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The Empires of Persia: CHAPTER 7 LECTURE NOTES - TRADITIONS AND ENCOUNTERS 6TH EDITION - AP World History

The Empires of Persia: CHAPTER 7 LECTURE NOTES - TRADITIONS AND ENCOUNTERS 6TH EDITION - AP World History

THE EMPIRES OF PERSIA

  • Persian Empires
    • Contemporary Iran
    • Four major dynasties
    • Achaemenids (558-330 BCE)
    • Seleucids (323-283 BCE)
    • Parthians (247 BCE-224 CE)
    • Sasanids (224-651 CE)

ACHAEMENID EMPIRE (558-330 BCE)

  • Migration of Medes/Persians from Central Asia before 1,000 BCE
    • Indo-Europeans
    • Capitalized on weakening Assyrian and Babylonian empires
    • Cyrus (r. 558-530 BCE) founder of dynasty
      • "Cyrus the Shepherd" (indicates borders of Egypt)
        • Called that because he was originally a shepherd, called by his people
        • Pastoral in nature
    • Peak under Darius (r. 521-486 BCE)
      • Ruled Indus to the Aegean 
      • Set up his capital at Persepolis 
        • Becomes an imperial center (where kings live, trade, hallmark of society

ACHAEMENID ADMINISTRATION: THE SATRAPIES

  • Had 23 administrative divisions: The Satrapies
    • Allows for "counties" or "states"
  • Satraps Persian, but staff principally local, were like governors 
  • System of spies, surprise audits*
    • Minimized possibilities of local rebellion
  • Standardized currency for taxaption purposes
  • Massive road buildings, courier services
    • Set up "royal road"
      • for trade, easily patrolled
  • Developed Qanat, avoided extensive loss to evaporation
  • Extensive road building
    • Persian Royal Road 1,600 miles, some of it paved 
  • Courier service
  • Policy of toleration unhder Cyrus, Darius 
    • Seen as a high/low point
  • Rebuilding of temple in Jerusalem 587 BCE
  • Xerxes )486-465 BCE) harshly represses rebellions in Mesopotamia/Egypt
    • Concerned about rebellions
    • Brutal treatment of rebellions made many find him distasteful because of his oppressive message/methods

PERSIAN WARS (500-479 BCE)

  • Rebellious Greeks in Ionia
  • Peninsular Greeks join in
  • Persians defeated at Maraton (490 BCE), retreated
    • Darius undertakes campaign to fight Greeks who supported Ionian Greeks and battles Athenians 
  • Alexander the Great conquers Achaemenid Empire (334-331 BCE) 

**NOTES***

Medes - spoke Indo-Euro languages

Pasargadae - In Persia, like right next to Persepolis

Cambyses - Cyrus' son (r. 530-522 BCE)

Audit - checking for order 

Qanat - System of underground canal

Ionia - Near Anatolia 


SELEUCID EMPIRE

  • Alexander the Great dies suddenly
    • Dies after returning from military campaigns
  • Generals divide empire, best part goes to Seleucus (reigned 505-281 BCE)
  • Attacked by rebellion in India, invasion of Parthians

PARTHIAN EMPIRE

  • Seminomadic Parthians drive Seleucus out of Iran
    • Built huts/small shelters to support nomadic lifestyle
  • Federated government structure
    • Allowed more decision making and power to local leaders; more rebellions, smaller consequences 
  • Especially strong cavalry
  • Weakened by ongoing wars with Romans 
  • Fell to internal rebellion 

SASANID EMPIRE (224-651 CE) 

  • Claimed descent from Achaemenids
    • Believed that they were restoring the Achaemenid empire in a sense
  • Continual conflict with Rome, Byzantium in the West, Kush in the East
  • Overwhelmed by Arab conquest in 651
  • Persian administration/culture absorbed into local Islamic culture
    • The Islamic culture that eventually dominated the Sasanid empire would use a lot of trade networks, city centers, etc. 

**NOTES**

Battle of Marathon = 490 BCE

Alexander of Macedon = Another name for Alexander the Great

Parthians established themselves as rulers of a powerful empire based in Iran that extended to wealthy Mesopotamia

Mithradates I = the Parthians greatest conquerer, came to the throne in 171 BCE and in 155 BCE, consolidated his rule and extended it to Mesopotamia

Ctesiphon = the Parthian capital, built near the Euphrates River and near modern-day Baghdad


PERSIAN SOCIETY

  • Early steppe traditions
    • Warriors, priests, peasants
    • Family/clan kinship very important
  • Creation of bureaucrat classes with empire
    • Tax collectors
    • Record keepers (trade records, etc.)
    • Translators

SLAVE CLASS

  • POW, conquered populations
  • Debtors (sell yourself/family members if you were the father to slavery)
  • Children/spouses also sold to slavery
  • Principally domestic servitude (cleaning, cooking, etc.)
    • Some agricultural labor, public works 

PERSIAN ECONOMY

  • Several areas exceptionally fertile
    • This area known as the "Fertile Crescent"
  • Long-distance trade benefits from Persian road building
  • Goods from India especially valued because of their rarity
    • India is like a warehouse for various goods from all over the world

