The Persian Empire 550 BCE-330 BCE

Similar documents
The Persian Empire. Mr. Mable 2012

Located in southwestern Iran Building an empire Same time Athens was becoming a democracy

Ancient Middle East Persia. March. 5 th, 2013

Cyrus the Great. A tolerant ruler he allowed different cultures within his empire to keep their own institutions. The Greeks called him a Law-Giver.

The Persian Empire. An Outsider Invader Threatens the Greek Mainland.

Greece and Persia. The Persian Wars Greece s Finest Hours

THE RISE OF NEW EMPIRES. Chapter 2 Section 4

Guided Notes - Persian & Peloponnesian Wars

Notes: The Greek World (Chapter 9)

Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills Transparency 4 4

The Persian Wars: Ionian Revolt The Ionian Revolt, which began in 499 B.C. marked the beginning of the Greek-Persian wars. In 546 B.C.

Objective: I understand when two groups meet what can happen? Can Sparta and Athens actually get along? Pericles comes to the rescue, maybe?

(1) For many years the Greek city-states had fought against each other over land and TRADE In the 400 s B.C., the city-states UNITED to confront a com

Unit 5 Lesson 5 The Phoenicians

World History I SOL WH1.5d Mr. Driskell

War in Ancient Greece. Essential Question: Why does conflict develop?

Greece at War. Persian Wars. May 01, 2013

The Persian Wars. Section 1 Introduction

We re Starting Period 2 Today!

Ancient Greek Warfare. Persian Wars, Peloponnesian War, and Alexander the Great

Chapter 4. Greece and Iran, B.C.E. AP World History

Student s Name: Subject: Social Studies

This is Sparta!!!! How the Spartans Saved the World

Study Guide Chapter 7 The Ancient Greeks

Battle of Marathon B.C.E.

Ionian Greek colonies

Unit 6 Lesson 8 The Persian and Peloponnesian Wars

Review 06 and 07 World History and the Bible

Athenian Background. Located NE of Sparta, on the Aegean Sea Had different philosophy than Spartans

APWH. Persia. Was Zoroastrianism First? 9/15/2014. Chapter 4 Notes

THE GRECO-PERSIAN WARS BCE

PERSIAN EXPANSION 520 B.C.,

Ancient Iran, BCE. from Iranz. Geography and Resources. The Rise of the Persian Empire

Warring City-States. Chapter 5, Section 2

LESSON 1: The Geography of Greece (read p )

Persians were creating a huge empire that stretched from Asia Minor to India

Ancient Greece B.C.E.

THE RISE OF GREECE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF GREEK POLITICAL LIFE

Persian Empire. Background Guide. Chair: Anna Ringheiser Website:

» 1. largest empire in history and eventually noticed Athens and other citystate s. Persians demand offer of Earth and Water

The Classical Empires

» 1. largest empire in history and eventually noticed Athens and other citystate s. Persians demand offer of Earth and Water

Classical Greek Civilization Our main topics: n History of Greek City-States n Cultural contributions as foundation of Western Civilization n

THINK: How did the many Greek city-states commonly relate/deal with each other?

Clip Art Ancient Greece Alexander the Great

Greek City-States. Reality and Image

GRECO-PERSIAN WARS NAME: B.C. 499 TO 479. Task: Read ~ Write ~ Respond Use your Split note-taking skills

History 3050: The Ancient Mediterranean. Lecture 5: The Persians. Wednesday, September 23, 2009


Ancient Greece. Chapter 6 Section 1 Page 166 to 173

World History I Mrs. Rogers Sem

Monetary History of the World

Greek Test Review Chapter 10 and Chapter 11

Mycenaean Civilization Develops 4. Mycenaean people were who migrated from the Eurasian Steppes. How was Mycenae ruled?

Meeting People Cyrus the Great (SY ruhs) Darius (duh RY uhs) Xerxes (ZUHRK SEEZ) Themistocles (thuh MIHS tuh KLEEZ)

THE HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE

Minoan and Mycenaean Societies

Big Idea. Hellenistic culture spreads.

