A report on Behistun Inscription, Bardiya and Achaemenid Empire
522 – 486)), the third ruler of the Achaemenid Persian Empire.
- Behistun InscriptionBardiya either ruled the Achaemenid Empire for a few months in 522 BC, or was impersonated by a magus called Gaumāta ; whose name is given by Ctesias as Sphendadates ( Sphendadátēs), until he was toppled by Darius the Great.
- BardiyaIn Darius the Great's Behistun inscription, his Persian name is Bardiya or Bardia.
- BardiyaThe inscription was illustrated by a life-sized bas-relief of Darius I holding a bow as a sign of his kingship, with his left foot on top of the chest of a figure lying on his back before him; the supine figure is reputed to be the magus Gaumāta, who, according to Darius, was an imposter and impersonator of Bardiya (a son of Cyrus the Great).
- Behistun InscriptionAccording to the Cyrus Cylinder (the oldest extant genealogy of the Achaemenids) the kings of Anshan were Teispes, Cyrus I, Cambyses I and Cyrus II, also known as Cyrus the Great, who created the empire (the later Behistun Inscription, written by Darius the Great, claims that Teispes was the son of Achaemenes and that Darius is also descended from Teispes through a different line, but no earlier texts mention Achaemenes).
- Achaemenid EmpireHe was succeeded by his eldest son Cambyses II, while his younger son Bardiya received a large territory in Central Asia.
- Achaemenid Empire3 related topics with Alpha
Darius the Great
2 linksDarius I ( ; c. 550 – 486 BCE), commonly known as Darius the Great, was a Persian ruler who served as the third King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire, reigning from 522 BCE until his death in 486 BCE.
Darius ascended the throne by overthrowing the legitimate Achaemenid monarch Bardiya, whom he later fabricated to be an imposter named Gaumata.
He had the cliff-face Behistun Inscription carved at Mount Behistun to record his conquests, which would later become an important testimony of the Old Persian language.
Cyrus the Great
2 linksCyrus II of Persia (c.
Cyrus II of Persia (c.
600–530 BC; Kūruš), commonly known as Cyrus the Great and also called Cyrus the Elder by the Greeks, was the founder of the Achaemenid Empire, the first Persian empire.
The traditional view based on archaeological research and the genealogy given in the Behistun Inscription and by Herodotus holds that Cyrus the Great was an Achaemenid.
Cyrus married Cassandane who was an Achaemenian and the daughter of Pharnaspes who bore him two sons, Cambyses II and Bardiya along with three daughters, Atossa, Artystone, and Roxane.
Old Persian
2 linksOne of the two directly attested Old Iranian languages and is the ancestor of Middle Persian (the language of Sasanian Empire).
One of the two directly attested Old Iranian languages and is the ancestor of Middle Persian (the language of Sasanian Empire).
Examples of Old Persian have been found in what is now Iran, Romania (Gherla), Armenia, Bahrain, Iraq, Turkey and Egypt, with the most important attestation by far being the contents of the Behistun Inscription (dated to 525 BCE).
As a written language, Old Persian is attested in royal Achaemenid inscriptions.
The phoneme /r/ can also form a syllable peak; both the way Persian names with syllabic /r/ (such as Brdiya) are rendered in Elamite and its further development in Middle Persian suggest that before the syllabic /r/, an epenthetic vowel [i] had developed already in the Old Persian period, which later became [u] after labials.