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EMPIRE OF THE MEDES AND PERSIANS
The third of the great Oriental monarchies brought in
contact with the Jews was that of the Medes and Persians,
which arose on the dissolution of the Assyrian and Babylonian
empires. The nations we have hitherto
alluded to were either Hamite or Shemite. But
our attention is now directed to a different race,
the descendants of Japhet. Madai, the third son of Japhet,
was the progenitor of the Medes, whose territory extended
from the Caspian Sea on the north, to the mountains of Persia
on the south, and from the highlands of Armenia and
the chain of Tagros on the west, to the great desert of Iran
on the east. It comprised a great variety of climate, and
was intersected by mountains whose valleys were fruitful in
corn and fruits. “The finest part of the country is an elevated
region inclosed by the offshoots of the Armenian
mountains, and surrounding the basin of the great lake
Urumizu, four thousand two hundred feet above the sea, and
the valleys of the ancient Mardus and the Araxes, the northern
boundary of the land. In this mountain region stands
Tabris, the delightful summer seat of the modern Persian
shahs. The slopes of the Tagros furnish excellent pasture;
and here were reared the famous horses which the ancients
called Nisæan. The eastern districts are flat and
pestilential, where they sink down to the shores of the Caspian
Sea; rugged and sterile where they adjoin the desert
of Iran.” The people who inhabited this country were
hardy and bold, and were remarkable for their
horsemanship. They were the greatest warriors
[pg 089]
of the ancient world, until the time of the Greeks. They
were called Aryans by Herodotus. They had spread over
the highlands of Western Asia in the primeval ages, and
formed various tribes. The first notice of this Aryan (or
Arian) race, appears in the inscriptions on the black obelisk
of Nimrod, B.C. 880, from which it would appear that this
was about the period of the immigration into Media, and
they were then exposed to the aggressions of the
Assyrians. “The first king who menaced their independence
was the monarch whose victories are recorded on
the black obelisk in the British Museum.” He made a raid
into, rather than a conquest of, the Median country. Sargon,
the third monarch of the Lower Empire, effected something
like a conquest, and peopled the cities which he founded with
Jewish captives from Samaria, B.C. 710. Media thus became
the most eastern province of his empire, but the conquest of
it was doubtless incomplete. The Median princes paid tribute
to the kings of Nineveh, or withheld it, according to
their circumstances
the Median monarchy commenced
B.C. 875; but Herodotus, with greater probable accuracy,
places the beginning of it B.C. 708. The revolt of Media
from Assyria was followed by the election of Deioces,
who reigned fifty-three years. The history of
this king is drawn through Grecian sources, and can not much
be depended upon. According to the legends, the seven
tribes of the Medes, scattered over separate villages, suffered
all the evils of anarchy, till the reputation of Deioces made
him the arbiter of their disputes. He then retired into private
life; anarchy returned, a king was called for, and Deioces
was elected. He organized a despotic power, which had its
central seat in Ecbatana, which he made his capital, built
upon a hill, on the summit of which was the royal palace,
where the king reigned in seclusion, transacting all business
through spies, informers, petitions, and decrees. Such is
the account which Rawlinson gives, and which Smith follows.
The great Median kingdom really began with Cyaxares,
about the year B.C. 633, when the Assyrian empire
was waning. He emerges from the obscurity like
Attila and Gengis Khan, and other eastern conquerors, at
the head of irresistible hordes, sweeps all away before him,
and builds up an enormous power. This period was distinguished
by a great movement among the Turanian races
(Cimmerians), living north of the Danube, which, according
to Herodotus, made a great irruption into Asia Minor,
where some of the tribes effected a permanent settlement;
while the Scythians, from Central Asia, overran Media, crossed
the Zagros mountains, entered Mesopotamia, passed through
Syria to Egypt, and held the dominion of Western Asia, till
expelled by Cyaxares. He only established his new kingdom
after a severe conflict between the Scythian and Aryan
races, which had hitherto shared the possession of the tablelands
of Media.
From age to age the Turanian races have pressed forward
to occupy the South, and it was one of these great movements
which Cyaxares opposed, and opposed successfully—the
first recorded in history. These nomads
of Tartary, or Scythian tribes, which overran
Western Asia in the seventh century before Christ, under the
new names of Huns, Avari, Bulgarians, Magyars, Turks, Mongols,
devastated Europe and Asia for fifteen successive centuries.
