily, and the Magi priests were the most educated and influential. In the cult of Mithras this Aryan god was created by the supreme God Ahura Mazda as Light to overcome evil and govern the world in prosperity. A series of seven initiations corresponding to the five planets, sun, and moon became very popular among soldiers, merchants, and slaves. The cult was introduced in Rome by Cilician pirates captured by Pompey and was a major rival to early Christianity. However, monotheism and the growing popularity and sophistication of the Christian movement eventually overcame Mithraism, which passed on the date of the Christmas holiday from the celebration of Mithras’s birthday.

Armenia was often caught in the struggle between the Parthian and Roman empires. In 2 BC Phraatakes with help from his mother Musa, who was a slave given Phraates IV by Augustus, murdered his father Phraates IV. In the year 1 CE Phraatakes, also known as Phraates V, made a treaty with Rome and agreed to withdraw from Armenia. Reaction to the regicide caused Phraatakes to be killed, and the Arsacid Orodes III was elected king. Orodes was killed also, and Phraatakes’ son Vonones returned from Rome. His foreign ways were resented, and Artabanus II, the Arsacid King of Media Atropatene, revolted and drove out Vonones. In 16 CE Vonones claimed the throne of Armenia; but threatened by a war with Parthia, he fled to Roman protection in Syria. Emperor Tiberius sent his nephew Germanicus, who chose Artashes to rule Armenia.

When Artashes died in 34 CE, Artabanus II was able to put his oldest son Arsaces on the throne of Armenia. Tiberius sent his nominees for the Armenian kingship, but Iberian king Pharasmanes had Arsaces assassinated in 35 and took the Armenian crown himself, defeating an invading Parthian army. When Rome’s governor of Syria, Vitellius, marched toward the Euphrates, Artabanus retreated from Armenia and fled to Hyrcania, awaiting the judgment of the Parthian nobles. Although Tiridates II was crowned in Ctesiphon by the Surena, he was unpopular and fled when Artabanus returned. Artabanus met with Vetellius and made peace with Rome by promising to leave Armenia alone. Nobles resented this so much that they exiled Artabanus again. Jews were also massacred during his reign. After his death his sons Vardanes and Gotarzes II struggled for the throne in 39 CE until the former was assassinated in 45. Some nobles asked Rome to send Meherdates, son of Vonones, but he was defeated by Gotarzes. Anti-Hellenic sentiment in Parthia caused Seleucia to revolt and become independent for several years.

When Gotarzes II died in 51 CE, Vonones II was soon replaced by his son or brother Vologeses I, who ruled until 78, except for the interval 55-58 when his son Vardanes II took over. Pharasmanes of Iberia, brother of Armenian king Mithridates, persuaded his son Rhadamistus to assassinate his uncle Mithridates to take that throne. So Vologeses in 51 invaded Armenia to make his brother Tiridates king. In 55 Rome’s Nero sent his top general Corbulo; Vologeses submitted and gave hostages to Rome because he was preoccupied with the rebellion by his son Vardanes. After his son’s revolt was crushed, Vologeses took on Corbulo but was weakened by a revolt in Hyrcania. Tiridates lost Artaxata in 58 and Tigranocerta two years later. Rome put the Cappadocian prince Tigranes on the throne of Armenia; but Vologeses was able to defeat Nero’s favorite Lucius Paetus, who fled. Corbulo marched to Armenia and in 63 made a treaty giving the Armenian throne to Tiridates, who was crowned in Rome by Nero in 66. This treaty lasted half a century. During the reign of Vologeses I the Avesta scripture for the Zoroastrian religion was compiled. The Roman historian Pliny described the Parthian empire as having eleven kingdoms in the north and seven in the south.

The nomadic Alans in alliance with the Hyrcanians overran the Parthian empire in 75 CE. Vologeses II ruled for only one year and was succeeded by Pacorus II (r. 78-93), though his rule in Persia was taken over by Artabanus III for a year in 80. The last coin Pacorus issued was minted in 96, and Vologeses II issued a coin nine years later. Before he died about 100, Pacorus made his son Axidares king of Armenia. Vologeses III (r. 105-47) faced rebellions and a major challenge from Osroes I (r. 109-28). In 115 Roman Emperor Trajan marched east to Armenia and captured Nisibis. After spending the winter in Antioch, the next year his Roman legions invaded Adiabene, crossed the Tigris but could not capture Hatra. Trajan died on his way home in 117. Osroes drove the remaining Romans out of the capital of Ctesiphon. Hadrian became Emperor and withdrew Roman troops from the regions east of the Euphrates River, allowing the Roman and Parthian empires to co-exist in peace. Vologeses III paid off invading Alans in 133. Vologeses IV (r. 147-91) invaded west of the Euphrates in 161. The counter-attack the next year was led by Co-emperor Lucius Verus, and the Parthians were driven back across the Euphrates. Statius Priscus captured Artaxata in Armenia, and the Romans took Babylon, Seleucia, and Ctesiphon before invading Media. However, in Atropatene (Azerbaijan) a devastating plague caused the Romans to withdraw.

