List of Illustrations
Preface to the English Translation
Translator’s Preface
Introduction: On the Trail of an Empire
1. Was There an Achaemenid Empire?
2. From Alexander to Cyrus and Back Again: Fragments of ego-histoire
3. The Historian and His Evidence
4. Space and Time
To the Reader
Acknowledgments
Prologue: The Persians before the Empire
1. Why Cyrus?
2. The Founder Legends
3. The Kings of Ansan
4. Ansan and Susa
5. Persian Society before the Conquests: Herodotus and Archaeology
6. Ansan, Ecbatana, Babylon, and Susa
7. From the Medes to the Persians
8. Conclusion
Part 1: The Empire-Builders: From Cyrus to Darius
Chapter 1. The Land-Collectors: Cyrus the Great and Cambyses (559-522)
1. Medo-Persian Hostilities, the Defeat of Astyages, and the Fall of Ecbatana (553-550)
2. The New International Situation and Cyrus’s Projects
3. The Defeat of Croesus and the Establishment of a Mediterranean Front
4. Cyrus in Central Asia
5. The Capture of Babylon (539)
6. Cyrus, Trans-Euphrates, and Egypt
7. From Cyrus to Cambyses
8. The Egyptian Campaign (525-522)
9. Cambyses and the Egyptian Traditions
Chapter 2. The Conquest and After: An Interim Summary
1. From Cyrus to Darius: Sources and Problems
2. Satraps and Satrapies
3. Tributes and Gifts
4. Continuities and Adaptations: The Case of Babylonia
5. From Bactra to Sardis
6. Persians and Conquered Populations
7. The Seats of Power
8. Royalty and Authority
9. The King and the Gods
10. Bardiya’s Usurpation (522)
Chapter 3. Trouble, Secession, and Rebuilding (522-518)
1. Darius Comes to Power (522)
2. Revolts and Reconquests (522-518)
3. The Aftermath of Victory: The Official Story
4. Darius and the Six
5. Summary and Perspectives
Chapter 4. Darius the Conqueror (520-486)
1. The Pursuit of Territorial Expansion (520-513)
2. The Persians in Europe
3. The Ionian Revolt (500-493)
4. From Thrace to Memphis (492-486)
Part 2: The Great King
Chapter 5. Images of the World
1. The Builder-King
2. The King and His Peoples: Inscriptions and Iconography
3. An Idealized Image of Space and Imperial Power
4. Images and Realities: The King among His Peoples
5. Images and Realities: The Imperial Festivals
6. Royal Table and Royal Paradise: Exaltation of the Center and Appropriation of Space
Chapter 6. Representations of Royalty and Monarchic Ideology
1. Sources and Problems
2. The Prince in His Own Mirror
3. The King in Majesty
4. The Good Warrior
5. The King, the Earth, and the Water
6. Between Men and Gods
Chapter 7. People and Life at Court
1. Sources and Problems
2. Household Staff
3. The Eunuchs
4. The Women’s Side
5. At the Great King’s Table
6. The Royal Hunts
7. Royal Pomp
Chapter 8. The King’s Men
1. The Giving King
2. Unequal Exchange
3. The King and His Faithful: The Rationale of the System
4. The King and His Faithful: The Dynamic of the Contradictions
5. King and Satraps
6. The King and His Faithful: The Persians, the Greeks, and the Others
7. Achaemenid Royalty and Persian Aristocracy
Part 3: Territories, Populations, and the Dependent Economy
Chapter 9. Territories, Communication, and Trade
1. The Network of Roads
2. Control of the Imperial Territory
3. Lines of Communication and Trade
Chapter 10. Royal Assessments and Tribute
1. Sources and Problems
2. Satrapies and Tributes
3. Gifts and Tribute
4. Tributes, Gifts, and Assessments
5. Payments of Tribute: Metal and Coin
6. The Administration of Tribute: Continuities and Adaptations
7. Tribute Economy and Appropriation: Royal Land and Tribute Land
Chapter 11. Persia: Empire and Tribute Economy
1. The Persepolis Archives
2. Administrative Hierarchy and Organization of Production