ZOROASTRIANISM 

  • Early Aryan influences on Persian religious traditions
    • Aryans would eventually settle in Indian subcontinent 
  • Zarathrustra (17th - early 6th century BCE)
    • Not much known about him, but he came from an aristocratic family
    • Became disenchanted with some traditional Persian religions 
    • Decided to wander for like ten years seeking guidance/wisdom, received a vision on the true vision of the universe
  • Prophet of Ahura Mazda against Anyra Mainyu
    • Ahura Mazda = good deity
    • Anrya Mainya = bad deity
    • 1st religion we see in this time that has a dualistic nature (good/bad deities)
  • Priests of Zarathrustra known as magi
    • Very big on oral tradition
  • Oral teachings until Sasanid period composed Gathas*
    • Moral teachings, songs, etc. 
    • Promises that Ahura Mazda will win/souls will be judged; good souls go to heavenly realm and evil will be cast down for eternal punishment and pain 
  • Fortunes of Zoroastrianism 
    • Under Alexander: massacre of magi, burning Zoroastrian temples
      • Alexander didn't seem to like what Zoroastrianism was proclaiming 
    • Weak Parthian support
    • Major revival under Sasanids, persecution of non-Zoroastrians
  • Discrimination under Islam
    • As Islam grows in power/expands its empire, any cultural religion that conflicted with Islam as it grew was persecuted
    • Very few Zoroastrians, but they're still in the Persia area where mostly Islam dominates
  • Other religious groups in the Persian Empire:
    • Major Mesopotamian communities of Jews
      • Jews originally based in Israel/Palestine
      • Had spread out throughout the Mesopotamian area to live in smaller communities
    • Composition of the Talmud (ca. 500 CE)
    • Buddhism, Christianity, and Manichaeism also survived

**NOTES**

Avesta = the holy book of religious texts from the Sasanids

Gathas = Zarathrustra's hymns compiled to honor various deities 

Talmud = the constitution of Judaism, pretty much a guide on how to read "The Old Testament" (in Protestant terms)

Manichaeism = A dualistic religious system with Christian, Gnostic, and pagan elements; founded in Persia in the third century by Manes (c. 216 - c. 276). The system was based on a supposed primeval conflict between light and darkness. It spread widely in the Roman Empire and in Asia, and survived in eastern Turkestan (Xinjiang) until the thirteenth century; religious or philosophical dualism. (Source: Quizlet)

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The Empires of Persia: CHAPTER 7 LECTURE NOTES - TRADITIONS AND ENCOUNTERS 6TH EDITION - AP World History

The Empires of Persia: CHAPTER 7 LECTURE NOTES - TRADITIONS AND ENCOUNTERS 6TH EDITION - AP World History

THE EMPIRES OF PERSIA

  • Persian Empires
    • Contemporary Iran
    • Four major dynasties
    • Achaemenids (558-330 BCE)
    • Seleucids (323-283 BCE)
    • Parthians (247 BCE-224 CE)
    • Sasanids (224-651 CE)

ACHAEMENID EMPIRE (558-330 BCE)

  • Migration of Medes/Persians from Central Asia before 1,000 BCE
    • Indo-Europeans
    • Capitalized on weakening Assyrian and Babylonian empires
    • Cyrus (r. 558-530 BCE) founder of dynasty
      • "Cyrus the Shepherd" (indicates borders of Egypt)
        • Called that because he was originally a shepherd, called by his people
        • Pastoral in nature
    • Peak under Darius (r. 521-486 BCE)
      • Ruled Indus to the Aegean 
      • Set up his capital at Persepolis 
        • Becomes an imperial center (where kings live, trade, hallmark of society

ACHAEMENID ADMINISTRATION: THE SATRAPIES

  • Had 23 administrative divisions: The Satrapies
    • Allows for "counties" or "states"
  • Satraps Persian, but staff principally local, were like governors 
  • System of spies, surprise audits*
    • Minimized possibilities of local rebellion
  • Standardized currency for taxaption purposes
  • Massive road buildings, courier services
    • Set up "royal road"
      • for trade, easily patrolled
  • Developed Qanat, avoided extensive loss to evaporation
  • Extensive road building
    • Persian Royal Road 1,600 miles, some of it paved 
  • Courier service
  • Policy of toleration unhder Cyrus, Darius 
    • Seen as a high/low point
  • Rebuilding of temple in Jerusalem 587 BCE
  • Xerxes )486-465 BCE) harshly represses rebellions in Mesopotamia/Egypt
    • Concerned about rebellions
    • Brutal treatment of rebellions made many find him distasteful because of his oppressive message/methods

PERSIAN WARS (500-479 BCE)

  • Rebellious Greeks in Ionia
  • Peninsular Greeks join in
  • Persians defeated at Maraton (490 BCE), retreated
    • Darius undertakes campaign to fight Greeks who supported Ionian Greeks and battles Athenians 
  • Alexander the Great conquers Achaemenid Empire (334-331 BCE) 

