The Various Persian Empires in the Classical Era

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE HEIGHT OF SOUTHWEST ASIA’S CLASSICAL SOCIETIES
Advertisements

Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. The Empires of Persia 1.
Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 1 Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia.
The Persian Empire Essential Vocabulary The Middle East The Persian Empire Cyrus the Great Darius the Great Royal Road Zoroastrianism.
Persia and Greece.
Persia Persia. The Persian Empire Cyrus the Great 580 – 530 B. C. E.  A tolerant ruler  he allowed different cultures within his empire to keep their.
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia 1©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 1 Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia.
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia 1©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Classical Empires PAP World History Uvalde High School.
The rise and fall of the Persian Empires
Persia. Foundations Political integration of the Iranian civilizations by warfare Beginning: 6th century BC Four empires over one millenium: Achaemenids.
The Persian Empire. The Achaemenids B.C.E. Indo-European in origin Founded by Cyrus in 558 Controlled Mesopotamia by 539 Empire Bordered Egypt.
Darius Expands the Empire
Unit 2 – The “Classical Era” in the West
Persia and Greece. 7 Important Periods Ancient Iran, 1000–30 b.c.e. Greek Archaic period 800–480 b.c.e. Persian Wars Classical Age of Greece 480–430 b.c.e.
Page 2 Darius, the Great King He is shown here on his throne in Persepolis, the new capital city he built. In his right hand, Darius holds the royal staff;
CHAPTER 7: The Empires of Persia The Empires of Persia
How are “empires” different from “river valley civilizations”?
Southwest Asia: Persian Empire
Persia Lies between Mesopotamia and central Asia. Subject to various invasions and migrations from the east People were Indo-European Had strong military.
 Persian thinker Zoroaster  Introduced new religion, Zoroastrianism  Monotheist religion  Inspired Cyrus’ conquest.
The Empires of Persia Chapter 7.
FOUNDATIONS REVIEW Agricultural Revolution to 600 CE.
Assyria, Babylon, and the Persian Empire The Fertile Crescent.
THE PERSIANS THE HEIGHT OF SOUTHWEST ASIA’S CLASSICAL SOCIETIES.
THE PERSIANS THE HEIGHT OF SOUTHWEST ASIA’S CLASSICAL SOCIETIES.
Persia Unites Many Lands
The Classical Empires Mr. Millhouse AP World History Spring 2008.
Unit 2 (600BCE–600CE) The Classical Empires Mr. Lewis AP World History.
Tom White, Nikitha Lattupally, Matt Massaro, Jessica Thomas.
The Persian Empire c. 550 – 330 BCE
The Empires of Persia 600BCE – 600CE.
Four Major Dynasties: Achaemenids ( BCE)
Essential Question: What is the difference between a “river valley civilization” & an “empire”? Warm-Up Questions: What is an “empire”? How are “empires”
Ch. 7 Empires of Persia The Achaemenid Empire
PERSIA Parthians - Sassanids
Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 1 Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia.
The First Empires! Mesopotamia and Egypt. The Meaning of Empire Empire is the extension of rule by one people over other, different peoples People see.
Quaestio : Was Herodotus’ view of the Persians accurate? Nunc Agenda : Take a handout (“The Mighty Persians”) from the homework desk and work individually.
The Empires of Classical Persia.  Contemporary Iran  Four major dynasties 1. Achaemenids ( B.C.E.) 2. Seleucids ( B.C.E.) 3. Parthians.
+ Empire Big Ideas & Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia ©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1.
Brief history of the Region. CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION.
Persian Empire At the dawn of the Classical Era, the Persian Empire was the most dominant empire on earth. To this day, (as a % of earth's population)
Persian Empires.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia
SS7H2 The student will analyze continuity and change in Southwest Asia (Middle East) leading to the 21st century.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome to Period 2!!! 600 to 600!!!.
The Achaemenid Persian Empire
Good day to you Please get a chapter 5 study guide
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia.
Persians and Greeks Early Classical empires
Classical Empires.
The Empires of Persia.
The Persians Lived in present-day Iran King Cyrus added many new territories to the empire Northern Mesopotamia, Syria, Canaan, Phoenician cities,
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia
The Persian Empire.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
AP World Review: Video #6: Greece and Persia (Key Concepts 2
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Chapter 7 The Empires of Persia
Geo Day 58.
Mid-Sixth Century BCE to Early Seventh Century CE
Presentation transcript:

The Various Persian Empires in the Classical Era AP World History KC 2.2.I-IIA-C Pamela Hammond, Brantley County High School, Nahunta, GA 2015

Achaemenid Empire (549–330 BC) Original Persian Empire of Cyrus the Great Known for religious tolerance and fair ruling under Cyrus Darius I Canal in Egypt for trade Royal Road Expanded empire Divided into Satrapies Elaborate bureaucracy “Eyes and ears of the King” Greco-Persian Wars Attempted diplomacy to annex— “give me your earth and water” Xerxes Defeated by Greeks Able administrator

Seleucid Empire (329-151 BC) Begun by one of Alexander’s generals, Seleucus Center of Hellenistic culture Dominated by Hellenistic aristocracy especially in the urban areas Some resistance in Judea when ordered to erect a temple to Zeus (Maccabees) Declined in the 3rd century BCE due to growing threat of the Romans in the West and the Parthians in the East Silver coin from the Seleucid Empire

Parthian Empire (247 BCE – 224 CE) Originally from east of the Caspian Sea Nomads, known for the “Parthian shot” rider twists backward at full gallop and shoots enemies in the rear Conquered Seleucids in 247 BCE Continued the satrapies/bureaucracies established by earliest Persians Participants in Silk Road trade, gained great wealth as a middle man between Rome and Han China Hellenistic kingdom; but saw a revival of Iranian culture Built the first qanat tunnels for irrigation purposes in the First century BCE Competed with Romans over Armenia Crassus killed in 53 BCE Gained control over the Levant Head of a Parthian Louvre

Sassanid Empire (226 AD – circa 650 AD) Sassanid Persians overthrew the Parthians and wanted to return to their Persian roots Zoroasterian Religious tolerance grew as Christians fled Roman Empire Continued strong centralized government with satrapies and bureaurcracies Constant warfare with Rome over SW Asia Both sides used Arab mercenaries Proxy war Continued as middle man on the Silk Roads Paid tribute to the Huns, so survived the invasions that brought down the empires surrounding them. Gained some tribute from Byzantine Empire to pay off the Huns (would later take over the Levant from Byz Emp Advanced system of taxation Fell to Muslim Arabs—Abbasid Dynasty Mesopotamia and Persia split into two Iraq and Iran Ctesiphon the capital of the Pre-Islamic Parthian and Sassanian Empires