3. The World of Work: The kurtas
4. Agriculture: Produce and Levies
5. Lands and Estates
6. The Persepolis Tablets and the Imperial Administration: Sources and Problems
7. The Management of Property and the Royal Warehouses in Egypt
8. Management of Surpluses
9. Lands and Peasants
10. The King’s House
11. Transition
Chapter 12. The King of the Lands
1. Darius and Egypt
2. Babylonia under Darius
3. Trans-Euphrates
4. From Jerusalem to Magnesia on the Meander
5. Western Asia Minor: Cities, Dynasts, and Empire after the Ionian Revolt
6. Population Resettlement and Deportation
7. Unity and Diversity
Part 4: From Xerxes to Darius III: An Empire in Turmoil
Chapter 13. Xerxes the Great King (486-465)
1. Sources and Problems
2. From Darius to Xerxes
3. From Sardis to Sardis (480)
4. Xerxes between Two Fronts (480-479)
5. The Persian Defeat: Its Causes and Consequences
6. Xerxes and His Peoples
7. Xerxes, Ahura-Mazda, and Persia
8. Athenian Offensives and Royal Territories (478-466)
9. Xerxes’ Western Strategy
10. From Xerxes to Artaxerxes
11. An Assessment
Chapter 14. From the Accession of Artaxerxes I to the Death of Darius II (465-405/404)
1. One King after Another (465)
2. The Egyptian Revolt (ca-454)
3. Trans-Euphrates Matters
4. The Asia Minor - Eastern Aegean Front
5. Ezra and Nehemiah in Jerusalem
6. One King after Another (425-424)
7. Affairs on the Western Front
8. The Great King in His Countries
Chapter 15. Artaxerxes II (405/404-359/358) and Artaxerxes III (359/358-338)
1. The Reign of Artaxerxes II: Sources and Problems
2. The War of the Two Brothers (404-401)
3. Artaxerxes the Victor
4. Conditions in Asia Minor and Artaxerxes II’s Strategy (400-396)
5. Agesilaus in Asia Minor (396-394)
6. Achaemenid Successes and Failures: From Asia Minor to Egypt (ca - ca)
7. Artaxerxes II, His Satraps, and His Peoples (ca-359/358)
8. At the Heart of Power
9. The Wars of Artaxerxes III (351-338)
Part 5: The Fourth Century and the Empire of Darius III in the Achaemenid longue durée: A Prospective Assessment
Chapter 16. Lands, Peoples, and Satrapies: Taking Stock of the Achaemenid World
Introduction: In the Steps of Alexander and on the Trail of Darius
1. Sources and Problems
2. The Satrapy of Dascylium
3. From Sardis to Ephesus
4. From Celaenae to Halicarnassus
5. Pixodarus at Xanthus
6. From Tarsus to Mazaca
7. From Tarsus to Samaria via Sidon and Jerusalem
8. From Gaza to Petra
9. Egypt from Artaxerxes III to Darius III
10. From Arbela to Susa
11. The Great King, Alexander, and the Peoples of the Zagros Mountains
12. Persepolis, Pasargadae, and Persia
13. From Persepolis to Ecbatana
14. From Ecbatana to the Halys
15. From Ecbatana to Cyropolis
16. From the Punjab to the Indus Delta
17. From Pattala to Susa and Babylon: The Persians and the Persian Gulf
18. An Appraisal and Some Questions
Chapter 17. The Great King, His Armies, and His Treasures
1. The Accession of Darius III
2. The Great King and the Persian Aristocracy
3. The Royal Armies
4. Subject Populations and Tribute Economy
5. Transition
Part 6: The Fall of an Empire (336-330)
Chapter 18. Darius and the Empire Confront Macedonian Aggression
1. Territories, Armies, and Strategies
2. Darius and His Faithful
3. The Local Elites, Darius, and Alexander: Popularity and Unpopularity of Achaemenid Dominion
4. The Death of a Great King (330)
5. The Fall of an Empire
Conclusion: From Nabonidus to Seleucus
Research Notes
List of Abbreviations
Bibliography
Indexes
Index of Sources
Index of Personal Names
Index of Divine Names
Index of Geographical Names
Index of Ancient Words
Index of Topics 1180
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