Parthian King Vologeses V (r. 191-207) intervened in a Roman succession struggle in support of Pescennius Niger’s revolt in 195 by invading Mesopotamia; but Roman Emperor Septimius Severus was successful and subjugated Adiabene, capturing Ctesiphon and Seleucia in 198. The Romans again could not take Hatra but annexed Adiabene. After Vologeses V died, his sons Vologeses VI (r. 207-22) and Artabanus IV (r. 213-24) fought a civil war, dividing and ending the Parthian empire. Vologeses VI ruled Iraq from Ctesiphon, and Artabanus IV was sovereign over Iran. Roman Emperor Carcalla attacked Artabanus in the west in 216, but his successor Macrinus was defeated the next year near Nisibis and paid the Parthians 200 million sesterces.

During the Parthian and Sasanian empires Persian society primarily practiced the Zoroastrian religion and had four classes. Highest were the priests and judges; second was the military; third were the literate bureaucrats; and fourth were the workers that included farmers, artisans, and merchants. Above these was the royal family, and below the four classes were non-citizen aliens and slaves; the law did not recognize a slave as having a family. Sacred slaves were those from any class who dedicated themselves to work in the Zoroastrian temples. Socially extended families were important as agnatic groups. Persians were patriarchal, and the wealthy often had harems.

Sasanian Persia 224-531

Mani and Manichaeism

Mani was born in Babylonia on April 14, 216 after Caracalla overthrew Vologeses VI and made his brother Artabanus IV (r. 213-24) the last Parthian king. When Mani was twelve, he was told in a vision to withdraw from a baptizing sect associated with Elkhasai. This revelation coincided with Ardashir’s overcoming the Parthians and reviving the Persian empire with the Sasanian dynasty. Near his 24th birthday Mani was told by his higher self or angelic teacher to proclaim himself a prophet. Two years later Shapur I became the King of Persia. Mani’s mission took him to Ctesiphon and then into western India for two years. There he wrote a book diplomatically praising Shapur. Hindus found his teaching of celibacy too strict; but in 243 he had more success in Khurasan, where he converted Governor Feroz, who told his brother, King Shapur, that Mani had no political ambitions but wanted to unify the people of the empire with this universal religion.

After Mani spent a year in a cave making paintings, Shapur invited the prophet to his court in 245. Mani requested and received royal letters to all the Persian governors telling them not to hinder his mission. For the next ten years Mani was able to spread his teachings throughout the Persian empire, establishing many churches and sending out disciples. Adda and Pateg carried the teachings of Mani to Egypt. When people made fun of an ugly saint, Mani pointed out that the soul is beautiful and is to be rescued from the material body.

In 255 Zoroastrian priests led by Karter persuaded Shapur to break with Mani and promote their religion in the empire, causing Mani to go into exile. In the next eighteen years the prophet returned to Khurasan and traveled in central Asia as far as western China, returning by way of Tibet and Kashmir. In 272 Shapur died and was succeeded by his son Hormizd I, Governor of Khurasan, who supported the Manichaeans; but he died after reigning one year. His younger brother Bahram loved pleasure and was cruel. He was persuaded by the magi to end toleration of heresies and foreign cults in order to promote the orthodox Sassanid religion. Mani tried to meet with the new King at his winter palace in Ctesiphon but failed to do so. Mani was said to have been related to the Parthian Arsacid dynasty, and his association with King Baat, possibly a Parthian Armenian, as he lectured to his disciples at Phargalia, may have led to Mani’s arrest at Gondeshapur (Belapat).

Mani was brought before an angry King Bahram I and said he had done no harm but had helped the royal family by freeing their servants of demons and by healing them. The King accused Mani of supporting the defeated Parthian cause. Mani replied that God sent him to bring the perfect commandments of Christ that he received from God through an angel so that many souls might be saved and escape punishment. Bahram asked why God did not reveal this to him, the King. Mani replied that God commands and decides whom to teach. The angry King silenced the prophet and had him chained in order to please the magi. Mani said that he had been protected by Shapur and Hormizd, but Bahram sentenced him to death and scourging. Mani was chained heavily in prison for 26 days. There he consoled his disciples and appointed Sisin as his successor. Mani died in prison on February 26 in 274, described as the Messenger of the Light withdrawing his soul from the body. Public distress at the news stimulated the King to order Mani’s body fed to birds and his head placed on a gate. So began persecution of the Manichaeans in the Persian empire that would continue sporadically for centuries.

Four years of persecution occurred before Sisin could organize the church. Many died as martyrs, and many fled to Khurasan or Turkestan. Some went west, and Pateg is said to have preached against the Old Testament in Rome by 280. Bahram II lost Ctesiphon and Seleucia to the Roman Emperor Aurelius Carus in 282 while Amu traveled in central Asia, and Adda put together scriptures in Africa. About five years later African proconsul Julian warned Diocletian that this strange religion’s ideas on sex, war, agriculture, and civic duties endangered Roman society. By 290 Manichaeism was flourishing in the Fayyum district of Egypt, and the Syriac Psalms would soon be translated into Coptic. Terrible persecution broke out in the Persian empire in 291. Bahram II killed Sisin himself, and many Manichaeans were slaughtered. Innai became the leader and is reported to have healed the King by prayer, giving peace to the new religion for a while.

