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.
It included several hundred Greek city-states in Asia Minor, and its policy was to promote prosperity and cultural development.
Persian Empire
His influence was only in the eastern Mediterranean where he established his empire over Greece and the Persian Empire. He slaughtered opposition, and tried to sow Greek culture in the ex-Persian Empire.
It took over the Persian Empire, and its cities in Ital and Sicily remained as an influence on Roman culture.
The empire had Turkish and Persian influences.
The empire had Turkish and Persian influences.
It was merely a Persian religious sect which did not have a political influence. The Persian Empire was divided into 20 provinces (satrapies) with a Persian governor (satrap), overseen by the king and his council, an entirely practical approach, not a religious one.
Parts of the Persian Empire copied Greek architecture and culture. Alexander the Great tried to introduce the Greek city-state model. It took superficial hold with the upper-classes, but reverted as other peoples moved in and was finally subsumed by the spread of Islamic influence.
The people within the Persian Empire which he ruled.
The Ummayads, who were the first to claim divinity of their lineage as the Persian Emperors did.
It dominated the Fertile Crescent and its resources.
Human. It spanned many cultures which had evolved in the varied Indo-European peoples in the Empire.
Unlike western parts of the Mughal Empire most of our culture remained the same, not much influence on Bangladesh really, except the conversations.