Khamis, 16 April 2009

Siapa Kurusy Agung Sebenarnya..!?

Peta Empayar Raja Kurusy Agung
Kurusy Agung,

Cyrus Yang Agung
Raja Parsi, Raja Anshan, Raja Media, Raja Babylon, Raja Sumer dan Akkad, Raja Empat Penjuru Dunia.

Pemerintahan
559 BC-529 BC (30 years)
Pertabalan
Anshan, Persis
Lahir
600 SM atau 576 SM
Anshan, Persis
Mangkat
Ogos?, 530 SM atau 529 SM
Along the Syr Darya
Dikebumikan
Pasargadae
Pendahulu
Cambyses I
Pengganti
Cambyses II
Pasangan
Cassadane dari Parsi
Anakanda
Cambyses IISmerdisArtystoneAtossaUnamed unknown
Kerabat diraja
Achaemenid
Ayahanda
Cambyses I dari Parsi
Bonda
Mandane dari Media atau Argoste (dari Parsi?)
Kurus Yang Agung (Parsi purba: 𐎤𐎢𐎽𐎢𐏁, IPA: /kʰuːrʰuʃ/, Kūruš > Parsi: کوروش بزرگ, Kūrošé Bozorg), (c. 600 SM atau 576 – Ogos 530 SM atau 529 SM), juga dikenali sebagai Cyrus II dari Parsi dan Cyrus Orang Tua, merupakan Shāhanshāh (Maharaja) Parsi yang pertama. Baginda merupakan pengasas Empayar Parsi di bawah empayar dinasti Achaemenid — sebuah empayar dunia pertama yang mempunyai sejarah penting dan mungkin yang paling kaya dan menggagumkan di dalam sejarah.
Di bawah pemerintahan baginda, empayar Parsi berjaya menawan banyak negara-negara bertamadun hebat yang lain yang terletak berdekatan Timur Dekat purba, ia berkembang dengan pesat, dan kemudian akhirnya menakluki kebanyakkan negara-negara di Asia Barat Daya dan Asia Tengah, bermula dari Mesir dan Hellespont di barat sehingga Sungai Indus di timur, dan mewujudkan empayar terbesar yang pernah disaksikan oleh dunia.

Tempoh pemerintahan Raja Kurus berlangsung selama 20 hingga 30 tahun. Raja Kurus menubuhkan empayar beliau dengan mula menentang dan menakluk Empayar Media, Empayar Lydia dan kemudian Empayar Neo-Babylon. Sebelum atau selepas penawanan Babylon, beliau telah mengetuai ekspedisi ke tengah Asia, yang mana mewujudkan kempen-kempen utama yang membawa "kepada penguasaan negara semua tanpa kekecualian". Kurus tidak berjaya menawan Mesir, setelah baginda mangkat dalam pertempuran dalam peperangan melawan orang Scythia di sepanjang Syr Darya pada bulan Ogos 530 SM atau 529 SM. Beliau telah digantikan oleh anak lelakinya, Cambyses II, yang telah berjaya meluaskan empayarnya dengan menakluk Mesir, Nubia, dan Cyrenaica semasa tempoh pemerintahan singkatnya.

Sebagai seorang pemimpin tentera, Raja Kurus meninggalkan warisan kekal pada seni kepimpinan dan membuat keputusan dan beliau menyifatkan kejayaan beliau sebagai "Kepelbagaian dalam nasihat, kesatuan dalam arahan." Raja Kurus menghormati budaya dan agama di tanak taklukannya.Adalah dikatakan, dalam sejarah sejagat peranan empayar Achaemenid yang ditubuhkan oleh Raja Kurus bergantung pada kejayaan model pentadbiran berpusat dan mewujudkan kerajaan yang bekerja ke arah kebaikan dan keuntungan subjeknya. Secara fakta, pentadbiran empayar melalui satraps dan prinsip-prinsip utama menubuhkan kerajaan di Pasargadae berjaya buat Raja Kurus. Selain dari negaranya sendiri, Iran, Raja Kurus juga meninggalkan warisan berterusan ke atas agama Yahudi (melalui Edik Pemulangan beliau), hak-hak kemanusiaan, politik, dan strategi ketenteraan, selain kedua-dua budaya Timur dan tamadun Barat.
Etimologi,

