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Classical Civilizations of the Middle East and Mediterranean

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Title: Classical Civilizations of the Middle East and Mediterranean


1
Classical Civilizations of the Middle East and
Mediterranean
  • Persia, Greece, and Rome

2
Persia
  • Ancient Persia arose in the area that is now
    Iran, mostly a high, dry plateau surrounded by
    mountains to the north, east, and west, and by
    the Indian Ocean to the south.
  • The Persians were an Indo-European people (Aryan)
    who lived on the margins of the earlier
    Mesopotamian civilization.
  • Iran means Land of the Aryans.

3
Persia
4
Persia
  • Around 560 BCE, the Middle East was divided into
    four great powers Egypt and the kingdoms of
    Lydia, Babylon, and Media (northern Iran).
  • These four thought they could live in peace and
    prosperity, but their fragile balance of power
    collapsed before a new, massive force, Persia.
  • Persias rise to prominence demonstrates the
    instability of the balance-of-power concept.

5
Persia
  • Persia would be the greatest empire that the
    ancient world had yet seen.
  • At one time, Assyria had controlled the northern
    portion of the Middle East, but they were
    conquered by the Medes (Media).

6
Persia
  • The Medes were famous warriors, feared by all
    Greeks. But their king was a tyrant and the
    Persians would eventually conquer Media.
  • Here is the story as related by the ancient Greek
    historian Herodotus many centuries later

7
Persia
  • Around the year 580 BCE, the tyrannical king of
    Media, Astyages, had a dream that his daughter
    would give birth to a son that would destroy his
    empire.

8
Persia
  • Astyages ordered his general (his second in
    command) Harpagusto have the child killedbut
    Harpagus, morally unable to do the deed, had the
    boy raised by a shepherd instead.

9
Persia
  • The child grew up thinking he was the son of a
    shepherd.
  • But by the time the boy was 10, it is said that
    he behaved like the son of a noble, not a
    shepherd.
  • So he was brought before the king. The king
    realized the boy looked like himself and
    questioned Harpagus, who admitted he hadnt
    killed the lad.

10
Persia
  • The king asked Harpagus to bring his own little
    son to the palace to celebrate a great feast in
    honor of the return of his grandson.

11
Persia
  • When the little boy arrived, he was killed
    without his father Harpagus knowing.
  • The little boy was cut into pieces, and put into
    a stew which was fed to his father (Harpagus had
    no idea).
  • Then his head, hands, and feet were brought in on
    a covered silver dish (as dessert) that Harpagus
    was ordered to uncover.

12
Persia
  • The kings grandson, Cyrus, was spared then sent
    back to live with his real parents.
  • According to the Greek historian Herodotus,
    Harpagus was looking for an opportunity to avenge
    himself and his son.
  • When Cyrus had come of age, Harpagus managed to
    convince the young Cyrus that the Medes were
    ready to revolt against their king, who had
    become an evil despot.

13
Persia
  • Cyrus organized a federation of ten Persian
    tribes and revolted, and Astyages 'armed all the
    Medes, and blinded by divine providence he
    appointed Harpagus to be the leader of the army'.
  • Harpagus switched sides and the Persians under
    Cyrus captured Astyages.

14
Persia
  • Ultimately he would overthrow his grandfathers
    kingdom, unite the Persians, and establish the
    Persian Empire.
  • This story of Herodotus illustrates the Greeks
    view of the history of the Middle East,
    highlighting the difference between the Greek
    love of freedom and the Middle Eastern
    willingness to accept absolute rule.

15
Persia
  • In the ancient Middle East, the king was a
    absolute ruler.
  • Individuals had no rights, except those allowed
    by the king.
  • The king was not only the law itself, but as the
    story of Harpagus showed, he was bound by no
    moral scruples, although there were limits to his
    power.
  • Like the Mandate of Heaven, rulers ruled at the
    discretion of the gods and must rule justly.

16
Persia
  • But as Herodotus showed, even those in positions
    of command and powerlike Harpagushad no rights
    and no protection from abuses.
  • In the Persian Empire, everyone from the highest
    vizier to the lowliest peasant was regarded as
    the kings slave.

17
Persia
  • Its location was in between the population
    centers of the Indian subcontinent and southwest
    Asia, so traders had crossed the area for many
    centuries before its people were organized under
    the first Persian warrior-king, Cyrus the Great
    (r 557-530 BCE).