In 296 Diocletian extended the Christian persecution to the Manichaeans, resulting in numerous martyrs in Egypt and North Africa. Although Persian King Narseh (r. 293-302) lost Mesopotamia and western provinces to Rome after he was defeated by Galerius, he left the Manichaeans in peace. In 303 Hormizd II executed Innai, and the next four Manichaean leaders were also killed. In the fourth century Manichaeism spread throughout the Roman empire. Two Christians, Archelaus in his Disputation with Manes and Alexander of Lycopolis in his “Of the Manichaeans,” treated Manichaeism as a Christian heresy instead of a new religion because Mani acknowledged Jesus as the Christ. In 372 Valentinian I prohibited all meetings, and Augustine adopted the faith for a decade until Christians urged Theodosius I to take away their civil rights in 381; the next year he decreed Manichaean elders put to death, and in 383 Theodosius banished all Manichaeans. Exile was again decreed by Valentinian II, and in Rome their property was confiscated in 389.

Since Mani believed that other religions had deteriorated because their original founders did not write down their teachings, he wrote several books himself in the Aramaic language of Syriac and made sure that they were accurately copied. His first book, Shapurakan, honored King Shapur I and assured him that he had no political ambitions. The Living Gospel was written and illustrated in the Turkestan cave and contains an account of the mission of Jesus. Mani began this book and his letters by referring to himself as the messenger of Jesus. The Treasure of Life describes how the soul comes from the pure Light and the body from the bad darkness. Although Manichaeism is similar and has been compared to Gnosticism, this book refutes the Marcionite doctrine of a third intermediary principle, and it gives cures for errors. The Book of Mysteries teaches that souls are purged and educated through reincarnation, and it aims to cut away false beliefs. The Pragmateia suggests what ought to be done. His other main works are The Book of Giants, Letters, and The Book of Psalms and Prayers.

Although these books were faithfully copied and translated into many languages as the religion spread, the many persecutions eventually destroyed the books. As Manichaeism faded into Catharist movements in the 13th century, the religion disappeared. In the 20th century Coptic documents were found at al-Fayyum in Egypt, and texts were also found in Turfan and Dunhuang in China. The Chinese catechism noted a book illustrating the two great principles, which may have been based on Mani’s paintings made for those who cannot read. The largest work found at al-Fayyum, the Kephalaia, contains the principal teachings of Mani described by disciples. These discoveries, though difficult to piece together because the texts were deteriorating, provide a more balanced view to the already known Christian works refuting Mani.

Mani taught there are two sources that are unborn and eternal—God (Light) and matter (darkness). God as good has nothing in common with evil because “a good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit.” Mani explained the universe as having three moments involving these two substances. In the past Spirit and matter were at first separate. Then Spirit entered into matter as souls incarnated into bodies, which is the present condition. Mani as a messenger of Light is helping souls become liberated from their bodies. The third moment is the future when the world will end as Spirit becomes purified again from matter. Somehow the king of darkness decided to enter the region of Light. God had no evil with which to punish, so Spirit entered into matter as souls went into bodies with the five faculties of intuition, thought, will, consideration, and reason. As souls mixed with matter they began to feel material and thus became trapped in bodies. When the Mother of Life, the First Man, and the Living Spirit prayed to the Great Father, that one sent a Messenger with the following twelve virtues: royalty, wisdom, victory, contentment, purity, truth, faith, patience, sincerity, kindness, justice, and Light.

According to Mani, Jesus lifted up the first man Adam to taste the Tree of Life. Mani also taught the trinity of the Father (God of truth), the beloved Son (Christ), and the Holy Spirit (Mother of Life). The five dark rulers may express themselves as the tyranny of rulers, arrogance of officials, idolatrous errors, superstitious rites, and sorcery. Previous messengers of God include Zarathustra, Buddha, and Jesus. True messengers may be known by the following five characteristics: gentleness, austerity, beauty, wisdom, and transformation. Their mission is to teach and convert living beings in order to save them from their suffering. Mani planted good seeds of truth and strengthened his church, sending out envoys to many lands. He fought greed and lust in order to teach people wisdom and knowledge. The Psalms refer to the divine medicine that heals wounds, crushes evil while crowning godliness, purifies the Light from the darkness, and gives rest to the souls. The Great Father is Love who gives oneself for everything. Souls are divine; even though they have fallen into the world, they will return to God.

