Not at all - he followed the model of the predecessor empires he took over - Assyrian and Babylonian.
No
The abbasids were rulers of the Islamic Empire back in the 700s to 1200s.
King Cyrus began the Persian (Achaemenid) Empire. He began as a tribal leader and proceeded to overthrow the overlord who ruled the area. He is the leader who conquered the most of the Persian empire's land. His empire extended from Anatolia to the Indus River. Cyrus is known as a great conqueror. Darius is considered to be the greatest Persian emperor. He broadened it a bit, but was more important as an administrator than a conqueror. He centralized his government at Persepolis, and standardized tax levies, coin, and code of law throughout the empire. Darius is known as an administrator. It is important to note that both rulers were extremely tolerant of different ethnic groups and cultures, which is highly unusual in world history.
Not by a long shot. The rulers of the Ottoman Empire were the Sultan, in political matters, and the Caliph, in spiritual matters. Shiites (shia) are a sect of Islam vigorously opposed by the Ottoman Empire and were often seen as a fifth column with loyalties to the Ottoman Empire's rival: the Safavid Persian Empire.
The Edyptian rulers used there absoulte power
There are numerous leaders of the Persian Empire who have ruled throughout history. See the below link for a list.
They divided it into 20 provinces (satrapies) with a Persian provincial governor (Satrap) in control supervised by the king and his council.
The rulers of an empire stretching from Libya to central Asia in the 5th, 4th and 3rd Centuries BCE.
They divided the empire into 20 provinces with Persian governors who were responsible to the king and his council for internal and external security, collecting taxes and improving prosperity.Local rulers continued to rule the cities, tribes and principalities according to their own customs. Aramaic was made the common communication language.
No
They created 20 provinces, each with a Persian provincial governor. These governors supervised the local rulers, provided internal and external security, and organised collection of taxes. The king and his council supervised the governors (satraps).
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.
Assyrian, Egyptian, Babylonian, Lydian, Phoenician, Greek.
It was to make the Persians respect him that he adopted their customs and dress; he wanted them to think he was no different to the rulers they'd had in the past.
They divided it into 20 provinces (satrapies) with a Persian provincial governor (Satrap) in control supervised by the king and his council.
Twenty provinces (Satrapies) each controlled by a Persian governor (Satrap) responsible to the Persian king and his council for supervising the province's indigenous rulers, keeping external and internal security, establishing prosperity and collection of taxes.
What best describes the Persian Empire is an empire that we're very strong and fought many battles. Also they we're an empire that had an enormous empire! The biggest of the time, that stretched over the vast lands of Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and a little tiny bit of India. They also had some magnificent leaders, that rulers for many years. So obviously the Persian Empire was a great period of history.