Perkataan Cyrus diterbitkan melalui bahasa Latin, daripada Greek Purba, daripada bahasa Parsi Purba:𐎤𐎢𐎽𐎢𐏁 (Kūrūš). Ahli-ahli sejarah purba Ctesias dan Plutarch menyatakan bahawa Cyrus telah dinamakan daripada Kuros, iaitu matahari, satu konsep yang mana ditafsirkan bermakna "seperti matahari," dengan menyatakan hubungannya dengan kata nama Parsi untuk matahari, khor, semasa menggunakan -vash sebagai satu akhiran keserupaan. Walaubagaimanapun, beberapa ahli sejarah moden, seperti Karl Hoffmann dan Rüdiger Schmitt dari Encyclopædia Iranica, telah mencadangkan penterjemahan "pemusnah musuh dalam pertandingan lisan".

Di Parsi moden, Cyrus biasanya merujuk kepada Kūrošé Kabīr dan juga Kūrošé Bozorg – satu nama terbitan Parsi untuk Cyrus Yang Agung. Di dalam Injil, beliau secara ringkasnya dikenali sebagai Koresh (bahasa Ibrani: כורש). Beliau juga seorang yang mungkin disebuat di dalam Qur'an dengan nama "Dhul-Qarnayn" yang mana menakluk tanah di timur dan barat.

Makam Raja Kurusy Di Pasargadae,Iran.
Empayar Lydia Dan Asia Kecil,

Tarikh sebenar penaklukan Lydia tidak diketahui, tetapi berlaku semasa penggulingan kerajaan Mede pada tahun 550 SM dan penaklukan Babylon pada tahun 539 SM oleh Cyrus. Menjadi satu kebiasaan di masa lalu dengan menandakan tahun 547 SM sebagai tahun penaklukan disebabkan beberapa penafsiran Babab Nabonidus, tetapi kedudukan ini pada masa sekarang tidak banyak dipegang.
Semasa berada di Sardis, Croesus telah menghantar permintaan kepada sekutunya bagi menghantar bantuan ke Lydia. Walaubagaimanapun, hampir penghujung musim sejuk, sebelum sekutu-sekutu dapat disatukan, peperangan dengan Cyrus telah merebak sehingga ke dalam wilayah jajahan Lydia dan mengepung Croesus di dalam ibu kotanya, Sardis. Tidak lama sebelum Pertempuran Thymbra terakhir di antara dua pemerintah ini, Harpagus menasihati Cyrus untuk meletakkan tentera untanya di hadapan pahlawan-pahlawannya; kuda-kuda Lydia, yang tidak biasa dengan bau unta, akan ketakutan. Strategi ini berjaya; kavalri Lydia telah ditumpaskan. Cyrus berjaya mengalahkan dan menawan Croesus. Cyrus menduduki ibu kota di Sardis, menakluki kerajaan Lydia pada tahun 546 SM.
Empayar Neo Babylon,
Menjelang tahun 540-539 SM, Raja Kurus telah menawan Elam (Susiana) dan ibu negaranya, Susa. Menjelang penghujung September, pasukan tentera Raja Kurus, di bawah pemerintahan Gubaru, gabenor Gutium, telah menyerang Opis di tebing Sungai Tigris dan berjaya mengalahkan tentera Babylon.
Pada Oktober 10, kota Sippar telah berjaya dirampas tanpa pertumpahan darah, dengan sedikit atau hampir-hampir tiada tentangan daripada penduduk. Terdapat kemungkinan Raja Kurus terlah berunding dengan para jeneral Babylon bagi mendapatkan persetujuan daripada mereka bagi mengelakkan pertumpahan darah.

