Persian Responses: Political and Cultural Interaction with(in) the Achaemenid Empire

Front Cover
Christopher Tuplin
Classical Press of Wales, Dec 31, 2007 - History - 350 pages
A generation ago the Achaemenid Empire was a minor sideshow within long-established disciplines. For Greek historians the Persians were the defeated national enemy, a catalyst of change in the aftermath of the fall of Athens or the victim of Alexander. For Egyptologists and Assyriologists they belonged to an era that received scant attention compared with the glory days of the New Kingdom or the Neo-Assyrian Empire. For most archaeologists they were elusive in a material record that lacked a distinctively Achaemenid imprint. Things have changed now. The empire is an object of study in its own right, and a community of Achaemenid specialists has emerged to carry that study forward. Such communities are, however, apt to talk among themselves and the present volume aims to give a professional but non-specialist audience some taste of the variety of subject-matter and discourse that typifies Achaemenid studies. The broad theme of political and cultural interaction - reflecting the empire's diversity and the nature of our sources for its history - is illustrated in fourteen chapters that move from issues in Greek historiography through a series of regional studies (Egypt, Anatolia, Babylonia and Persia) to Zarathushtra, Alexander the Great and the early modern reception of Persepolis.
 

Contents

Thucydides portrait of Tissaphernes reexamined
1
Xenophons wicked Persian or Whats wrong with
27
On Persian tryphē in Athenaeus
51
the Achaemenid kings
67
Suez and Hibis
99
Indigenous aristocracies in Hellespontine Phrygia
117
Hellenization and Lycian cults during the Achaemenid period
143
palace building
163
gifts of the Yauna
177
Boxus the Persian and the hellenization of Persis
225
The philosophers Zarathushtra
237
Last of the Achaemenids?
267
European reception of a Persian ruin
313
observations on early European
343
Index
357
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Christopher Tuplin is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Liverpool. He is the author of Failings of Empire (1993) and Achaemenid Studies (1996), editor of Pontus and the Outside World (2004) and Xenophon and his World (2004) and co-editor (with T.E.Rihll) of Science and Mathematics in Ancient Greek Culture (2002). He has also published numerous research papers, chiefly on Xenophon, classical Greek history and the Achaemenid Persian Empire.

Bibliographic information