Introducing the Read-Aloud

Athens and Sparta. Chapter 7, Section 2

Home work. Fill in the Blanks Use your study sheet to find the correct answers. THE CRADLE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION

Wednesday 7 June 2017 Morning

Early People of the Aegean

Greece. made up of two parts: mainland hundreds of small islands. Two main features: Mountains Seas

The Glory of Ancient Greece

Bell work- p 60 of comp book- Maka your paper looka like mine Write What are we doing this week in the agenda. Peloponnesian Wars- Athens vs Sparta

Ancient Greece Chapter 7 Review

Alexander fighting Persian king Darius III. Alexander Mosaic, from Pompeii, Naples, Museo Archeologico Nazionale.

THE CHALLENGE OF PERSIA. The Making of Classical Greece

Ancient Greece. Theme: Religion Theme: Society & Culture -Slide 1 -Slide2 Theme: Science & Tech. -Slide 1 -Slide 2

Athens and Sparta THE EARLIEST GREEK CIVILIZATIONS THRIVED NEARLY 4,000 YEARS AGO. YET THEIR CULTURE STILL IMPACTS OUR LIVES TODAY.

Geography and Early Greek Civilization

11. How was Hippias a different ruler than his father Pysistritus? What did he do to his father's reforms?

Greco-Roman: Early Experiments in Participatory Government

name: hr: group / solo due on:

APWH chapter 4.notebook. September 11, 2012

A Short History of Athens

city-state: a tiny country with its own government, based around one large city; polis Examples: Athens, Sparta, Corinth, Megara, Argos

Chapter Introduction

THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE NILE. Section 1

Objectives for Chapter 4

Essential Question: What is Hellenism? What were the lasting characteristics of the Roman Republic & the Roman Empire?

Text 1: Empire Building Through Conquest. Topic 6: Ancient Rome and the Origins of Christianity Lesson 2: The Roman Empire: Rise and Decline

Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks, c B.C. c. 133 B.C. Lesson 3: Classical Greece

Ancient Greece: The Greek Mainland and Greek Colonies

WHI.05: Ancient Greece: Geography to Persian Wars

Battle of Marathon B.C.E.

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? The Ancient Greeks Lesson 1 Rise of Greek Civilization ESSENTIAL QUESTION GUIDING QUESTIONS

Bell Work: HINT HINT HINT! Look on pg. 140

5/21/14. Introduction. Early Greek and Roman Societies. Classical Civilization in Mediterranean: Greece and Rome. Chapter 4

NAME DATE CLASS. Troy. KEY Ancient Greece ASIA MINOR. 100 miles km Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection

Name: Period: Date: Mediterranean Sea , '13"N 18 48'30"E. Nile River , '14.06"N 31 26'27.

Document A: Herodotus

The Kingdoms of Ancient Egypt Nile River Valley Civilization in the Ancient Era

Big Idea Rome Becomes an Empire Essential Question How did Rome become an Empire?

The Persian Wars. The Limits of Empire And the Birth of a Greek World View

CLASSICAL GREECE. Spolufinancováno ESF a státním rozpočtem ČR, reg. č. projektu CZ.1.07/1.1.00/ OPVK

Sparta and Athens. Chapter 4, Section 2. Athens. Sparta Both. (Pages )

Ancient Greece Chapter Four

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3. Early Civilization in Greece. Minoans Settle on Crete. Ancient Greece Chapter Four

Transcription:

The Persian Empire 550 BCE-330 BCE

The Rise of Persia The Persians based their empire on tolerance and diplomacy. They relied on a strong military to back up their policies. Ancient Persia is where Iran is today. At the height of the Persian Empire, it stretched from India to Africa! WOW!

Persia is in Modern Day Iran

The Extent of the Persian Empire

Cyrus the Great (The 1 st Great Leader)

Cyrus s Empire 550 BC Conquered several neighboring kingdoms Military Genius Controlled an empire spanning 2000 miles!!! Kindness toward conquered people Honored local customs and religions 538 BC - Allowed the Jews to return to their homeland, Jerusalem Considered by the Jews to be one of God s anointed ones

Primary Source This is the word of Cyrus king of Persia: The Lord, God of heaven has given me all the kingdoms of the earth, and he himself has charged me to build him a house at Jerusalem in Judah. To every man of his people now among you I say, God be with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem in Judah, and rebuild the house of the Lord God of Israel, the God whose city is Jerusalem. What type of ruler was Cyrus based on this quote?