Cylinder Cyrus
Agama,
Polisi keagamaan Cyrus didokumenkan dengan baik di dalam teks Babylon selain daripada sumber-sumber Yahudi. Cyrus telah memulkan polisi umum yang boleh ditafsirkan sebagai polisi yang membenarkan kebebasan beragama ke seluruh empayar luas baginda. Baginda membawa keamanan kepada penduduk Babylon dan dikatakan menjauhi tenteranya daripada kuil-kuil dan tempat-tempat beribadat serta memulih semula patung tuhan-tuhan Babylon ke tempat ibadatnya. Contoh lain polisi keagamaan baginda, sepertimana telah dibuktikan oleh silinder Cyrus (lihat di bawah), merupakan was his treatment of the Jews during their exile di Babylon selepas Nebuchadnezzar II memusnahkan Jerusalem.
Politik Dan Falsafah,
Semasa pemerintahan baginda, Cyrus mengekalkan kawalan ke atas kawasan jajahan kerajaan yang luas,Empayar Cyrus adalah berdasarkan pada tribute dan kerahan tentera daripada banyak bahagian jajahan beliau.
Penaklukan Cyrus memulakan era baru dalam pembinaan bangunan empayar di mana, superstate yang besar, yang mengandungi berbagai-bagai negara, bangsa, agama, dan bahasa, yang diperintah di bawah pentadbiran tunggal dan diketuai oleh sebuah kerajaan pusat. Sistem ini kekal untuk selama berkurun-kurun,semasa pemerintahan mereka ke atas Parsi, dan dinasti-dinasti Iran kemudiannya termasuk Parthian dan Sassanid.
Pada tahun 1992, beliau berada di kedudukan ke 87 di dalam senarai tokoh-tkoh berpengaruh di dalam sejarah, Michael H. Hart. Pada 10 Disember, 2003, semasa menerima Hadiah Keamanan Nobel, Shirin Ebadi mengingatkan Cyrus, dengan berkata:

"Saya orang Iran, berketurunan dari Cyrus Yang Agung. Maharaja ini telah mengistiharkan semasa di puncak kuasa 2,500 tahun dahulu bahawa baginda tidak dapat memerintah rakyatnya sekira mereka tidak mahu.' Baginda berjanji tidak akan memaksa seseorang menukar agama dan kepercayaan mereka dan menjamin kebebasan untuk semua. Piagam Cyrus Yang Agung harus dikaji di dalam sejarah hak-hak manusia."
Silinder Cyrus,
Silinder ini dibuat berikutan penawanan Parsi ke atas Babylon pada tahun 539 SM.Ia juga menggambarkan bagaimana Cyrus telah memperbaiki hidup penduduk Babylonia,dan memulih semula kuil-kuil dan rumah-rumah ibadat agama.
Silinder Cyrus merupakan sebuah artifak dari zaman Empayar Parsi yang mengandungi perisytiharan Cyrus Agung yang ditulis dalam tulisan pepaku Babylon (bahasa Akkadia) pada silinder tanah liat. Ketika menawan Babylon, Cyrus Agung membuat perisyhtiharan ini yang mengandungi kisah mengenai pencapaiannya, akta-akta hak kemanusiaan, serta salasilah keluarga dirajanya.

Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi mendakwa bahawa perisytiharan tersebut merupakan titik permulaan sejarah perjuangan hak kemanusiaan. Ini disokong oleh peristyiharan tersebut yang memberikan hak untuk mendirikan semula patung dewa yang telah diharamkan oleh raja Babylon, serta juga kebebasan beragama.

Silinder Cyrus ditemui oleh Hormuzd Rassam, seorang ahli arkeologi Assyria-British, pada tahun 1879 di asas candi Esagila, iaitu candi untuk dewa Marduk di Babylon, dan kini tersimpan di Muzium British di London.

Who is Cyrus The Great..!?

Map of Cyrus The Great Enpire

Cyrus the Great,
King of Persia, King of Anshan, King of Media, King of Babylon, King of Sumer and Akkad, King of the four corners of the World[1]

Reign
559 BC-530 BC (30 years)
Coronation
Anshan, Persis
Born
600 BC or 576 BC
Birthplace
Anshan, Persis
Died
August, 530 BC
Place of death
Along the Syr Darya
Buried
Pasargadae
Predecessor
Cambyses I
Successor
Cambyses II
Consort
Cassadane of Persia
Offspring
Cambyses IISmerdisArtystoneAtossaUnamed unknown
Royal House
Achaemenid
Father
Cambyses I of Persia
Mother
Mandane of Media or Argoste (of Persia?)
Religious beliefs
Zoroastrianism[2]

Campaigns of Cyrus the Great,

He was the founder of the Persian Empire under the Achaemenid dynasty, which was an empire without precedent— a world-empire of major historical importance and perhaps the most wealthy and magnificent in history.It was under his own rule that the empire embraced all previous civilized states of the ancient Near East, expanded vastly, and eventually conquering most of Southwest Asia and much of Central Asia, from Egypt and the Hellespont in the west to the Indus River in the east, to create the largest empire the world had yet seen.