**NOTES***

Medes - spoke Indo-Euro languages

Pasargadae - In Persia, like right next to Persepolis

Cambyses - Cyrus' son (r. 530-522 BCE)

Audit - checking for order 

Qanat - System of underground canal

Ionia - Near Anatolia 


SELEUCID EMPIRE

  • Alexander the Great dies suddenly
    • Dies after returning from military campaigns
  • Generals divide empire, best part goes to Seleucus (reigned 505-281 BCE)
  • Attacked by rebellion in India, invasion of Parthians

PARTHIAN EMPIRE

  • Seminomadic Parthians drive Seleucus out of Iran
    • Built huts/small shelters to support nomadic lifestyle
  • Federated government structure
    • Allowed more decision making and power to local leaders; more rebellions, smaller consequences 
  • Especially strong cavalry
  • Weakened by ongoing wars with Romans 
  • Fell to internal rebellion 

SASANID EMPIRE (224-651 CE) 

  • Claimed descent from Achaemenids
    • Believed that they were restoring the Achaemenid empire in a sense
  • Continual conflict with Rome, Byzantium in the West, Kush in the East
  • Overwhelmed by Arab conquest in 651
  • Persian administration/culture absorbed into local Islamic culture
    • The Islamic culture that eventually dominated the Sasanid empire would use a lot of trade networks, city centers, etc. 

**NOTES**

Battle of Marathon = 490 BCE

Alexander of Macedon = Another name for Alexander the Great

Parthians established themselves as rulers of a powerful empire based in Iran that extended to wealthy Mesopotamia

Mithradates I = the Parthians greatest conquerer, came to the throne in 171 BCE and in 155 BCE, consolidated his rule and extended it to Mesopotamia

Ctesiphon = the Parthian capital, built near the Euphrates River and near modern-day Baghdad


PERSIAN SOCIETY

  • Early steppe traditions
    • Warriors, priests, peasants
    • Family/clan kinship very important
  • Creation of bureaucrat classes with empire
    • Tax collectors
    • Record keepers (trade records, etc.)
    • Translators

SLAVE CLASS

  • POW, conquered populations
  • Debtors (sell yourself/family members if you were the father to slavery)
  • Children/spouses also sold to slavery
  • Principally domestic servitude (cleaning, cooking, etc.)
    • Some agricultural labor, public works 

PERSIAN ECONOMY

  • Several areas exceptionally fertile
    • This area known as the "Fertile Crescent"
  • Long-distance trade benefits from Persian road building
  • Goods from India especially valued because of their rarity
    • India is like a warehouse for various goods from all over the world

ZOROASTRIANISM 

  • Early Aryan influences on Persian religious traditions
    • Aryans would eventually settle in Indian subcontinent 
  • Zarathrustra (17th - early 6th century BCE)
    • Not much known about him, but he came from an aristocratic family
    • Became disenchanted with some traditional Persian religions 
    • Decided to wander for like ten years seeking guidance/wisdom, received a vision on the true vision of the universe
  • Prophet of Ahura Mazda against Anyra Mainyu
    • Ahura Mazda = good deity
    • Anrya Mainya = bad deity
    • 1st religion we see in this time that has a dualistic nature (good/bad deities)
  • Priests of Zarathrustra known as magi
    • Very big on oral tradition
  • Oral teachings until Sasanid period composed Gathas*
    • Moral teachings, songs, etc. 
    • Promises that Ahura Mazda will win/souls will be judged; good souls go to heavenly realm and evil will be cast down for eternal punishment and pain 
  • Fortunes of Zoroastrianism 
    • Under Alexander: massacre of magi, burning Zoroastrian temples
      • Alexander didn't seem to like what Zoroastrianism was proclaiming 
    • Weak Parthian support
    • Major revival under Sasanids, persecution of non-Zoroastrians
  • Discrimination under Islam
    • As Islam grows in power/expands its empire, any cultural religion that conflicted with Islam as it grew was persecuted
    • Very few Zoroastrians, but they're still in the Persia area where mostly Islam dominates
  • Other religious groups in the Persian Empire:
    • Major Mesopotamian communities of Jews
      • Jews originally based in Israel/Palestine
      • Had spread out throughout the Mesopotamian area to live in smaller communities
    • Composition of the Talmud (ca. 500 CE)
    • Buddhism, Christianity, and Manichaeism also survived

**NOTES**

Avesta = the holy book of religious texts from the Sasanids

Gathas = Zarathrustra's hymns compiled to honor various deities 

Talmud = the constitution of Judaism, pretty much a guide on how to read "The Old Testament" (in Protestant terms)

Manichaeism = A dualistic religious system with Christian, Gnostic, and pagan elements; founded in Persia in the third century by Manes (c. 216 - c. 276). The system was based on a supposed primeval conflict between light and darkness. It spread widely in the Roman Empire and in Asia, and survived in eastern Turkestan (Xinjiang) until the thirteenth century; religious or philosophical dualism. (Source: Quizlet)