MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

The Wall/ Vanished Worlds/ Achaemenid Empire
Ruined columns and carved doorways of the Tachara, the Palace of Darius, at Persepolis

Carole Raddato, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 2.0

Vanished Worlds

Achaemenid Empire

Achaemenid Persia · First Persian Empire
550 BCE 330 BCE

The world's first superpower — ruled from a palace its conqueror torched in a single night.

Born
550 BCE
Died
330 BCE
Lived
220 years
Dead for
2,356 yrs
Forgottenness
-0.04
Cause of death
Conquest · Overreach
Replaced by
Alexander's Macedonian Empire, then the Seleucid Empire
The Obituary

The Achaemenid Empire was the first state to deserve the word “superpower.” Founded around 550 BCE by Cyrus the Great, it stretched at its height from the Aegean to the Indus — some 5.5 million square kilometres, the largest empire the ancient world had yet seen — bound together by the Royal Road, a relay of mounted couriers, and a tolerant administration that let conquered peoples keep their gods and customs.

For two centuries it was the order against which the Greek city-states defined themselves. Then, in a single decade, it fell to one man. Alexander of Macedon shattered the Persian armies at Issus and Gaugamela, and in 330 BCE he reached Persepolis, the ceremonial capital, and burned it — by one account on a drunken impulse after a feast. The last king, Darius III, fled and was stabbed to death by his own satrap. The first empire to rule the known world ended as a looted, smouldering palace.

Worth remembering

  • Its Royal Road let mounted couriers cross ~2,700 km in seven days; Herodotus's praise of them — stopped by neither snow nor rain nor night — was later borrowed as a postal motto.
  • The Cyrus Cylinder, proclaiming the return of deported peoples to their homes, is often called the first charter of human rights.

The people

  • Cyrus the Great — Founder, c. 600–530 BCE

    United the Medes and Persians and conquered Babylon; the Cyrus Cylinder is often called an early charter of tolerance.

  • Darius I — Builder of Persepolis, 550–486 BCE

    Created the satrapy system and the Royal Road; began the great palace complex Alexander would later burn.

  • Darius III — Last King of Kings, c. 380–330 BCE

    Lost at Issus and Gaugamela, then was murdered by his own satrap Bessus as he fled.

Gallery

Further reading

Sources

  1. Achaemenid Empire (c. 550–330 BCE); largest empire of antiquity; fell to Alexander Wikipedia
  2. Persepolis, the ceremonial capital, burned by Alexander in 330 BCE Wikipedia

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby