In Day Of Empire, Amy Chua throughout the book explains the rises and falls of the most powerful hyper powers, large empires being able to maintain large areas while being stable in history. Her thesis of the book states tolerance was the rise and fall of the first empires in history. Where tolerance is the cause and decline of an empire. The empires had tolerance, Chua explains in her book that tolerance is the freedom of the people to do as they please and coexist with each other no matter the religion or even ethnical background which is what led to the rise of the empires. At the same time, tolerance led to the decline through the intolerance of the leaders as well as too much tolerance, where as the more a empire became diverse the harder it was to become unified and help fix problems. Intolerance where as leaders changed as time went on the more ignorant and greedy they became, they wanted things their way as well as to their standards. They set rules and made the people change their way of life which led to the fall of the hyperpower because of the rebellion of the people and other powers conquering.…
The Persians had a very good government. Before Persia became known as the largest empire in the world in its time period they were not unified. It wasn't until 522 B.C. that the Persian Empire became unified. Emperor Darius accomplished the real unification of this empire. Darius set up a government that was then used as a template for later rulers. He then divided the Persian Empire into section; a government official called a satrap headed each of these sections. The satraps were usually Persian and the people inside the local government were non-Persians. His government was a monarchy (kings/queens) and it was a centralized government. According to the economy and the wealth of each province, determined how much taxes would cost for that year. Like the great King Hammurabi, Darius adopted rules and laws from the people in which he conquered. Darius then drew a single code of laws in which the people within the empire had to abide by.”He did not abolish the existing laws of individual lands or peoples, nor did he impose a uniform law code on his entire empire.”(Bentley and Ziegler 170) .…
The Persian King Cyrus was part of one of the most powerful kingdoms leading after the “Dark Age”(textbook, p.37). His great ruling was primarily in Babylon but his ruling emerged all around the world; “(as to…
Empires have dominated our globe for centuries on, yet no one has linked the connection between how these empires rise, and what causes their reign to end. Through collective studies, Day Of Empire author Amy Chua presents a persuasive theory which argues that hyper powers achieved their world dominance through tolerance of culture and religion, as well as the individuals residing in the conquered society, amassing their talents for the benefit of the Empire.…
Cyrus’s legacy was continued by Cambyses (B.C. 530-522), and then brought to the peak by Darius the Great, who expanded the Achaemenid, or the Persian Empire, into present-day India. One big contributor to Darius’s success was his brilliant leadership and direct military conquering of the Immortals, who were…
Cyrus II had established the administrative basis for the empire, where his son Darius perfected the system around 519 BCE. According to Herodotus, Darius’ administration was later followed by all successive kings, including his own son Xerxes. He notes that Xerxes, who succeeded kingship in 486BC inherited the empire created by his three predecessors; Cyrus the Great, Cambyses and Darius the I. Modern historian Olmstead, explains that the Persian empire was a hereditary monarchy, meaning that the descendants of Achaemenes, the Archaemenids, formed the royal dynasty where they ruled by the grace of Ahuramazda. It has generally been established by many modern scholars such as Granger, that Xerxes and his predecessors were not considered gods, but were absolute monarchs and autocrats, who claimed religious and hereditary sanction for their rule, by the grace of Ahuramazda. Like his father Darius, Xerxes was an absolute ruler, where all his subjects had to obey him. On the Naqsh I…
Persia’s rise to power began with the marriage between a Persian and a Median. Cyrus, the son of a powerful Persian chief, married a Median princess. The Medes had been the first to achieve a complex political organization in Central Asia near western Iran. The Persians eventually overthrew the Median monarch but maintained the framework of the Median government. In Persian society the warrior was dominant. Over the course of two decades the Persian rulers and their armies redrew the map of western Asia from Anatolia to Mesopotamia and as far as the Indus region. Cyrus and his successors used the traditions of the local people and the creation of a new organizational structure to maintain control of their empire. (103-104)…
Darius I ruled the Persian Empire from 521-485BC. He conquered the Indus valley and attacked the Scythians, but never conquered them or the Greeks at whose hands he suffered a defeat in the battle of Marathon. He began building the religious and administrative centre at Persepolis. Darius I built the treasury and had finished the palace at Susa in media when he decided to build another capital at Persia, called PERSEPOLIS.…
The Persian empire at its peak has long been seen as one of the largest wholes during the classical era, and few have rivaled its size. The land that Alexander the Great was able to conquer, however, was one of the few that served as an appropriate challenge. Around the time of 338 B.C.E through 323 B.C.E., Alexander's collected mass was a whole. Of a Greek origin, Alexander was taught by Aristotle, the great philosopher, and it can be inferred that he used the strategic methods learned, among other things, to assist him during his expansion. It was short lived, however, when he died of an unknown cause at an early age of thirty-three. Even though his empire crumbled, his legacy lived on. Multiple cities, strongly influenced by Alexander, erected,…
Alexander, son of king Philip II and Olympias was born in 356 B.C.E, and at age 19, became king of Macedon. With a great army at his disposal and his brilliant military mind, he started his conquest. From 337-323 B.C.E Alexander conquered Greece, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and a large part of Asia. Alexander ruled from Macedonia to the northern part of India. He defeated the Persians numerous times with his incredible military strategies, even when his armies were outnumbered by almost 200,000 Persian soldiers. The sheer size of his empire was unlike anything ever seen before but when he died in 323 B.C.E, the three main areas he conquered (Greece/Macedonia, Egypt, and Mesopotamia/ Asia) were split up and became their own kingdoms. The area that was once Greece and Macedonia became the Antigonid Kingdom, the Egyptian are became the Ptolemaic Kingdom and the Asia/ Mesopotamia area became the Seleucid Kingdom.…
Cyrus launched Persia’s imperial venture, and his conquests laid the foundation for the first Persian Empire. In 585 B.C.E. Cyrus became king of the Persian tribes and in 553 B.C.E. he initiated a rebellion against his median overlord, and he succeeded after 3 years. By 548 B.C.E. he had all of Iran under his control and in 546 B.C.E. he conquered the powerful kingdom of Lydia in Anatolia. Between 545 B.C.E. and 539 B.C.E he campaigned in central Asia and Bactria and in 539 B.C.E., after a quick campaign, he seized Babylonia, and their vassal states immediately recognized Cyrus as their lord. Within a period of 20 years, Cyrus went from a minor regional king to the ruler of an empire that stretched from India to the border of Egypt. Cyrus managed to expand the empire by using the wealth and resources he had attained after conquering Lydia to extend Persian authority to new lands and build the earliest set of vast imperial states of classical times.…
2. Alexander of Macedon: Heir to the throne of his father Philip of Macedon, Alexander of Macedon, or Alexander the Great, was a young king who had conquered most of the Persian Empire. He was a brilliant strategist and an inspired leader.…
Persia was the greatest empire that the ancient world had yet seen. It had grown into a stronger empire through the reigns of Cyrus, Cambyses, and Darius. Just before Darius's death the Ionian cities revolted, causing the beginning of the Persian Wars.…
The next heir to the throne was Darius I who helped to build the largest known empire in the world. He divide his empire into twenty provinces which was ruled by a different satrap who served as the governor. In addition to charging the people annual taxes to contribute, Darius built a strong army and maintained heavily fortified roads and cities. Darius also viewed himself as a divine ruler, who practiced the Persian religion of zoroastrianism.…
Persia had 3 kings: Cyrus, Cambyses, and Darius I. Persia also had "governors" that were called Satraps. Also in Persia was the capital city, also known…