The Persians
Around 1200 BC, some new
people invaded West Asia from the north. These people were called the
Persians and the Medes. Both of them were Indo-European
people, distantly related to the Hittites,
the Greeks and the
Romans.
Like the Scythians, the Medes and the Persians
were nomadic people. They
travelled around Siberia with their horses
and their cattle, and grazed
the cattle and the horses on the great fields of grass there. Usually
they lived well enough this way.

But sometimes the weather was worse than usual, and
the Medes and Persians could not find enough to eat. This time, when
that happened, the Medes and Persians headed south into West Asia. Maybe
they had heard that there were Dark Ages
there and they thought it would be easy to take over. Maybe they just
thought it would be nicer in the south, where it was warmer.
They settled in what is now Iran, and we don't hear
much about them until about 600 BC.
Probably they could not fight the Assyrians
and didn't try to. But by 600 BC the Assyrians were getting weaker.
At this time the Medes and the Persians mixed into one group, under
one king.
Tomb of Cyrus the Great
At first the Medes were in charge, but in 559 BC
Cyrus, who was a Persian, made himself king,
and from then on the Persians were in charge. Cyrus (SIGH-russ) soon
also conquered the whole rest of West Asia: the Babylonians,
the Assyrians, the Jews,
the Phoenicians and the Syrians, and also
the Lydians and the Greeks
in modern Turkey. He is remembered as a good ruler. He managed to unify
a very diverse group of people, with many different languages and religions.
At the same time, he allowed each group to keep their own religion.
This is especially surprising because he himself had recently converted
to Zoroastrianism and clearly
felt strongly about his new faith.
When Cyrus died in 530 BC,
his son Cambyses (cam-BYE-sees) became king. Cambyses added Egypt
to the Persian Empire, beating an Egyptian army that also had many Greek
soldiers fighting for pay. But according to Herodotus
Cambyses suffered from severe mental illness later in his life, and
eventually his own people killed him.
In 521 BC Darius (da-RYE-us), who was a Persian and
a Zoroastrian but only
a distant cousin of Cyrus and Cambyses, seized the throne. He moved
the Persian capital to the new city of Persepolis, and hired workmen
from all over to work on the new buildings there. Some of the men working
at Persepolis seem to have been Greek.
Persepolis
Stairs at Persepolis
Darius also tried to conquer the Scythians,
but failed.
In 490 BC, Darius tried to conquer
Athens and mainland Greece. Some of the Greek cities, like Thebes,
surrendered to Darius or made treaties with him. But Athens fought back
and defeated the Persians,
and Darius took his troops and went home.
Greek graffiti at Persepolis
(and modern graffiti)
The next Persian king, Xerxes (ZERK-sees), put down a big rebellion
in Egypt and then attacked
Greece again in 480 BC. But Xerxes was also defeated,
and went home. The Persians pretty much stopped trying to expand their
empire then. But they continued to rule from Afghanistan to Turkey and
Egypt for another 150 years, until they were conquered by Alexander
the Great.