18
Persia
  • As the founder of the Achaemenid dynasty, Cyrus
    forged a unified Persia by uniting the two
    original Iranian tribes the Medes and the
    Persians.
  • He created an imperial system based on
    Mesopotamian examples, like the Babylonians and
    the Assyrians, but surpassed them all in size and
    splendor.

19
Persia
  • Cyrus was able to overcome other rulers, like the
    king of Medes (his grandfather Astyages), to
    extend his territory from the edge of India to
    Egypt and the Mediterranean Sea.
  • When he conquered territory, he presented himself
    not as a conqueror but as a liberator and
    legitimate successor.

20
Persia
21
Persia
  • The Cyrus the Great Cylinder is considered by
    many to be the worlds first declaration of human
    rights.

22
Persia
  • There were three main premises in the decrees of
    the Cyrus Cylinder
  • 1. racial, linguistic, and religious equality
  • 2. slaves and all deported peoples were to be
    allowed to return to home
  • 3. and all destroyed temples were to be
    restored.

23
Persia
  • In 1971, the Cyrus Cylinder was described as the
    worlds first charter of human rights and it was
    translated into all six official U.N. languages.
  • A replica of the cylinder is kept at the United
    Nations Headquarters in New York in the second
    floor hallway, between the Security Council and
    the Economic and Social Council chambers.

24
Persia
  • Cyrus owed a lot of the success of his empire to
    the rich mineral resources of his kingdom,
    especially iron.
  • Persian iron was considered the best in the
    world.

25
Persia
  • At its height, Persia contained about 35 million
    people.
  • It was extremely diverse, with dozens of
    ethnicities, languages, and cultural traditions.

26
Persia
The ancient Persian capital of Pasargardae.
27
Persia
  • Starting with Cyrus, the empire centered on an
    elaborate cult of kingship in which the monarch,
    secluded in royal magnificence, could be
    approached only through an elaborate ritual (you
    had to crawl on your belly then kiss the feet of
    the king).
  • Ruling by the will of Ahura Mazda, kings were
    absolute monarchs, more than willing to crush
    rebellious regions or officials.

28
Persia
29
Persia
  • In the eyes of many, Persian kings deserved their
    many titlesKing of kings, Great king, King in
    Persia, King of all countries, King in this great
    earth far and wide.
  • Cyrus conquered not only Media but Lydia (today,
    western Turkey) as well.

30
Persia
  • He captured the legendary Croesus (the king of
    Lydia and his great-uncle r.560-546 BCE) and
    subjected him to a humiliating imprisonment and
    almost death.

31
Persia
  • Croesus had conquered most of the cities of Asia
    Minor including the Greek cities.
  • He was on fairly good terms with the Greeks,
    mainly because he left them alone.
  • They were free to pursue their internal disputes,
    so long as they paid tribute money.
  • The Greeks were okay with this because trade was
    flourishing, thanks to Croesus' wise rule.

32
Persia
  • Cyrus was now the ruler of the Ionian Greeks,
    having more or less inherited them by conquering
    Lydia.
  • The Greeks did not like their new Persian
    overlords, for the Persians drafted Greeks into
    their armies, levied heavy tribute (taxes),
    garrisoned Persian troops in the Greek cities,
    and interfered with the local governments.

33
Persia
  • Soon the Greeks were complaining about Persian
    oppression thwarting Greek liberty.
  • The Greeks began walling their towns and calling
    war councils.
  • Cyrus responded to this by conquering the Greek
    cities directly.
  • This would set the stage for later Greek/Persian
    issues.

34
Persia
  • The success of the empire under Cyrus was due to
    superior military leadership and organization.
  • Cyrus also left in place native political systems
    (if they submitted to his rule).
  • He allowed his subjects to retain their own
    customs and laws, under the supervision of his
    Persian representatives, the satraps.

35
Persia
  • It was more than conquest and royal decree that
    held the empire together.
  • The satraps were an effective bureaucratic system
    of governors placed in each of the empires
    twenty-three provinces.
  • Lower-level officials were drawn from local
    authorities.