The reign of Cyrus lasted twenty nine to thirty years. Cyrus formed his empire by fighting and conquering first the Median Empire then Lydian Empire and the Neo-Babylonian Empire. Either before or after Babylon, he led an expedition into central Asia, which resulted in major campaigns that brought "into subjection every nation without exception." Cyrus did not venture into Egypt, as he himself died in battle, fighting the Scythians along the Syr Darya in August 530 BC. He was succeeded by his son, Cambyses II, who managed to add to the empire by conquering Egypt, Nubia, and Cyrenaica during his short rule.
As a military leader, Cyrus left an everlasting legacy on the art of leadership and decision-making and he attributed his success to "Diversity in counsel, unity in command." Cyrus the Great respected the customs and religions of the lands he conquered. It is said that, in universal history the role of the Achaemenid empire founded by Cyrus lies in its very successful model for centralized administration and establishing a government working to the advantage and profit of its subjects. In fact, the administration of the empire through satraps and the vital principle of forming a government at Pasargadae were the work of Cyrus. Aside from his own nation, Iran, Cyrus also left a lasting legacy on Jewish religion (through his Edict of Restoration), human rights, politics, and military strategy, as well as on both Eastern and Western civilizations.

The word Cyrus is derived, via Latin, from Ancient Greek, from old Persian Kūrūš. The name has been recorded in ancient inscriptions in many different languages. The ancient Greek historians Ctesias and Plutarch noted that Cyrus was named from Kuros, the sun, a concept which has been interpreted as meaning "like the sun," by noting its relation to the Persian noun for sun, khor, while using -vash as a suffix of likeness. However, some modern historians, such as Karl Hoffmann and Rüdiger Schmitt of the Encyclopædia Iranica, have suggested the translation "humiliator of the enemy in verbal contest."In Iran, Cyrus is always referred to as "Kūrošé Kabīr" and/or Kūrošé Bozorg – meaning "Cyrus the Great". In the Bible, he is known as simply Koresh (Hebrew: כורש‎). Also he is possibly mentioned in the Qur'an under the title "Dhul-Qarnayn".

Similar to other culture-heroes and founders of great empires, folk traditions abound regarding his family background. According to Herodotus, he was the grandson of the Median king Astyages and was brought up by humble herding folk. In another version, he was presented as the son of poor parents who worked in the Median court. These folk stories are however contradicted by his own testimony according to which he was preceded as king of Persia by his father, grandfather and great-grandfather.

"The four winged guardian figure", a bas-relief found at Pasargadae on top of which once inscribed in three languages the sentence "I am Cyrus the king an Achaemenian"
Out of the ten to fifteen Persian tribes, he was from the tribe of the Pasargadae, which was also the name for Persia's capital city which predated Cyrus. He was descended from one of its clans, the Achaemenidae. Before he united the Persians and Medes under a single empire, he was king of Persia and inherited the kingdom of Anshān (when Teispes of Anshan had conquered Anshān) from his other line of supposed kings. Which became one vassal kingdom under the Median Empire, in what is now the Fars Province in southwestern Iran. In this area Cyrus would later build his own city in Pasargadae.

The dynasty was supposedly founded by Achaemenes (c. 700 BC?), who was succeeded by his son Teispes. Inscriptions indicate that when the latter died, two of his sons shared the throne as Cyrus I of Anshan and Ariaramnes of Persia. They were succeeded by their respective sons, Cambyses I of Anshan and Arsames of Persia. However, the authenticity of these inscriptions has been called into question, thus blurring the history of Cyrus' predecessors.

