[Home]History of Cyrus the Great

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Revision 3 . . December 9, 2001 1:19 am by Alan Millar [More old encyc text]
Revision 2 . . October 3, 2001 4:17 am by Alan Millar [link to History of Persia]
  

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Changed: 45c45
Initial text from Easton's Bible Dictionary, 1897 -- Please update as needed
Initial text from Easton's Bible Dictionary, 1897

Added: 46a47,141
More text to integrate from Schaff-Herzog Encyc of Religion:

CYRUS THE GREAT (also called Cyrus the Elder,
to distinguish him from Cyrus the Younger, son of
Darius II., killed at Cunaxa, 401 B.C.):

Founder
of the Persian Empire; b. about 600 B.C.; d. in
July, 529 B.C. He belonged to the elder line of
the Achaemenidae, which became extinct with the
death of his son, Cambyses. Herodotus and Ctesias
relate that he was of humble origin; but from
inscriptions still preserved it is evident that he was
of royal descent. In his cylinder inscription he
designates his predecessors up to Teispes as kings
of Anshan, which by some has been interpreted as
Susiana, by others as the ancestral seat of the
Achaemenidae.

He ascended the throne in 559,
but not as an independent ruler, being forced to
recognize Median overlordship. However, in 550
he conquered the last of the Median kings,
Astyages, captured Ecbatana, in 546 assumed the title
"king of Persia," and gained for the Persians
dominion over the Iranian peoples.

An alliance was
formed against Cyrus by Croesus of Lydia,
Nabonidus of Babylon, and Amasis II. of Egypt; but
before the allies could unite Cyrus had occupied
Sardis, overthrown the Lydian kingdom, and taken
Croesus prisoner (546 B.C.). In 538 there followed
the occupation of Babylon by Cyrus. According
to the Babylonian inscription this was in all
probability a bloodless victory (see BABYLONIA,
VI., 7, $ 3). From the list of countries subject to
Persian rule given on the first tablet of the great
Darius inscription of Behistan, written before any
new conquests could have been made except that
of Egypt, the dominion of Cyrus must have
covered all Hither Asia and reached as far eastward
as the borders of India.

According to Herodotus
and Ctesias, Cyrus met his death in the year 529,
while warring against tribes northeast of the
headwaters of the Tigris. He was buried in the town of
Pasargadae. Both Strabo and Arrian give
descriptions of his tomb, based upon reports of men who
saw it at the time of Alexander's invasion. The
tomb northeast of Persepolis, which has been
claimed as that of Cyrus, is evidently not his, as
its location dose not fit the reports.

Cyrus was distinguished no less as statesman
than as a soldier. His statesmanship came out
particularly in his treatments of newly conquered
peoples. By pursuing a policy of generosity,
instead of repression, and by favoring the local
religion, he was able to make his new subjects his
enthusiastic supporters. A good example of this
policy is found in his treatment of the Jews in
Babylon.

Cyrus figures in the old Testament as the patron
and deliverer of the Jews. He is mentioned
twenty-three times by name and alluded to several times
more, viz.: II Chron. xxxvi. 22 (twice), 3; Ezra i. 1
(twice), 2, 7, 8, iii. 7, iv. 3, 13, 14, 17, vi. 3; Isa.
xliv. 28, xlv. 1; Dan. i. 21, vi. 28, x. 1. From these
statements it appears that Cyrus, king of Persia,
was the monarch under whom the captivity of the
Jews ended, for in the first year of his reign he was
prompted of Yahweh to make a decree that the
temple in Jerusalem should be rebuilt and that such
Jews as cared to might return to their land for this
purpose. Moreover, he showed his interest in the
project by sending back with them the sacred
vessels which had been taken from the temple and a
considerable sum of money to buy building
materials with.

After the work had been stopped by
enemies of the Jews it was recommended under the
exhortations of the prophets, and when the
authorities asked the Jews what right they had to build a
temple they referred to the decree of Cyrus.
Darius, who was then reigning, caused a search for this
alleged decree to be made, and it was found in the
Babylonian archives (Ezra vi. 2), whereupon Darius
reaffirmed the decree and the work proceeded to its
triumphant close. Daniel was in the favor of Cyrus,
and it was in that year of Cyrus that he had the
vision recorded in his tenth chapter.

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