Although the Manichaean community had a hierarchy of five levels including Mani’s successor and twelve masters (teachers), 72 illuminates (overseers), elders (priests), the rest of the elect, and hearers, the main distinction was between the elect and the hearers. The elect have their hearts, hands, and mouths sealed by celibacy, non-injury, and abstinence from alcohol and meat. The elect eat only a little in the morning and one meal in the evening. In their strict poverty their only possession was one garment that was replaced once a year. The elect teach by grace, wisdom, and faith. The duties of the hearers are to fast, pray, and give charity. They are to fast and be celibate on Sundays, and hearers pray four times a day. Giving charity includes providing food for the elect who do no injurious work such as farming, giving a relative to be one of the elect, and building a temple or dwelling place. The hearers could work in the fields and have one wife, but they were forbidden to fight in wars. The hearers confess to the elect, and the elect confess to one another.

The soul is from on high but is imprisoned in the body waiting to be liberated. Mani taught renouncing the world’s possessions to find the peace of poverty. He advised wisely and skillfully strengthening oneself around the body’s gates lest the sin of the body prevail and extinguish the Light. His religious methods include singing and chanting spiritual words, reading and studying, discriminating with wisdom and accepting pure commands, always being clean in actions of body, mouth, and mind, practicing kind deeds, being gentle and amiable, bearing humiliation, following good rules and habits, resting the mind in the place of liberation, and leaping for joy in standing firm in the right way. Mani warned against, lying, anger, and hurtful words that may come from speaking for the sake of killing a man, beasts, or trees. Kindness and sincerity are for saints a base for brightness and a wonderful gate which lets one see everywhere while walking a straight path.

Like the Mahayana Buddhists, Mani promised such would be born in a Pure Land, where they would be free of penalties and could rejoice in calmness. The Light-mind of the Christ awakens those who sleep and gathers those who are scattered abroad. God sends the soul to the judge of the dead that appears as in a mirror. The Great Judge has no partiality but knows how to forgive those who have repented. No one can hide when that one searches out their actions and repays them according to their deserts. The saints go to the heaven of Light and are at peace. Unstained by ignorance, passion, and desire, they are not pressed into rebirth.

Sasanian Persia 224-531

Parthian Empire

Artabanus IV was also known as Ardawan. When he attacked Fars in 224, the rebel Ardashir was victorious at Hormuzdagan and founded the Sasanian dynasty based on his descent from Sasan. According to the historian Tabari, Ardashir went on to conquer Sakastan (Seistan), Hyrcania, Merv (Margiana), Balkh (Bactria), and Khwarezm (Chorasmia), and Ferishta recorded that he even invaded the Kushan empire in India. Armenia continued to be fought over by the Romans and the Persians. In 232 Ardashir won a battle against the Romans over Armenia and made a treaty with Emperor Alexander Severus. Then a Persian noble assassinated the Armenian King Khosrov and was drowned while fleeing. Ardashir restored the privileges of the Magi and organized them into an assembly with seven top priests. His zeal for the Zoroastrian religion caused Christians to be persecuted. Ardashir maintained a standing army and kept it independent of the provincial governors. Ardashir once said, “There can be no power without an army, no army without money, no money without agriculture, and no agriculture without justice.”9

When Ardashir died in 240, Armenia and Hatra revolted against his successor Shapur I (r. 240-70). The second Sasanian king managed to take the latter fortress by promising to marry the rebelling king’s daughter; but after Hatra capitulated, he had the princess executed. While the Romans were in turmoil, Shapur captured Nisibis and ventured west as far as Antioch. The Romans fought back and pushed the Persians across the Tigris. When Philip replaced the murdered Roman Emperor Gordian III in 244, he made a treaty with Shapur and departed. Shapur conquered Antioch again in 258 and even captured the Roman Emperor Valerian two years later. Shapur invaded Cappadocia; but Odenathus of Palmyra had a powerful army and pushed the Persians back across the Euphrates, besieging Ctesiphon. After Odenathus was assassinated, his widow Zenobia gained Egypt but did not get Persian aid for Palmyra, which was defeated by Roman Emperor Aurelian in 275. Shapur died in 270 and was succeeded by Hormizd I, who supported the prophet Mani. However, he was succeeded by his son Bahram I the next year. Bahram was so tyrannical that a conspiracy ended his life in 274. During the reign (274-93) of Bahram II, Roman Emperor Carus invaded Persia in 283; but the legions believed that his death by lightning was a sign from heaven and retreated. During this era the mobad Karter led the drive that persecuted any religion other than the Zoroastrian.

In 287 Emperor Diocletian placed Tiridates III, the son of Khosrov II, on the Armenian throne. After Bahram II died in 293, Narseh (r. 293-302) became the Sasanian king and invaded Armenia three years later, forcing Tiridates to flee to Rome. Diocletian sent Galerius to Armenia the next year; the wounded Narses fled as the Persians were routed, and a treaty made the Tigris River the boundary between the two empires. Having lost more territory than any other Parthian or Sasanian ruler, Narseh abdicated in 302 BC. Hormizd II (r. 302-9) set up a court of justice to help the poor keep from being oppressed by the rich. When he died, the nobles did not want his oldest son to rule because of his favoring Hellenic culture. So they elected Shapur II (r. 309-79) while his mother was still pregnant because the mobad (priest) had declared that the baby would be male. In 323 Hormizd escaped from prison and was well received by Roman Emperor Constantine. Meanwhile Tiridates III (r. 287-330) of Armenia had stopped persecuting Christians and had become a zealous convert to Christianity in 294.

