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.
From his entry to Asia Minor 334-326BCE.
It was not found, it was built up over a period of about fifty years.
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.
The period of disorder after the decline of the Roman Empire led to an extended period of disunity during the Middle Ages that was characterized by feudalism.
Two of the four pre-Islamic Persian Empires were around during the Period of the Roman Empire: the Parthian Empire (247 BC-224 AD) and the Sasanian Empire (224-651)
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 "Immortals" (sometimes called "Ten Thousand Immortals" or "Persian Immortals") was the name given by Herodotus to an elite force of soldiers who fought for the Achaemenid Empire. This force performed the dual roles of both Imperial Guard and standing army during the Persian Empire's expansion period and during the Greco-Persian Wars. The force consisted mainly of Persians but also included Medes and Elamites.
Roman Empire, Greek Empire, and Persian Empire
550-350 bc
The Persian Empire lasted from the second half of the 6th Century BCE until Alexander the Great took over the empire 200 years later.
The Golden Age of Athens, where it turned the Delian League which it had led against the Persian Empire into an empire of its own and lived the golden life on the proceeds of that empire.
The earth has not changed over that period.
Ancient Greece did not expand into the Persian Empire. Greece was comprised of over 2,000 independent city-states, the ones in Asia Minor being inside the Persian Empire. It was the Macedonians under Alexander the Great who expanded into and took over the Persian Empire. Alexander's successors divided the Empire into kingdoms of their own (Egypt, Syria-Mesopotamia etc , and these lasted a couple of hundred years until the expanding Roman Empire absorbed them.
There were several conquerors of Israel. During the Hellenistic period, it was Pompey. During the Persian period it was Cyrus and during the Babylonian period it was Ashkelon.
Of wich era we are talking? A princess from the ancient persian empire, or of the late shah´s period? Greetings
There is no answer to this question The Achaemenid house rouled the Persian Empire from 550 BCE that included the area that was known as the Mesopotamian and later Babylonian Empirer in the pre classical period. In the 20th century AD when the Ottoman Empire was dismandled the lands of the former Mesopotamian/ Babylonian Empire were given to the British Empire and later the state of Iraq was formed.