Cyrus I of Anshan
- Cyrus I of Anshan
Cyrus I (Old Persian "Kuruš"), was King of Anshan from c. 600 to 580 BC or, according to others, from c. 652 to 600 BC. His name in Modern Persian is کوروش, while in Greek he was called "Κύρος".
Cyrus was an early member of the
Achaemenid dynasty . He was apparently a grandson of its founderAchaemenes and son of Teispes of Anšān. Teispes' sons reportedly divided the kingdom among them after his death. Cyrus reigned as King of Anshan while his brother was KingAriaramnes of Persia .The chronological placement of this event is uncertain. This is due to his suggested but still debated identification with the
monarch known as "Kuras of Parsumas". Kuras is first mentioned c. 652 BC. At that year kingShamash-shum-ukin , ofBabylon (668 - 648 BC) revolted against his older brother and overlord kingAshurbanipal , ofAssyria (668 - 627 BC). Cyrus I is mentioned being in amilitary alliance with the former. The war between the two brothers ended in 648 BC with the defeat and reportedsuicide of Shamash-shum-ukin.Cyrus I is mentioned again in 639 BC. At that year Ashurbanibal managed to defeat Elam and became overlord to several of its former allies. Kuras was apparently among them. His elder son "Arukku" was reportedly sent to Assyria to pay
tribute to its King. Kuras then seems to vanish from historical record. His suggested identification with Cyrus would help connect the Achaemenid dynasty to the major events of the 7th century BC.Ashurbanipal died in 627 BC. Cyrus presumably continued paying tribute to his sons and successors
Ashur-etil-ilani (627 - 623 BC) andSin-shar-ishkun (623 BC - 612 BC). They were both opposed by an alliance led byCyaxares of theMedes (633 - 584 BC) andNabopolassar of Babylon (626 - 605 BC). In 612 BC the two managed to capture the Assyrian capitalNineveh . This was effectively the end of the Assyrian Empire though remnants of the Assyrianarmy underAshur-uballit II (612 - 609 BC) continued to resist fromHarran .Media and Babylon soon shared the lands previously controlled by the Assyrians. Anshan apparently fell under the control of the former. Cyrus is considered to have ended his days under the overlordship of either Cyaxares or his son
Astyages (584 BC - 550 BC). Cyrus was succeeded by his son Cambyses I of Anšān. His grandson would come to be known asCyrus the Great , creator of thePersian Empire .It has been noted that this account of his life and reign would place his early activities more than a century before those of his grandson. This would place his fathering of Cambyses very late in life and his death at an advanced age. It has been argued that Kuras and Cyrus I were separate figures of uncertain relation to each other. The later would have then reigned in the early 6th century BC and his reign would seem rather uneventful. Due to the current lack of sufficient records for this historical period it remains uncertain which theory is closer to the facts.
References
*A. Shapur Shahbazi: "Cyrus I". In: "
Encyclopædia Iranica ", vol. 6, p. 516 (contains only a part of the above-mentioned information).
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Cambyses I of Anshan — Cambyses I, Old Persian: Kambūjiya, the Elder (c. 600 BC ndash;559 BC) was King of Anshan from c. 580 to 559 BC and was the father of Cyrus II (Cyrus the Great). His name in Greek was Καμβύσης , whence the Latin Cambyses. Cambyses was an early… … Wikipedia
Cyrus the Great — King of Āryāvarta[1][2], King of Persia, King of Anshan, King of Media, King of Babylon, King of Sumer and Akkad, King of the four corners of the World[ … Wikipedia
Cyrus cylinder — The Cyrus cylinder, also known as the Cyrus the Great cylinder, is a document issued by the Persian emperor Cyrus the Great in the form of a clay cylinder inscribed in Babylonian cuneiform. The cylinder was created following the Persian conquest… … Wikipedia
Cyrus — is an English transliteration of the Persian name, Kourosh. For the etymology, see Cyrus (name). Contents 1 Persian Monarchy 2 Other persons named Cyrus 2.1 Given name … Wikipedia
List of kings of Persia — History of Greater Iran until the rise of modern nation states Pre modern … Wikipedia
List of ancient Persians — Median Dynasty= *Deioces 728 675 BC *Phraortes 675 653 BC *Madius the Scythian 653 625 BC *Cyaxares 625 585 BC *Astyages 585 550 BCThe Medes were an Iranian people. The Persians, a closely related and subject people, revolted against the Median… … Wikipedia
List of named asteroids (A-C) — A List of named asteroids ordered alphabetically from A to C.See also: *List of named asteroids (D E) *List of named asteroids (F H) *List of named asteroids (I K) *List of named asteroids (L N) *List of named asteroids (O R) *List of named… … Wikipedia
Achaemenid Empire — Persian Empire redirects here. For other uses, see Persian Empire (disambiguation). Persian Empire ← … Wikipedia
Magnus Johnson — United States Senator from Minnesota In office July 16, 1923 – March 4, 1925 Preceded by Knute … Wikipedia
6th century BC — The 6th century BC started the first day of 600 BC and ended the last day of 501 BC.In India, Panini, sometime during this century [http://books.google.com/books?id=CKLxjjXqAsQC pg=PA39 lpg=PA39 dq=panini+BCE source=web ots=Gakie80Lfx… … Wikipedia