After the powerful Constantine died in 337, dividing his empire between his three sons, Shapur II took the opportunity to urge the pagans in Armenia to revolt and raid across the Roman border. The next year Shapur besieged Nisibis but could not take the Roman stronghold. The Persians raided Roman territory. Shapur captured and blinded Arshak, son of Tiranus, but in 341 he made a treaty with Armenia and put Arshak II on their throne. Shapur’s Persians invaded Mesopotamia in 348 and fought the Roman army of Constantius for two years. For the third time Shapur failed to capture Nisibis, losing 20,000 men. Christianity had become the official religion of the Roman empire, and Shapur responded by doubling taxes for Christians to pay for his wars. For refusing to collect the taxes six bishops and a hundred priests were executed at Susa on Good Friday 339. Massacres and the destruction of churches continued in the Sasanian empire for the next forty years of Shapur’s reign. Shapur had to fight off Huns (Chionites) in the east from 353 to 358. During this interlude Constantius found a Roman wife for King Arshak II, and Armenia returned to the Roman orbit. Shapur fought another war for two years with the Roman empire, capturing the fortress at Amida. This war ended when Constantius died in 361.

In 363 the pagan Roman Emperor Julian invaded Persia with a hundred thousand men and a fleet of 1,100 ships built for the Euphrates River; but the Sasanians had far surpassed the Parthians in fortifying their cities. Julian avoided them, and his alliance with the Saracen chiefs fell apart; he was killed by a javelin fighting near Samarra and was portrayed heroically as a lion by Persian painters. Jovian became Roman emperor and ceded the five provinces east of the Tigris and the fortress of Nisibis to Shapur’s empire. Europeans, who had been in Nisibis for two centuries, were removed. When Valens became Roman Emperor for the East, Shapur II invaded Armenia. Pap (r. 369-374), son of Arshak II, fled and asked for Roman support. So Shapur returned to Armenia and captured the treasury of Arsaces and made Pap agree to his terms. After the Romans interfered in Iberia in 370, the next year the Persians attacked the Romans at Vagabanta. In 376 a truce led to a treaty that left Christian Armenia and Iberia independent.

The long reign of Shapur II was followed by Ardashir II (r. 379-83), who was called the Beneficent for remitting taxes; but he was deposed by his nephew Shapur III (r. 383-88). Factional conflict in Armenia resulted in the Persians and Romans making a treaty in 384 that divided Armenia. During the reign of Bahram IV (r. 388-99), Khosrov IV, the satrap of Persian Armenia, revolted but could not get help from Emperor Theodosius I and was imprisoned. After Bahram IV was killed by a mutiny, Yazdgard I (r. 399-420) became ruler of the Sasanian empire. He tolerated the Christians and Jews, decreeing in 409 that Christians could worship openly and rebuild their churches; but the Zoroastrians pressured him into persecuting them during the last five years of his reign.

Nobles tried to prevent any of his sons from succeeding; but his son Bahram V Gur (r. 420-38) won the struggle. He continued the persecution of Christians; when many fled to Roman territory, he demanded them back and then declared war. After a battle between champions of the Persians and Romans, they made a treaty in 422 that granted toleration of Christians in Persia and of Zoroastrians by the Romans. In 425 the Hephthalites (White Huns) led by Yetailito crossed the Oxus River and invaded Persia. Bahram Gur led a successful counter-attack that chased the Huns back across the Oxus. According to the poet Firdausi, Bahram Gur ventured into India, and as a result 12,000 Gypsies migrated into Persia with their music and dancing. Bahram Gur was acclaimed for promoting agriculture, literacy, and science, leaving Persia at the height of its power. His son Yazdgard II (r. 438-57) made a treaty with Theodosius II agreeing that neither would build new fortifications on their frontier. This allowed Yazdgard to campaign in the east from 443 to 451. Zoroastrian mobads tried to win back Armenia to their religion, defeating the Christian party. In Iraq the patriarch Joseph became a martyr at Karka (Kirkuk) in 455 as other Christians fled. The Christian Bar-Soma was expelled from Edessa for heresy but returned in 457.