Cambyses is considered by Herodotus to be of nobility but not a king, and further notes his marriage to Princess Māndānā, who was the daughter of Princess Aryenis of Lydia (or of another wife according to Christian Settipani) and Astyages, king of the Medes. From their union, Māndānā bore only one son, Cyrus II, better known today as Cyrus the Great, whom was named after the child's grandfather.

According to Ctesias, Cyrus the Great married a daughter of Astyages named Amytis, which seems unlikely, as his wife would also be his aunt (which according to Xenophon Māndānā had a brother named Cyaxares II). A possible explanation is that Astyages married again, and his second wife bore him this daughter. Cyrus' first wife, Cassandane, is equally obscure. According to Herodotus and the Behistun Inscription, she bore Cyrus at least two sons, Cambyses II and Smerdis. Both sons later separately ruled Persia for a short period of time. Cyrus also had several daughters, of which two, Artystone and Atossa, would marry Darius the Great. The latter is significant, as she gave birth to Xerxes I, Darius' successor.

Early life,

The best known dates for the birth of Cyrus is either 600-599 BC or 575-576 BC. Little is known of his early years, as there are only a few sources known which detail that part of his life, and have been damaged or lost.

Herodotus's story of Cyrus' early life belongs to a genre of legends in which abandoned children of noble birth, such as Oedipus and Romulus and Remus, return to claim their royal positions. His overlord was his own grandfather, Astyages, ruler of the powerful Median kingdom.
After the birth of Cyrus, Astyages had a dream that his Magi interpreted as a sign that his grandson would eventually overthrow him. He then ordered his steward Harpagus to kill the infant. Harpagus, morally unable to kill a newborn, summoned the Mardian Mitradates (which the historian Nicolaus of Damascus calls Atradates), a royal bandit herdsman from the mountainous region bordering the Saspires, and ordered him to leave the baby to die in the mountains. Luckily the herdsman and his wife (whom Herodotus calls Cyno in Greek, and Spaca-o in Median) took pity and raised the child as their own, passing off their recently stillborn infant as the murdered Cyrus. For the origin of Cyrus's mother, Herodotus say's Mandane of Media and Ctesias insists she is full Persian but gives no name, while Nicolaus gives the name Argoste as Atradates' wife, whether this figure represents Cyno or Cambyses' unnamed Persian queen has yet to be determined. Nicolaus also says Cyrus was originally named Abradates by his step parents, therefore it's probable that when reuniting with his original family, in custom Cambyses names him (or had named him before the separation) "Cyrus" after his own father, who was the first Cyrus.

When Cyrus was ten years old, Herodotus claims that it was obvious that Cyrus was not a herdsman's son, stating that his behavior was too noble. Astyages interviewed the boy and noticed that they resembled each other. Astyages ordered Harpagus to explain what he had done with the baby, and after confessing that he had not killed the boy, the king tricked him into eating his own broiled and chopped up son. Astyages was more lenient with Cyrus, and allowed him to return to his biological parents, Cambyses and Mandane. While Herodotus' description may be a legend, it does give insight into the figures surrounding Cyrus the Great's early life.


Median Empire

Though his father died in 551 BC, Cyrus had already succeeded to the throne in 559 BC. However, Cyrus was not yet an independent ruler. Like his predecessors, Cyrus had to recognize Median overlordship. During Astyages' reign, the Median Empire may have ruled over the majority of the Ancient Near East, from the Lydian frontier in the west to the Parthians and Persians in the east.

In Herodotus' version, Harpagus, seeking vengeance, convinced Cyrus to rally the Persian people to revolt against their feudal lords, the Medes. However, it is likely that both Harpagus and Cyrus rebelled due to their dissatisfaction with Astyages' policies. From the start of the revolt in summer 553 BC, with his first battles taking place from early 552 BC, Harpagus with Cyrus led his armies against the Medes until the capture of Ecbatana in 549 BC, effectively conquering the Median Empire.

