This depends on the time period. For the vast majority of Persian history, the Persian people actively supported their rulers, especially during the Achaemenid Empire, which is often seen as the Golden Age of Persia. The main criticism of the Persian rulers came during the Imperialist Period where the Qajjar Shahs had a policy of selling business concessions to Europeans. This angered the Persian population because it led to a diminishing of national Persian culture and an influx of Western influence and ideals.
The Persian people did not. They supported and benefited from the empire they established over other peoples.
The ruler who created the Persian Empire was Cyrus the great
The Persian people did not want their rulers giving away their business or helping another country instead of helping them.
Cyrus the Great was the ruler who greatly extended Persian Empire. He was the founder of the Achaemenid Empire.
Darius III.
Cyrus the Great.
The Persian people did not want their rulers giving away their business or helping another country instead of helping them.
The Persian people did not want their rulers giving away their business or helping another country instead of helping them.
The Persian people did not want their rulers giving away their business or helping another country instead of helping them.
The ruler who created the Persian Empire was Cyrus the great
Their ruler was an hereditary king.
The Persian people did not want their rulers giving away their business or helping another country instead of helping them.
Cyrus the Great was the ruler who greatly extended Persian Empire. He was the founder of the Achaemenid Empire.
Darius I.
Darius was the Persian ruler beginning in 521 BC.
Zoroastrianism
No king Cyrus was a Persian ruler.
Cyrus the Great.