When Yazdgard II died in 457, his younger son Hormizd III seized the throne while his older brother Peroz was governing Seistan. The Hephthalites helped Peroz (r. 459-84) capture his brother, and Peroz also put down a revolt by Albanians west of the Caspian Sea. After he sent a slave pretending to be a princess, the insulted Khush-Newaz killed and mutilated Persian officers in revenge. Tabari wrote that Peroz was lured into the desert and had to prostrate himself before the Hephthalites. Peroz helped Bar-Soma to use force in establishing the doctrine of the “two natures of Christ” in order to separate these Christians from the Monophysites west of them. Yazdgard and Peroz changed previous policy that had tolerated Jews. Yazdgard abolished the Sabbath in 455, and in 468 Peroz had half the Jews in Isfahan slaughtered after Jews were accused of flaying two magi. The Kushans’ defeat of Peroz stimulated the Armenians to revolt in 481; but the Iberian king treacherously changed sides, enabling the Persians to kill the Armenian king. Peroz was finally defeated and killed by Hephthalites at Balkh; much of the army was destroyed, and his successor Balash (r. 484-88) paid them tribute for two years. Vahan gained toleration for Christians in Armenia by helping Balash in a civil war against a son of Peroz named Zaren.

Kavad I, son of Peroz, became the Sasanian king in 488. In 489 Roman Emperor Zeno dissolved the Nestorian college at Edessa, but Bar-Soma re-established it at Nisibis. In 491 the Armenian Church rejected the “one person in two natures” doctrine promulgated by the Council at Chalcedon in 451 and as Monophysites have been independent of the Constantinople Patriarch ever since. A communist named Mazdak of Persepolis converted thousands to his doctrine of sharing property and even women. The historian Tabari described how he used a tube in a cavern beneath a fire altar as a fraudulent religious device and even converted Kavad. The Zoroastrian mobads defended their religion by deposing and imprisoning Kavad in 496. He escaped to the Hephthalites and was received by Khush-Newaz; they helped him regain the throne two years later as his replacement Zamasp did not fight to retain the crown. The Nestorian doctrine that the divine and human persons are separate in the incarnate Christ became prevalent in Persia.

After eighty years of peace, in 503 Kavad I went to war with the Roman empire because they had not been paying Persia the agreed expenses for the Derbent garrison. The Persians invaded Roman Armenia and lost 50,000 men besieging and taking the fortress of Amida as the Romans there were annihilated. That year Kavad also sent his army to stop a Hephthalite invasion of Khurasan, which enabled Romans to cross the Tigris. In 505 Persia and Rome made a peace treaty for seven years that enabled Kavad to win a final campaign against the Hephthalites by 513. A resurgence of the Mazdakites plotted with Kavad’s oldest son Kavus to establish their religion in Persia; but Kavad’s younger son Khusrau persuaded his father to let him put down the rebellion. Khusrau organized a religious debate and then massacred the Mazdakis at Ctesiphon about 528.

When Kavad I canceled toleration of Christians in Iberia in favor of Zoroastrians, they revolted. The Iberian king Gurgenes fled to Lazica and appealed to Rome for help. When the Persians went into Lazica, Romans led by the famous General Belisarius invaded Persian Armenia in 526. The Romans were defeated, and Emperor Justinian sent another 25,000 men, including Massagetae cavalry, which tipped the balance in an even battle. Al-Harith ibn ‘Amr al-Kindi drove the Lakhmids out of Hira in 525 for a few years; but the Lakhmid chief Mundhir III regained Hira and in 529 raided Syria as far as Antioch, where he sacrificed 400 Christian nuns to the goddess al-Uzza, representing the planet Venus. Two years later the Persians allied with Mundhir to invade Syria. Belisarius with help from Isaurians, Lycaonians, and Arabs defended Antioch, killed Kavad, and forced the retreat of the Persian army.

Sasanian Persia 531-651

Possibly influenced by the ideas of the 2nd century Gnostic philosopher Carpocrates of Alexandria, whose followers venerated Zarathustra, Pythagoras, and Plato for four centuries, and Bundos, a Manichaean who had lived in Rome during the reign of Diocletian, the Zoroastrian mobad Zardusht Khurragan in the mid-5th century began interpreting the inner meaning of the Avesta. Those making such interpretations were called Zandiks. Ibn al-Nadim wrote of an earlier Zoroastrian named Mazdak, who taught enjoying pleasures in friendly equality, sharing women and family, doing good deeds, not harming anyone, and offering hospitality.

Mazdak, son of Bamdad, led the Mazdakite movement during the reign of Kavad I. According to Tha‘alibi he taught that God provided subsistence so that it could be shared equally; but people wronged and dominated each other with the strong exploiting the weak to gain property; thus it is necessary to take from the rich to give to the poor, and those with an excess of property or women should share. The poet Firdausi wrote that the Mazdakites avoided the five demons of envy, anger, vengeance, need, and greed. Mazdak recommended ways of breaking up the large estates, prohibiting hoarding, removing class distinctions, and establishing public charities for those in need. He aimed to reduce Zoroastrian rituals by limiting their temples to three major ones. Although accused of advocating wives in common, it is more likely that Mazdak probably wanted to eliminate harems and polygamy so that more people could have one wife. Abolishing class distinctions also meant being able to marry outside of one’s class. Mazdakite women exercised more rights, and the Druze sect (currently in Lebanon) allows women to be in the elite.