While Cyrus seems to have accepted the crown of Media, by 546 BC, he officially assumed the title King of Persia instead. With Astyages out of power, all of his vassals (including many of Cyrus' relatives) were now under his command. His uncle Arsames, who had been the king of the city-state of Parsa under the Medes, therefore would have had to give up his throne. However, this transfer of power within the family seems to have been smooth, and it is likely that Arsames still was the nominal governor of Parsa, under Cyrus' authority - more of a Prince or a 'Grand Duke' than a King.[citation needed] His son, Hystaspes, who was also Cyrus' second cousin, was then made satrap of Parthia and Phrygia. Cyrus thus united the twin Achamenid kingdoms of Parsa and Anshan into Persia proper. Arsames would live to see his grandson become Darius the Great, Shahanshah of Persia, after the deaths of both of Cyrus' sons.Cyrus' conquest of Media was merely the start of his wars. Astyages had been allied with his brother-in-law Croesus of Lydia, (son of Alyattes II), Nabonidus of Babylon, and Amasis II of Egypt, who reportedly intended to join forces against Cyrus.

Croesus in Tribute of Croesus by Claude Vignon, 1629.
The exact dates of the Lydian conquest are unknown, but it must have taken place between Cyrus' overthrow of the Mede kingdom (550 BC) and his conquest of Babylon (539 BC). It was common in the past to give 547 BC as the year of the conquest due to some interpretations of the Nabonidus Chronicle, but this position is currently not much held. The Lydians first attacked the Achaemenid Empire's city of Pteria in Cappadocia. Croesus besieged and captured the city enslaving its inhabitants. Meanwhile, The Persians invited the citizens of Ionia who were part of the Lydian kingdom, to revolt against their ruler. The offer was rebuffed, and thus Cyrus levied an army and marched against the Lydians, increasing his numbers while passing through nations in his way. The Battle of Pteria was effectively a stalemate, with both sides suffering heavy casualties by nightfall. Croesus retreated to Sardis the following morning.

While in Sardis, Croesus sent out requests for his allies to send aid to Lydia. However, near the end of winter, before the allies could unite, Cyrus pushed the war into Lydian territory and besieged Croesus in his capital, Sardis. Shortly before the final Battle of Thymbra between the two rulers, Harpagus advised Cyrus to place his dromedaries in front of his warriors; the Lydian horses, not used to the dromedaries' smell, would be very afraid. The strategy worked; the Lydian cavalry was routed. Cyrus defeated and captured Croesus. Cyrus occupied the capital at Sardis, conquering the Lydian kingdom in 546 BC. According to Herodotus, Cyrus spared Croesus' life and kept him as an advisor, but this account conflicts with some translations of the contemporary Nabonidus Chronicle, which interpret that the king of Lydia was slain.Before returning to the capital, a Lydian named Pactyes was entrusted by Cyrus to send Croesus' treasury to Persia. However, soon after Cyrus' departure, Pactyes hired mercenaries and caused an uprising in Sardis, revolting against the Persian satrap of Lydia, Tabalus. With recommendations from Croesus that he should turn the minds of the Lydian people to luxury, Cyrus sent Mazares, one of his commanders, to subdue the insurrection, but demanded that Pactyas be returned alive. Upon Mazares' arrival, Pactyas fled to Ionia, where he had hired more mercenaries. Mazares marched his troops into the Greek country and subdued the cities of Magnesia and Priene, where Pactyas was captured and sent back to Persia for punishment.

Mazares continued the conquest of Asia Minor, but died of unknown causes during his campaign in Ionia. Cyrus sent Harpagus to complete Mazares' conquest of Asia Minor. Harpagus captured Lycia, Cilicia and Phoenicia, using the technique of building earthworks to breach the walls of besieged cities, a method unknown to the Greeks. He ended his conquest of the area in 542 BC, and returned to Persia.

Superimposed on modern borders, the Achaemenid Empire under Cyrus' rule extended approximately from Turkey, Palestine, and Armenia in the west to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and to the Indus River in the east. Persia became the largest empire the world had ever seen.
By the years 540-539 BC, Cyrus captured Elam (Susiana) and its capital, Susa. Towards the end of September, Cyrus' armies, under the command of Gubaru, the governor of Gutium, attacked Opis on the river Tigris and defeated the Babylonian army.On October 10, the city of Sippar was seized without a battle, with little to no resistance from the populace. It is probable that Cyrus engaged in negotiations with the Babylonian generals to obtain a compromise on their part and therefore avoid an armed confrontation. Nabonidus was staying in the city at the time, and soon fled to the capital, Babylon, which he had not visited in years.

