It was not a Greek who conquered Asia Minor and the Persian Empire, it was the Macedonian king Alexander the Great
He was a Macedonian - Alexander III, called The Great.
Yes, the Persians picked up the convenient money habit from the territories they conquered - Babylon, Lydia and the Greek cities of Asia Minor.
The Greek city-states in Asia Minor revolted against rule by the Persian Empire.
It was a Macedonian - Alexander the Great.
The Greek city-states in Asia Minor within the Persian Empire revolted.
The Ionian Revolt from 499 BCE in which the Greek city-states in Asia Minor within the Persian Empire tried to throw off Persian rule.
Mainland Greece in ancient times was not part of the Persian Empire, though many Greek lands in what is now Turkey were conquered by Persia. It was Greek military resistance to two Persian invasions that kept it out of the Persian Empire.
The other way around - Greek culture influenced the Persian Empire - first because of the couple of hundred Greek city-states located in Asia Minor and the Islands which were part of the Persian Empire, and later by Alexander the Great's takeover of the Empire, and the partially-successful attempts by him and his successors to introduce Greek culture throughout the Empire.
The Persian Empire versus a coalition of Greek city-states led first by Sparta, then Athens.
He conquered the Persian Empire, which incorporated a series of provinces stretching from Asia Minor and Egypt to Central Asia.A map giving an outline of the Persian Empire is attached in the separate panel Sources and related linksbelow,
There was no Grecian empire. The Greek world comprised hundreds of independent city-states stretching from Spain to Asia Minor. The Persian Empire stretched from Libya to Pakistan.