King Kavad I wanted to promote justice, and he was strongly influenced by the religious ideas of Mazdak and began implementing social reforms that limited the privileges of the nobles. Mazdak asked the king if one with extra food should share it with the hungry, and this led to Mazdakite mobs plundering granaries, storehouses, and the palaces of the wealthy and their harems. The nobles reacted by deposing Kavad, who fled to the Hephthalites. When he returned to power, Kavad was more cautious. His oldest son Kavus sympathized with the Mazdakites; but Khusrau was his favorite son and was allowed to persecute and massacre the Mazdakites even before he became king, burying their upper bodies in the ground and executing Mazdak. As King, Khusrau also tried to implement his own reforms to assuage the people.

Grand Vizier Mebodes presented the will of Kavad that made Khusrau I (r. 531-79) king of kings. Khusrau, also known as Khosrow or as Noshirwan or Anushirwan in the east, has been acclaimed as the greatest of Persian monarchs; but because of an attempt to place his brother Zames on the throne, he began his reign by putting to death all his brothers and their sons except one son of Zames named Kavad, who escaped. He also executed Mazdak and one hundred thousand of his followers. Khusrau organized the Sasanian empire into four regional satrapies: Khurasan and Kirman in the east, Fars and Khuzistan in the south, Iraq and Mesopotamia in the west, and Armenia and Azerbaijan in the north.

After Justinian closed the philosophy school at Athens in 529, Khusrau welcomed the last Neo-Platonists to his court. He ordered Plato and Aristotle translated into Persian and read their works. A book of kings was compiled and was later used by Firdausi in his famous poem. In 533 Khusrau made a treaty with Rome, which agreed to pay Persia 11,000 pounds of gold for the upkeep of garrisons in the Caucasus. This enabled Justinian and Belisarius to conquer Italy and North Africa in the next six years. Buzurjmihr tutored prince Hormizd and became vizier. Buzurjmihr held that the worst misery is to see the close of life approaching without having practiced virtue. Zoroastrian Mar Aba converted to Christianity and stood up to Khusrau, who respected him and allowed bishoprics to be founded at Herat and Samarkand by 540.

Afraid of Rome’s growing power, Khusrau invaded Syria in 540, raiding Antioch and other places. Persia gained another treaty in which Rome paid 5,000 pounds of gold as a war indemnity along with annual subsidies of 500 pounds for the garrisons. Khusrau ordered a city built near Ctesiphon based on the Greek model of Antioch. When Lazica appealed to Khusrau in 540, he besieged and captured Petra from the Romans. Because Lazica had become Christian, he wanted to remove the population and tried to assassinate the Lazic King Gubazes. When this plotted failed, another war with Rome broke out in 549 that lasted eight years with the Romans driving the Persians out of Lazica. The five-year truce of 557 led to the 562 treaty in which Rome still agreed to pay Persia 30,000 gold coins annually. Turks entered Persian history when they made an alliance with Khusrau in 554 and helped him conquer the Hephthalites. Khusrau also attacked the Khazars, killing thousands and ravaging their territory. After Khusrau poisoned the Turk ambassadors, proposing an alliance with Sinjibu (Silzibul) in 567, the next year the Turks offered Rome an alternative trade route to China.

Emperor Justin wanted to impose Christian orthodoxy on Armenia while Khusrau sent the Surena to build a fire temple and promote Zoroastrianism. The Armenians got a promise of religious toleration from Justin, and the Romans defeated 15,000 Persians and killed the Surena in 571. Justin stopped paying for the garrisons and urged Axum’s Abyssinian King Arethas to invade the Persians; but in 572 the Persians traveled 2,000 miles to drive the Abyssinians out of Yemen. The next year Justin sent his cousin Marcianus to invade Arzanene and besiege Nisibis; but Khusrau relieved Nisibis and besieged Dara while the Adarmaanes captured Antioch and 292,000 men. When Tiberius became Emperor of Rome, he agreed to pay 45,000 gold coins (nomismata) for peace with Persia and 30,000 annually for three years of truce. Armenia was not included in the treaty, and Khusrau invaded it and burned Melitene. Roman legions drove the Persians back across the Euphrates and pillaged, but they were defeated in Armenia by the Persians in 576. Both Roman and Persian armies plundered in 578. Khusrau fled to Ctesiphon, where he died in 579.

Khusrau was called “the Just” and reformed the land tax to a basic minimum to give farmers incentives to produce more. He also promoted agriculture by improving irrigation with dams, reclaiming wasteland, and granting seeds, tools, and animals. Roads and bridges were repaired. He reinstituted a standing army with regular pay and even submitted himself to inspection and discipline. His army was much stronger than Parthian armies because of heavily armored cavalry equipped with lances, swords, and maces as well as bows and arrows. In his justice system he was merciful, especially to the young. Women were generally not secluded in Persia at this time, though Khusrau himself had perhaps the largest harem ever with 12,000 women. Chess was imported from India, and literature was preserved in the Pahlavi language, though this was still limited to about a hundred different books. When the Roman ambassador noted that the royal square was irregular, he learned that the Persian Shah had decided not to force a woman to sell her land.