36
Persia
  • Satraps were responsible for collecting tribute
    (mostly gold), providing soldiers, and keeping
    order.
  • The satraps had miniature courts that mimicked
    that of the Persian king in Persepolis and their
    positions became hereditary.

37
Persia
  • A system of imperial spies, known as the eyes
    and ears of the King, represented another
    imperial presence in the far reaches of the
    empire.
  • Yet under Cyrus there was a general policy of
    respect for the empires many non-Persian
    cultural traditions which also cemented the
    states authority.

38
Persia
  • Under Cyrus, large areas of his empire enjoyed
    peace and prosperity longer than in any previous
    period.
  • Herodotus talked of how beautiful the Persian
    Empire was and even how the Persians valued
    flower gardens (tulip cultivation became an art
    under Cyrus).

39
Persia
  • Cyrus famously won the gratitude of the Hebrews
    when in 539 BCE he allowed those exiled in
    Babylon (which had started in 597 BCE) to return
    to their homeland and rebuild their temple in
    Jerusalem.
  • Even though many Jews decided to stay in Babylon,
    this is an important and pivotal point in Jewish
    history.

40
Persia
  • The prophet Isaiah saw in Cyrus victories the
    hand of God, named him the Lords anointed, and
    gloated over the fate of the old enemy Babylon
  • Let now the astrologers, the stargazers, the
    monthly prognosticators, stand up, and save thee
    from these things that shall come upon thee.
    Isaiah x1v, x1vii, 1-13

41
Persia
  • But Cyrus wanted to expand his empire to the
    east, into what was called Scythia (todays
    Turkmenistan and Afghanistan).
  • For Herodotus and the Greeks, this action of
    Cyrus showed outrageous arrogance, what they
    called hubris.

42
Persia
  • Cyrus, we are told, met his death trying to take
    over the land of the Scythians in an unnecessary
    preemptive war that he did not need to fight.
  • It is said the Scythian ruler had Cyrus face
    buried in a bucket of his own blood.
  • When news that the king had died reached Persia,
    sacred fires all across the land were
    extinguished.

43
Persia
  • This is the tomb of Cyrus at Pasargadae (Cyrus
    capital in Southern Iran).
  • Inside the tomb were found a golden coffin, a
    table set with drinking vessels, and jewel
    studded ornaments.

44
Persia
  • An inscription inside the tomb read O man,
    whoever thou art, from wheresoever thou cometh,
    for I know you shall come, I am Cyrus, who
    founded the empire of the Persians. Grudge me
    not, therefore, this little earth that covers my
    body.
  • Persians were expected to shave their hair in
    mourning, and the manes of horses were cut short.
  • Cyrus son Cambyses II took over the Empire,
    eventually uniting it with Egypt.

45
Persia
  • The Empire continued to expand and reached its
    maximum extent under Darius I, extending beyond
    Egypt into Libya, and into an area north of
    Greece called Macedonia (where Alexander the
    Great came from).

46
Persia
  • In Egypt and Babylon, Persian kings took care to
    uphold the local religious cults in an effort to
    gain the support of their followers and
    officials.
  • The Greek historian Herodotus commented that
    there is no nation which so readily adopts
    foreign customs. They have taken the dress of
    the Medes and in war they wear the Egyptian
    breastplate. As soon as they hear of any luxury,
    they instantly make it their own.

47
Persia
  • Cyrus grandson, Darius I (r. 522-486 BCE), was
    an extremely competent ruler, but a strongly
    authoritarian one.
  • He had the misfortune of trying to rule the
    Greeks.

48
Persia
  • The Persian king Darius worshipping Ahura Mazda.

49
Persia
  • Darius knew the Ionian Greeks were a problem and
    he realized that they could get help and
    encouragement from the Greek mainland.

50
Persia
  • He was determined to conquer Greece proper in
    order to secure his western frontier.
  • But the Greek city-states rebelled (the Ionian
    Revolt), killing or driving out the Persian
    garrisons and declaring liberty.

51
Persia
  • The local satrap could not control the rebellion,
    and the revolt spread.
  • By 499, most of the cities on the Ionian coast
    were once again independent, a situation Darius
    would not tolerate.
  • The revolt had succeeded, but only temporarily.
  • The Ionian city-states appealed to the Greeks on
    the mainland for help.

