They divided the empire into 20 provinces with a Persian governor and the cities and tribes retained their traditional government. The governors provided internal and external security and supervised the local government.
In an era before electron communications, where messages were passed physically, the Persians established a system of sea, river and road transport to pass information in a timely manner.
They were so important because it led to the destruction of the Persian Empire.
the persians strenthen their empire by being under attack alot they became so strong they cauld almost beat the athalots
The Persians were the best rulers for the empire because they were tolerant of the people they conquered. They respected their customs and religious beliefs. They encouraged unity so they built hundreds of roads making it easier to communicate with other people.
There were hundreds of Greek city-states in Asia Minor, so when they incorporated the area into their growing empire, they got the Greeks too.
Constantinople was the capital of the eastern part of the Roman empire so the emperor or "Caesar" who was ruling had the most power.
DariusThe Persians called it so after the Indus River. which was their take on the local word Sindhu.
They divided the empire into 20 provinces with Persian governors but left the cities, tribes and principalities under their traditional rules, blending normal rule with overall control and protection.
Alexander the Great took effective control of the Empire in 331 BCE, so by 330 BCE there was no Persian Empire to rule - it was the Macedonian Empire of Alexander.
Persia faced a revolt by the Greek city-states within its empire, known as the Ionian Revolt. Greek cities outside the empire attempted to intervene, so the Persians decided that the only path to stability was to bring these cities in mainland Greece within the empire where they could be controlled. This whold provess lasted for 50 years with little success, so the Persians agreed to peace, and the Greek cities could then get back to their usual occupation of fighting each other.
Its failure convinced the Persians that the only way to keep the Greek cities quiet and stop disrupting the peace in its empire was to bring them within the empire. This led to the persian invasion of peninsular Greece a decade later.
The mongols invaded their home city, but the third crusaders had to fight their way through to get to the Holy Land, so they attacked the Persians to get through.