Hormizd IV (r. 579-90) continued the war with Rome after negotiations with the General Maurice failed. Maurice defeated the Persians in 581 at Constantia and succeeded Tiberius as Roman Emperor the next year. In 588 a mutiny in the Roman army enabled the Persians to drive them out of Arzanene; but they defeated the Persians and took Martyropolis. The next year the Persians regained Martyropolis, though the Romans won at Nisibis. The General Bahram Chobin led the Persians to victory over the Turks, killing their khan and capturing his son. The gold and gems taken were carried away on 256 camels. Bahram Chobin tried to take the throne but was defeated in 591 and fled to the Turks, who killed him. Hormuzd’s son Khusrau II Parviz (r. 590-628) had fled to Constantinople and was restored at Ctesiphon with the help of Roman Emperor Maurice. Khusrau ceded territory to the Byzantine empire in the treaty of 591. After Maurice was assassinated in 602, Khusrau Parviz avenged this by going to war against his successor Phocas. The Persians took Dara in 605 after a siege of nine months and Amida, Harran, and Edessa by 607. They also plundered Armenia, Cappadocia, Phyrgia, Galatia, and Bithynia.

Khusrau Parviz wanted the daughter of Arab prince Noman, who appealed to the Shaybani. The Shah’s Arab allies deserted, and at the battle of Dhuqar the Persians were defeated by Arabs in 610, the year Muhammad had his first revelation. The Persian army invaded Syria, taking Antioch in 611, Damascus in 613, and Jerusalem the next year. The Persian General Shahin captured Chalcedon near Constantinople by 617. Two years later the Persians invaded Egypt and captured Alexandria. The Persian empire had never been so large since the ancient Achaemenians. However, Roman Emperor Heraclius began rolling back these advances in 622 by defeating Shahrbaraz at Issus and again in Armenia in 624. That year Heraclius invaded Atropatene (Azerbaijan) and destroyed the Zoroastrian fire temple. Khusrau made an alliance with Avars and besieged Constantinople in 626, but they were foiled by the Roman navy. When Heraclius attacked the palace of Khusrau Parviz at Dastagird the next year and defeated the Persians near Nineveh, the Shah fled. After he insulted the corpse of Shahin and tried to execute Shahrbaraz and other generals, the nobles turned against Khusrau, imprisoning him and torturing him to death in 628.

Khusrau Parviz tolerated Christianity because of his love for his Monophysite Christian wife Shirin. When he began losing battles, he seized treasures from Christian churches and tried to impose the Nestorian doctrine. Khusrau was succeeded by his son Kavad II, who made peace with Heraclius, returning the “true cross” taken from Jerusalem. Kavad died after a few months, and a chaotic sequence of eleven rulers tried to govern Persia until Khusrau’s grandson Yazdgard III (r. 632-51) became the last Sasanian Emperor. In 633 the Arab invasion of Iraq led by Muslim Khalid ibn al-Walid began. The Persian General Rustam was defeated in the critical battle at Qadisiya in 637. Sa’d led the Muslim invasion of Mesopotamia and captured the capital at Ctesiphon. The zealous Islamic army soon swept into Khuzistan in 640 and finally defeated the Persian army led by Perozan by killing over 100,000 at Nehawand in 642, forcing Yazdgard to flee from Ray to Isfahan to Kirman and to Balkh. A decade after the Arabs had taken over his empire, Yazdgard was finally murdered for his jewelry near Marv in 651. The Arabs encouraged those conquered to convert to Islam by exempting Muslims from the taxes they imposed on the Zoroastrians, Christians, Jews, and non-believers.

Muhammad and Islamic Conquest

Notes

1. Myths from Mesopotamia tr. Stephanie Dalley, p. 285.
2. Ibid., p. 287.
3. Ibid., p. 303-304.
4. The Ancient Near East c. 3000-330 BC by Amélie Kuhrt, p. 612-613.
5. The Dawn and Twilight of Zoroastrianism by R. C. Zaehner, p. 74.
6. Yasna 49:11, in The Divine Songs of Zarathushtra tr. Irach J. S. Taraporewala, p. 727.
7. Herodotus 1:87 tr. Aubrey de Sélincourt, p. 49.
8. Ibid., p. 96.
9. Quoted in A History of Persia, Volume 1 by Percy Sykes, p. 397.

Copyright © 1998-2010 by Sanderson Beck

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MIDEAST & AFRICA 1700-1950

Introduction
Ethics
Prehistoric Cultures
Sumer, Babylon, and Hittites
Egypt
Israel
Assyrian, Neo-Babylonian, and Persian Empires
Muhammad and Islamic Conquest
Abbasid, Buyid, and Seljuk Empires 750-1095
Islamic Culture 1095-1300
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North Africa to 1700
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Summary and Evaluation
Bibliography

Persia (Iran) and Afghanistan 1700-1950
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Chronology of Mideast & Africa to 1950
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