52
Persia
  • Sparta refused, arguing that events in Asia were
    none of its concern.
  • Athens, on the other hand, sent an entire army
    plus a navy to defend her fellow Greeks from the
    Persians.
  • The expedition burned Sardis, capital of that
    part of the Empire, in 496 and the Persians were
    driven completely out of Asia Minor (Western
    Turkey).

53
Persia
  • Ruins of the Lydian capital, Sardis.

54
Persia
  • When the Persians arrived in force, the rebellion
    ended quickly. By 493 BCE, the Ionian rebellion
    had been crushed by the Persians (it started in
    499 BCE).
  • Darius was surprisingly lenient, at least with
    those cities that agreed to submit to Persian
    rule once more.
  • He did re-institute the garrisons and the taxes.
  • This was the first salvo in the Greco-Persian
    conflicts that would last for decades.

55
Persia
  • Since Athens had been the principle ally of the
    Ionians, they fully expected to feel the wrath of
    Darius.
  • The Athenians were so worried, in 493 they fined
    the playwright Phrynichus 1,000 drachmas for his
    play The Capture of Miletus, because it recounted
    the events of the Ionian Revolt and reminded them
    of the reasons for their current fears.

56
Persia
  • In order to punish the Greeks for their
    impudence, Darius did send his army to the Greek
    mainland (since Athens supported their Ionian
    cousins).
  • In 492 BCE, Darius gave his satrap in Thrace
    (Northern Greece) command of 600 ships, sent to
    bring Athens to its knees.

57
Persia
  • But a freak storm (a gift from the gods)
    destroyed the fleet and Herodotus says 20,000
    Persians were lost.

58
Persia
  • Two years later, Darius sent another armada of
    600 ships that unloaded over 20,000 infantry and
    cavalry (compared to about 10,000 Athenian
    defenders).

59
Persia
  • The Athenians' feelings are best expressed by
    Aeschylus, who fought in the Persian wars, in his
    tragic play The Persians
  • "On, sons of the Hellenes! Fight for the freedom
    of your country! Fight for the freedom of your
    children and of your wives, for the gods of your
    fathers and for the sepulchers of your ancestors!
    All are now staked upon the strife!"

60
Persia
  • The two sides met on the Plains of Marathon,
    about 26 miles north of Athens.
  • Against great odds, the Athenian hoplite warriors
    killed over 6400 Persians (while losing about
    192).

61
Persia
  • Pheilippides then famously ran the 26 miles from
    the battlefield to tell the people of Athens of
    Persias defeat then collapsed and died (he ran
    150 miles to Sparta and back two days before the
    battle to enlist Spartas help).

62
Persia
  • The Persians retreated to their ships, sailed to
    what they thought was an undefended Athens, and
    were surprised to find the Athenian army had
    marched back in time to thwart their efforts
    (Sparta arrived after the battle and couldnt
    believe Athens won).
  • http//www.npr.org/player/v2/mediaPlayer.html?acti
    on1t1islistfalseid129652464m129653903

63
Persia
  • A second series of battles began under Darius
    successor, his eldest son Xerxes (520-465 BCE).
  • The Persians under Xerxes were defeated even more
    decisively at the Battle of Thermopylae (480 BCE)
    (The famous Spartan 300) and again at Plataea
    (479 BCE).

64
Persia
  • Leonidas at Thermopylae by David

65
Persia
  • After Plataea, the disorganized Persian army was
    no longer much of a threat to the Greeks.
  • 40 years after the Persian wars, Herodotus wrote
    his Historai (Histories) meaning researches.

66
Persia
  • He tried to answer the question of why nations
    rise and fallwhy great nations were once small
    and why weak nations were once great.

67
Persia
  • Herodotus wanted to understand if invariable laws
    of history explained these changes.
  • His book was also the first attempt to explain
    why the Middle East was different from the West.
  • He noted conflict from the two regions from the
    very start, including the Trojan War. The
    Persian Wars were one more struggle in a series
    he believed would continue as long as humanity.

68
Persia
  • Herodotus intended his history as a lesson to the
    people of Athens as they embarked on their
    empire.
  • Because he understood that people frequently
    learned from the mistakes of others, he pointed
    to the mistakes of the once-mighty Persians.
  • Darius wanted to conquer Athens, but his much
    larger army was defeatedthis should have taught
    the Persians that their army wasnt invincible.

