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Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

author:Interesting history

< h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > introduction</h1>

When it comes to the word "Father of the Nation", no matter which country the people, there should be reverence and solemnity in their hearts, after all, the people who can have the title of "Father of the Nation" are basically pioneers of dynastic changes and the founders of the current country. In modern society, the "fathers" of each country are basically modern figures, but there is such a country in the world, and its citizens generally regard an ancient person living in the 6th century BC as the father of the country. From the perspective of modern society, this is undoubtedly incredible. So, which ancient figure had such charm that even after more than two thousand years, it still makes the people of today's people have great respect for him?

This country is Iran in West Asia, and the "father of the nation" they revere is the Persian monarch Cyrus II, known as "Cyrus the Great", who started with a small country located in the southwest of present-day Iran, gradually annexed the then powerful countries of Medes, Lydia and Babylon, unified most of the ancient Middle East, and established a huge empire from the Mediterranean sea to India in the east - the Persian Empire.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Territory of the Achaemenid dynasty

As the founder of this glorious empire, Cyrus the Great's life is very strange. Most of the modern information about Cyrus the Great is derived from the greek "father of history", the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, according to this "father of history", although scholars waved warning flags when Herodotus discussed the Persians, and even Herodotus recorded some stories of self-conflicting Cyrus, but in the origin of Cyrus, scholars still held a favorable attitude - Cyrus was a member of the aristocracy, but not a member of the royal family. Cyrus, on the other hand, may also have been the fourth king of Anshan (i.e. Tali-Malyan).

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Statue of Herodotus

Anshan was a city in the ancient Persian Gulf region, located in the Zagros Mountains, near Parsa (present-day Fars, southwestern Iran) on the Plain of Malvdasht, and has been one of the capitals of Elam since the third millennium BC. Around 700 BC, Achaemenes, the ancestor of the Achaemenid family, established the Persian kingdom centered on the city of Anshan, but was still constrained by Elam. The city of Anshan was once under Assyrian rule and then probably under the control of the Medes.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ The image of Cyrus the Great painted by the present people

Around 550 BC, Cyrus defeated his maternal grandfather, the Medes king Atiargas (also known as Ishtum), captured him, captured the capital of the Median kingdom, Ecbanatan, and then became king of the Medes. The Medes stretched as far as present-day Tehran, westward to the Hales River on the Lydia border, and Cappadocia was also under Cyrus rule.

The first theory is that in the dream of the King of Babylon, the god Marduk led the good king Cyrus to a successful victory over Astiages. The second theory comes from the Babylonian Chronicle, "Astiages gathered his army and marched on Cyrus II, the king of Ansan, whose army rose up and captured Astiages." ”

The third is the record of Herodotus. Herodotus's version differs from the other two, and Astiagus was betrayed in this war, as Astiagus once killed the son of his close confidant Halpagos and cooked it into a dish for Harpagos to eat.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

Map of Medes and Lydia

King Croesus, known for his wealth, ruled the Lydian kingdom of Asia Minor. The kingdom of Lydia, located west of the River Hales and capitalized in Sardis, had its kings in control of the Greek cities of Ionia and received tribute from these regions.

Croesus burned the first Persian city he encountered, Putria (present-day central Turkey), and Cyrus's Persian army soon arrived on the battlefield, where the two sides began to engage. After a battle, both sides had casualties, it was difficult to distinguish between victory and defeat, and Croesus thought that dragging on was not the way to go, so he decided to withdraw.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Oil painting depicting Cyrus the Great's march

The hastily fought by the Lydians were defeated and eventually fought against the Persians on the Simbra Plains, on the outskirts of the capital Sardis. The Lydians still wanted to rely on the spear cavalry for superiority, but Cyrus eventually scored a game.

, unloading everything on their backs, and then the infantry and cavalry followed. Lydia's horse team met the camels and immediately collapsed, and Chloessos's last hopes were dashed.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Persian camel cavalry image painting

After all, the Lydians were the most belligerent people in West Asia, jumping off their horses and engaging the Persian army in hand-to-hand combat, with heavy losses on both sides. Eventually, the Lydians were defeated and fled back to the city of Sardis. In the same year (547 BC), Cyrus conquered Uraltu. According to Herodotus, he also conquered Battria.

Because he allowed to believe in both Marduk (the God of the Babylonians) and God (the only God believed by the Jews), he was embraced by many and recognized as a leader.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

Restoration of Solomon's Temple (the first Jewish temple).

Just half a century ago, Nebuchadnezzar II, the king of the Neo-Babylonian kingdom, conquered the Kingdom of Judea twice, burned the Jehovah's Temple of Judaism, and sent a large number of commoners, craftsmen, priests, and nobles to Babylon, who were known as the "Prisoners of Babylon." While the Jews lamented that their future was uncertain, they received an edict from Cyrus, who allowed them to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the temple, and to return to the Jews the large quantities of gold and silver sacrifices that Nebuchadnezzar II had plundered. Many scholars believe that the king of Ancient England recorded in the Biblical book of Ezra was Cyrus the Great.

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Portrait of the Prisoner of Babylon

During the war, the Queen's Son led his troops to rob the camp, and Cyrus annihilated the enemy army and captured the Queen's Son, who immediately committed suicide in shame. When the queen learned of this, she sent an emissary to tell Cyrus, "I swear by the sun, the master of the Masaghethi, that no matter how bloodthirsty and thirsty you may be, I will make you drink enough blood." "After a fierce battle, the Masaghtai were victorious,

Cyrus the Great: The Founder of the Persian Empire of Medes Blood, The Conqueror of Generosity and Kindness Introduction

▲ Cyrus the Great Mausoleum

After Cyrus's death, his son Cambyses II succeeded to the throne, and he sent an army to defeat the Masaghtai, transported his father's body, and buried him solemnly in his former capital, Pasargad (in present-day Fars Province, Iran). Although Cyrus was defeated and died, he won the eternal respect of future generations.

< h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > concluding remarks</h1>

Judging from our Chinese conception, this emperor undoubtedly did not get a good death, but as a warrior, being able to wrap the body of Ma Ge on the battlefield is undoubtedly the highest reward he hopes to receive.

Resources:

Depuydt L. 1995. Murder in Memphis: The Story of Cambyses's Mortal Wounding of the Apis Bull (Ca. 523 BCE). Journal of Near Eastern Studies 54(2):119-126.

Dusinberre ERM. 2013. Empire, Authority, and Autonomy in Achaemenid Anatolia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Lendering J. 1996 [last modified 2015]. Cyrus the Great. Livius.org. [Accessed 02 July 2016]

Munson RV. 2009. Who Are Herodotus' Persians? The Classical World 102(4):457-470.

Young J, T. Cuyler 1988. The early history of the Medes and the Persians and the Achaemenid empire to the death of Cambyses

The Cambridge Ancient History. In: Boardman J, Hammond NGL, Lewis DM, and Ostwald M, editors. The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 4: Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean, c525 to 479 BC. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Waters M. 2004. Cyrus and the Achaemenids. Iran 42:91-102.

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