They have been the scourge of the race, and they
commenced their incursions before Grecian history begins.
Learning from these Scythian invaders many arts, not
before practiced in war, such as archery and cavalry movements,
Cyaxares was prepared to extend his empire
to the west over Armenia and Asia Minor, as
far as the river Halys. He made war in Lydia with the
father of Crœsus. But before these conquests were made,
he probably captured Nineveh and destroyed it, B.C. 625.
He was here assisted by the whole force of the Babylonians,
under Nabopolassar, an old general of the Assyrians, but
who had rebelled. In reward he obtained for his son, Nebuchadnezzar,
[pg 091]
the hand of the daughter of Cyaxares. The last
of the Assyrian monarchs, whom the Greeks have called
Sardanapalus, burned himself in his palace rather than fall
into the hands of the Median conqueror
The fall of Nineveh led to the independence of Babylon,
and its wonderful growth, and also to the conquests of the
Medes as far as Lydia to the west. The war with
Lydia lasted six years, and was carried on with various
success, until peace was restored by the mediation of a
Babylonian prince. The reason that peace was made was
an eclipse of the sun, which happened in the midst of a great
battle, which struck both armies with superstitious fears.
On the conclusion of peace, the son of the Median king,
Astyages, married the daughter of the Lydian monarch,
Alyattes, and an alliance was formed between Media and
Lydia.
At this time Lydia comprised nearly all of Asia Minor, west
of the Halys. The early history of this country is
involved in obscurity. The dynasty on the throne,
when invaded by the Medes, was founded by Gyges, B.C.
724, who began those aggressions on the Grecian colonies
which were consummated by Crœsus. Under the reign of
Ardys, his successor, Asia Minor was devastated by the
Cimmerians, a people who came from the regions north of
the Black Sea, between the Danube and the Sea of Azov,
being driven away by an inundation of Scythians, like that
which afterward desolated Media. These Cimmerians, having
burned the great temple of Diana, at Ephesus, and destroyed
the capital city of Sardis, were expelled from Lydia
by Alyattes, the monarch against whom Cyaxares had made
war.
Cyaxares reigned forty years, and was succeeded by Astyages,
B.C. 593, whose history is a total blank, till near
the close of his long reign of thirty-five years, when the Persians
under Cyrus arose to power. He seems to have
resigned himself to the ordinary condition of Oriental
kings—to effeminacy and luxury—brought
[pg 092]
about by the prosperity which he inherited. He was contemporary
with Crœsus, the famous king of Lydia, whose life
has been invested with so much romantic interest by Herodotus—the
first of the Asiatic kings who commenced hostile
aggression on the Greeks. After making himself master of
all the Greek States of Asia Minor, he combated a power
which was destined to overturn the older monarchies of the
East—that of the Persians—a race closely connected with the
Medes in race, language, and religion.
The Persians first appear in history as a hardy, warlike
people, simple in manners and scornful of luxury. They
were uncultivated in art and science, but possessed great wit,
and a poetical imagination. They lived in the mountainous
region on the southwest of Iran, where the great plain
descends to the Persian Gulf. The sea-coast is hot and arid,
as well as the eastern region where the mountains
pass into the table-land of Iran. Between these
tracts, resembling the Arabian desert, lie the high
lands at the extremity of the Zagros chain. These rugged
regions, rich in fruitful valleys, are favorable to the cultivation
of corn, of the grape, and fruits, and afford excellent
pasturage for flocks. In the northern part is the beautiful
plain of Shiraz, which forms the favorite residence of the
modern shahs. In the valley of Bend-amir was the old capital
of Persepolis, whose ruins attest the magnificent palaces
of Darius and Xerxes. Persia proper was a small country,
three hundred miles from north to south, and two hundred
and eighty from east to west, inhabited by an Aryan race,
who brought with them, from the country beyond the
Indus, a distinctive religion, language, and political institutions.
Their language was closely connected with the Aryan
dialects of India, and the tongues of modern Europe.
Hence the Persians were noble types of the great Indo-European
family, whose civilization has spread throughout
the world. Their religion was the least corrupted of the
ancient races, and was marked by a keen desire to arrive
at truth, and entered, in the time of the Gnostics, into the
[pg 093]
speculations of the Christian fathers, of whom Origen was
the type. Their teachers were the Magi, a wise and learned
caste, some of whom came to Jerusalem in the time of
Herod, guided by the star in the East, to institute inquiries
as to the birth of Christ. They attempted to solve the
mysteries of creation, but their elemental principle of
religion was worship of all the elements, especially of fire.