PERSIA and the city of PERSEPOLIS

PERSEPOLIS ~ A Famous City 518 BCE King Darius (another Leader) Utilized influences and materials from all over his empire, which included Babylon, Egypt, Mesopotamian and Greece

How did the Kings keep control of such a vast empire? The divided the Empire into Provinces Appointed Royal Governors who were loyal to the Emperor and did his bidding. They spied on the citizens and on the governors to make sure they were not going to steal or revolt.

How did people get around the Empire??? The Royal Road 1,677 miles long with 111 relay stations Relay stations had rest areas and fresh horses. The entire royal road could be traveled in a week by a horsemen. WOW! Caravans took about a month Other smaller roads branched off the royal road

How would the Royal Road enable a ruler to maintain power in the empire?

Darius

Darius the Great Sneaky Beginnings: He was a member of the king s body guard and overthrew the king in 522 BC! He took power and created a well-organized efficient government He brought peace and stability back to Persia Expanded the empire by 500 miles But could not conquer Greece

But where does this fit into History? Do you remember Athens Greece??? Well, they fought the Persians over control of the Land First Persian War

The Battle of Marathon QUICK HISTORY LESSON: The Athenians had won at Marathon, but they certainly had not destroyed the Persian army. They had made plans before the battle that if they won, they would get word back to Athens as soon as possible because they knew that the Persian fleet was sure to sail around Attica and attempt to take the city while it was undefended. The citizens were to fortify the walls and make it appear that Athens was strongly defended.

Marathon When Athens won the battle, the general sent a young soldier (probably named Pheidippides) to take word back to Athens. He ran the entire distance, 26 miles, shouted Joy to you! We have won!" and fell dead of exhaustion. (WOW!) In memory of this event, the Marathon was included among the contests since the first contemporary Olympic Games.

Result of the 1 st Persian War King Darius Lost! The Persian Empire continued to lose power.

Xerxes Darius was followed by his son, Xerxes (ruled 485-465 BCE) Xerxes became a Dictator. (Uh Oh.) He did not follow Darius or Cyrus and was not tolerant of others. His main goal was to conquer Greece at all costs!

This started Wait for it The Second Persian War

Another History Lesson: The Battle of Thermopylae 300 Spartans held off 1 million troops of the Persian Empire so that people in Greek city-states could flee safely without being killed by the Persians. After killing the 300 Spartans the Persians Marched on Athens, but Athens was deserted! The citizens had time to escape to the Island of Salamis. Persians were bottlenecked in the small bay of Salamis They could not maneuver The smaller Greek Ships destroyed the Persian fleet.

Battle of Salamis

Result of the 2nd Persian War Xerxes Lost! Persia had to retreat home in failure. Never again did Persia expand.

Alexander the Great Macedonian (Greek) King that laid the final death blow to the Persian Empire and conquered it.

Decline of the Empire Military Problems Was finally conquered by Alexander the Great Persia s defenses were smashed by Alexander s army Even though Persian soldiers outnumbered them, Alexander s army was able to take them by surprise and break through a weak point in Persian lines. King Darius III tried to negotiate a peace settlement, but Alexander did not accept and went on to conquer the remainder of The Persian Empire.

Decline of the Empire Social Problems For the most part, they were very tolerant of their citizen s religions, languages, laws and ideas. However, when faced with rebellion, they did not hesitate to take extreme military measures. People revolted over heavy tax burdens Social structure started to break down when there was no longer a strong leader. The people below the upper class started organizing riots and revolt.

Decline of the Empire Leadership Problems Persia was ruled successfully for many years under leaders like Cyrus the Great and Darius I. After the death of Darius, his son Xerxes ruled. He was a cruel and weak King. The empire weakened gradually under his rule due to conspiracies, assassinations, and revolts by the people who were burdened with heavy taxes Kings became greedy and began stealing from the supply of riches rather than giving it to the people.

Decline of the Empire Economic Problems Persian taxes became heavier and more oppressive This led to economic depression and revolts Persian kings started hoarding gold and silver rather than recirculating it. This meant not enough gold and silver for business and made the economy even worse When local leaders (Satraps) decided to become more independent and rule their section like they were kings themselves instead of subjects of the king, this caused economic problems.