Transcript Slide 1

The Persian Empire
2000 BC – 100 BC
The Persian Empire
2000 BC – 100 BC
Spoke an Indo-European Language
Originally ruled by the Medes
Cyrus the Great led a rebellion to win
independence, united the Medes and
Persians
Darius and Xerxes I would spread rule of
Persia further
It was the mightiest Empire of the time
Had several disputes with Greece
Government
Rulers concerned with justice
Allowed conquered people to keep own
leaders, language, and religion
King had spies to check regional rulers
Built roads to connect empire
Became extension of Silk Road
Eventually defeated by Alexander the Great
Building an Empire
-the son of Cyrus the Great conquered Egypt
-Darius built a network of public roads, introduced a uniform set of
weights and measurements and established several capital cities
-Persia became the largest empire that
had ever been built
-taxes were paid by the people to
the king
-trade made the Persians very
wealthy
Religion
-at first, Persians worshipped many gods
-in 570 BC, a religious leader named Zoroaster,
introduced Zoroastrianism
-there were only two gods
1. the god of truth, light, and goodness
2. the god of darkness and evil
-the whole universe was the battleground
between the two forces
-if you lived a good life, you went to Heaven
-if you lived an evil life, you went to Hell
Persian Empire
Persia’s Accomplishments
-they learned the practice of using coins
-Persians moved from a bartering to a “money economy”
-they built 100’s of miles of roads using gravel and stone
-a postal service was established to make communication easier
Geography
-large mountainous peninsula,
the islands of the Aegean Sea,
and the coast of what is
present-day Turkey
-farming was hard because of
the hilly and stony terrain so
they had to rely on trade
-they produced wine, olive oil,
and pottery which they traded
-trade  cultural diffusion
-the exposure led to the
Greeks using the Phoenician
alphabet
The Rise of Greek City-States
Mountains and the sea caused Greek centers of population to be
cut off from one another. As a result, separate city-states
developed with their own governments and laws. The Greek word
for city-state is polis.
Sparta
-one of the most important citystates
-located in the southern part of
Greece
-military state
-in 725 BC, the Spartans
conquered their neighbors and
forced them to farm for them
-individualism and new ideas
were discouraged
-strict obedience and selfdiscipline were highly
valued….for example, if a
newborn Spartan baby was
found to be unhealthy, it was
left on a hillside to die
Athens
- Developed the first Democracy
- a democratic city-state where
voting on issues took place
-the Citizens Assembly was the
main governing body
-all citizens were welcome but
only the first 5,000 were allowed
-the Citizens Assembly met about
ten times a year
-the assembly made laws
-even poor citizens could be on
the assembly
-this type of government became
known as a democracy
-all citizens were allowed to
participate in government