But the Persians also believed in the two principles of good
and evil, which were called the principle of dualism, and
which they brought from India. It is thought by Rawlinson
that the Persians differed in their religion from the
primeval people of India, whose Vedas, or sacred books,
were based on monotheism, in its spiritual and personal
form, and that, for the heresy of “dualism,” they were compelled
to migrate to the West. The Medes, with whom they
subsequently became associated, were inclined to the old
elemental worship of nature, which they learned from the
Turanian or Scythic population.
The great man among the Persians was Zoroaster—or
Zerdusht, born, probably, B.C. 589. He is immortal, not
from his personal history, the details of which we
are ignorant, but from his ideas, which became the
basis of the faith of the Persians. He stamped his mind on
the nation, as Mohammed subsequently did upon Arabia.
His central principle was “dualism”—the two powers of
good and evil—the former of which was destined ultimately
to conquer. But with this dualistic creed of the old Persian,
he also blended a reformed Magian worship of the elements,
which had gained a footing among the Chaldean priests, and
which originally came from the Scythic invaders. Magism
could not have come from the Semitic races, whose original
religion was theism, like that of Melchisedek and
Abraham; nor from the Japhetic races, or Indo-European,
whose worship was polytheism—that of personal
gods under distinct names, like Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva.
The first to yield to this Magism were the Medes, who
adopted the religion of older settlers,—the Scythic tribes,
[pg 094]
their subjects,—and which faith superseded the old Aryan
religion.
The Persians, the flower of the Aryan races,
were peculiarly military in all their habits and
aspirations. Their nobles, mounted on a famous breed of
horses, composed the finest cavalry in the world. Nor
was their infantry inferior, armed with lances, shields, and
bows. Their military spirit was kept alive by their mountain
life and simple habits and strict discipline.
Astyages, we have seen, was the last of the Median kings.
He married his daughter, according to Herodotus, to Cambyses,
a Persian noble, preferring him to a higher alliance
among the Median princes, in order that a dream might
not be fulfilled that her offspring should conquer Asia. On
the return of the dream he sought to destroy the child she
was about to bear, but it was preserved by a herdsman; and
when the child was ten years of age he was chosen
by his playfellows on the mountains to be their
king. As such he caused the son of a noble Median to be
scourged for disobedience, who carried his complaint to
Astyages. The Median monarch finds out his pedigree from
the herdsman, and his officer, Harpagns, to whom he had
intrusted the commission for his destruction. He invites,
in suppressed anger, this noble to a feast, at which he serves
up the flesh of his own son. Harpagus, in revenge, conspires
with some discontented nobles, and invites Cyrus, this boy-king,
now the bravest of the youths of his age and country,
to a revolt. Cyrus leads his troops against Astyages, and
gains a victory, and also the person of the sovereign, and
his great reign began, B.C. 558
The dethronement of Astyages caused a war between
Lydia and Persia. Crœsus hastens to attack the
usurper and defend his father-in-law. He forms
a league with Babylonia and Egypt. Thus the three most
powerful monarchs of the world are arrayed against Cyrus,
who is prepared to meet the confederation. Crœsus is defeated,
and retreats to his capital, Sardis; and the next
[pg 095]
spring, while summoning his allies, is attacked unexpectedly
by Cyrus, and is again defeated. He now retires to Sardia,
which is strongly fortified, and the city is besieged, by the
Persians, and falls after a brief siege. Crœsus himself is
spared, and in his adversity gives wise counsel to his
conqueror.