69
Persia
  • The Persians should have learned, according to
    Herodotus, that a small army of free menin this
    case the Greeksfighting against an invasion of
    their country will defeat a much larger
    professional army fighting as the slaves of a
    despot.

70
Persia
  • In 480 BCE Xerxes returned to Greece with an even
    larger army of over 1 million men and over 1000
    warships.
  • Xerxes himself rode in the battle chariot of the
    god Ahura Mazda.

71
Persia
  • Xerxes force rolled over every nation in their
    path.
  • Only 31 out of the hundreds of Greek cities, led
    by Athens and Sparta, fought against the
    Persians.
  • Many others, including Thebes, supported the
    Persians.
  • It seemed as if Xerxes would prevail.
  • At the pass of Thermopylae, the Spartan 300
    defeated 20,000 Persians.

72
Persia
  • Xerxes found Athens empty and burned it in
    retaliation of the Greeks burning of Sardis
    (Lydia), but against his counselors advice, he
    fought a naval battle in the Bay of Salamis off
    the coast of Athens, and the Persian fleet was
    destroyed.

73
Persia
  • The Persian Empire began to decline, and the
    empire of Athens began to rise.
  • Herodotus found an explanation in the concept of
    hybris, arrogance that leads to the abuse of
    power and self-destruction.
  • Xerxes made the choice to invade when he did not
    have to.
  • Xerxes found that free men defending their
    country could not be conquered.

74
Persia
  • Some historians see the clash between Athens and
    Persia as the trigger event that set the West
    (Greece) against the East (Persia) as a
    defining concept for modern day international
    politics.
  • Following this line of thinking, todays events
    in the Middle East are framed in the mind set
    that West and East have been natural enemies
    since these ancient days.

75
Persia
  • The Persian Wars were significant for two primary
    reasons 1). they signaled the decline of Persia,
    and 2). they showed Athens to be the premier
    city-state in Greece.

76
Persia
  • For the next 1,000 years, the Persian imperial
    bureaucracy and court life, with its
    administrators, tax collectors, record keepers,
    and translators provided the model for later
    governments in the region, including those of the
    Islamic world.

77
Persia
  • The Persian infrastructure included a system of
    standardized coinage, predictable taxes levied on
    each province, and a newly dug canal linking the
    Nile with the Red Sea, which greatly increased
    commerce and enriched Egypt.
  • A royal road some 1700 miles long facilitated
    commerce and communications across the vast
    empire.

78
Persia
  • The royal road.

79
Persia
  • Caravans of merchants could traverse this highway
    in 90 days, but imperial couriers, with a fresh
    supply of horses every 25-30 miles, could carry a
    message from one end of the road to another in
    less than two weeks.

80
Persia
  • Herodotus was impressed, for Neither snow, nor
    rain, nor heat, nor darkness of nightprevents
    them from accomplishing the task proposed to them
    with utmost speed.
  • This description was later made the motto of the
    United States Postal Service.

81
Persia
  • Before the cult of Zoroaster, Persian religions
    centered on sacrifice and fire.
  • Zoroaster (c.630 c. 550 BCE), also called
    Zarathustra, was an ancient Persian prophet who
    founded the monotheistic religion Zoroastrianism.

82
Persia
  • According to the 'Zend Avesta', the sacred book
    of Zoroastrianism, he is said to have received a
    vision from Ahura Mazda, the Wise Lord (God), who
    appointed him to preach the truth.

83
Persia
  • According to Zoroaster, man had been given the
    power to choose between good and evil (the idea
    of Free Will)...between the God of Light and the
    principle of evil.
  • He believed in a messianic deliverance, the
    resurrection of the dead, and a life everlasting
    after judgment.
  • His religion was based upon good thoughts, good
    words, and good deeds.

84
Persia
  • The end of the world would come when the forces
    of light would triumph and the saved souls
    rejoiced in its victory by living on in a heaven
    while condemned souls would spend eternity in
    pain (Hell).

85
Persia
  • Zoroastrianism influenced Judaism and by default,
    Christianity and Islam.
  • The angels of the Judeo/Christian/Islamic
    tradition and the notion of God/Satan and
    heaven/hellfire which awaited the good/wicked
    both came from Zoroaster.
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