Cyrus leaves a Lydian in command of the captured city,
and departs for home. A revolt ensues, which leads to a
collision between Persia and the Greek colonies, and the subjection
of the Grecian cities by Harpagus, the general of
Cyrus. Then followed the conquest of Asia Minor,
which required several years, and was conducted by
the generals of Cyrus. He was required in Media, to consolidate
his power. He then extended his conquests to the
East, and subdued the whole plateau of Iran, to the mountains
which divided it from the Indus. Thus fifteen years
of splendid military successes passed before he laid siege to
Babylon, B.C. 538
Cyrus leaves a Lydian in command of the captured city,
and departs for home. A revolt ensues, which leads to a
collision between Persia and the Greek colonies, and the subjection
of the Grecian cities by Harpagus, the general of
Cyrus. Then followed the conquest of Asia Minor,
which required several years, and was conducted by
the generals of Cyrus. He was required in Media, to consolidate
his power. He then extended his conquests to the
East, and subdued the whole plateau of Iran, to the mountains
which divided it from the Indus. Thus fifteen years
of splendid military successes passed before he laid siege to
Babylon, B.C. 538
Cyrus fell in battle while fighting a tribe of Scythians at
the east of the Caspian Sea, B.C. 529, He was the greatest
general that the Oriental world ever produced, and well
may rank with Alexander himself. His reign of
twenty-nine years was one constant succession of
wars, in which he was uniformly successful, and in which
[pg 096]
success was only equaled by his magnanimity. His empire
extended from the Indus to the Hellespont and the
Syrian coast, far greater than that of either Assyria or Babylonia.
The result of the Persian conquest on the conquerors
themselves was to produce habits of excessive
luxury, a wide and vast departure from their
original mode of life, which enfeebled the empire,
and prepared the way for a rapid decline
Cambyses, however, the son and successor of Cyrus, carried
out his policy and conquests. He was, unlike
his father, a tyrant and a sensualist, but possessed
considerable military genius. He conquered Phœnicia,
and thus became master of the sea as well as of the land.
He then quarreled with Amasis, the king of Egypt, and subdued
his kingdom
Like an eastern despot, he had, while in Egypt, in an hour
of madness and caprice, killed his brother, Smerdis. It happened
there was a Magian who bore a striking resemblance
to the murdered prince. With the help
of his brother, whom the king had left governor of his household,
this Magian usurped the throne of Persia, while Cambyses
was absent, the death of the true Smerdis having been
carefully concealed.
The news of the usurpation reached Cambyses while
returning from an expedition to Syria. An accidental
wound from the point of his sword proved
mortal, B.C. 522. But Cambyses, about to die,
called his nobles around him, and revealed the murder of his
brother, and exhorted them to prevent the kingdom falling
into the hands of the Medes. He left no children.
The usurper proved a tyrant. A conspiracy of Persians
followed, headed by the descendants of Cyrus; and Darius,
the chief of these—the son of Hystaspes, became king of
Persia, after Smerdis had reigned seven months.
But this reign, brief as it was, had restored the old
Magian priests to power, who had, by their magical arts,
[pg 097]
great popularity with the people, not only Medes, but
Persians.
Darius restored the temples and the worship which the
Magian priests had overthrown, and established
the religion of Zoroaster. The early years of his
reign were disturbed by rebellions in Babylonia and Media,
but these were suppressed, and Darius prosecuted the conquests
which Cyrus had begun. He invaded both India and
Scythia, while his general, Megabazus, subdued Thrace and
the Greek cities of the Hellespont.
The king of Macedonia acknowledged the supremacy of
the great monarch of Asia, and gave the customary
present of earth and water. Darius returned at
length to Susa to enjoy the fruit of his victories, and the
pleasures which his great empire afforded. For twenty
years his glories were unparalleled in the East, and his life
was tranquil.
But in the year B.C. 500, a great revolt of the Ionian cities
took place. It was suppressed, at first, but the Atticans,
at Marathon, defeated the Persian warriors, B.C. 490, and
the great victory changed the whole course of
Asiatic conquest. Darius made vast preparations
for a new invasion of Greece, but died before they were
completed, after a reign of thirty-six years, B.C. 485, leaving
a name greater than that of any Oriental sovereign, except
Cyrus.
The Persian empire was the last of the great monarchies
of the Oriental world, and these flourished for a period of two
thousand years. When nations became wicked or extended
over a large territory, the patriarchal rule of the primitive
ages no longer proved an efficient government. Men must
be ruled, however, in some way, and the irresponsible despotism
of the East, over all the different races, Semitic,
Hamite, and Japhetic, was the government which Providence
provided, in a state of general rudeness, or pastoral simplicity,
or oligarchal usurpations. The last great monarchy
was the best; it was that which was exercised by the descendants
of Japhet, according to the prediction that he
should dwell in the tents of Shem, and Canaan should be his
servant.
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