Two days later, on October 12 (Julian calendar; October 7 by the Gregorian calendar), Gubaru's troops entered Babylon, again without any resistance from the Babylonian armies, and detained Nabonidus. Herodotus explains that to accomplish this feat, the Persians diverted the Euphrates river into a canal so that the water level dropped "to the height of the middle of a man's thigh," which allowed the invading forces to march directly through the river bed to enter at night. On October 29, Cyrus himself entered the city of Babylon and detained Nabonidus.

Prior to Cyrus' invasion of Babylon, the Neo-Babylonian Empire had conquered many kingdoms. In addition to Babylonia itself, Cyrus probably incorporated its subnational entities into his Empire, including Syria and Judea, although there is no direct evidence of this fact.
After taking Babylon, Cyrus proclaimed himself "king of Babylon, king of Sumer and Akkad, king of the four quarters of the world" in the famous Cyrus cylinder, an inscription deposited in the foundations of the Esagila temple dedicated to the chief Babylonian god Marduk. The text of the cylinder denounces Nabonidus as impious and portrays the victorious Cyrus as pleasing to Marduk. It goes on to describe how Cyrus had improved the lives of the citizens of Babylonia, repatriated displaced peoples and restored temples and cult sanctuaries. Although some have asserted that the cylinder represents a form of "human rights charter", historians generally portray it in the context of a long-standing Mesopotamian tradition of new rulers beginning their reigns with declarations of reforms.

Cyrus' dominions comprised the largest empire the world had ever seen. At the end of Cyrus' rule, the Achaemenid Empire stretched from Asia Minor in the west to the northwestern areas of India in the east.

Death,

The details of Cyrus' death can vary by account. The account of Herodotus from his Histories provides the second longest detail, in which Cyrus met his fate in a fierce battle with the Massagetae, a tribe from the southern deserts of Kharesm and Kizilhoum in the southernmost portion of the steppe regions of modern-day Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, following the advice of Croesus to attack them in their own territory.The Massagetae were related to the Scythians in their dress and mode of living; they fought on horseback and on foot. In order to acquire her realm, Cyrus first sent an offer of marriage to their ruler Tomyris, a proposal she rejected. He then commenced his attempt to take Massagetae territory by force, beginning by building bridges and towered war boats along his side of the river Jaxartes, or Syr Darya, which separated them. Sending him a warning to cease his encroachment in which she stated she expected he would disregard anyway, Tomyris challenged him to meet her forces in honorable warfare, inviting him to a location in her country a day's march from the river, where their two armies would formally engage each other. He accepted her offer, but, learning that the Massagetae were unfamiliar with wine and its intoxicating effects, he set up and then left camp with plenty of it behind, taking his best soldiers with him and leaving the least capable ones.

The general of Tomyris's army, which was also her son Spargapises, and 1/3 of the Massagetian troops killed the group Cyrus had left there, and, finding the camp well-stocked with food and the wine, unwittingly drank themselves into inebriation, diminishing their capability to defend themselves when they were then overtaken by a surprise attack. They were successfully defeated, and although he was taken prisoner, Spargapises committed suicide once he regained sobriety. Upon learning of what had transpired, Tomyris denounced Cyrus' tactics as underhanded and swore vengeance, leading a second wave of troops into battle herself. Cyrus was ultimately killed and his forces suffered massive casualties in what Herodotus referred to as the fiercest battle of his career, and the ancient world. When it was over, Tomyris ordered the body of Cyrus brought to her, then decapitated him and dipped his head in a vessel of blood, in a symbolic gesture of revenge for his bloodlust and the death of her son.

However, some scholars question this version, mostly when Herodotus admits this event was one of many versions of Cyrus' death that he heard from a supposedly reliable source who told him no one was there to see the aftermath. Nevertheless, others suggest the Persian troops may have later recovered the body after it was crucified which was also after his beheading, or that Tomyris beheaded and then crucified a man other than Cyrus, or Cyrus's double.

Ctesias, in his Persica, has the longest account which says Cyrus met his death while putting down resistance from the Derbices infantry, aided by other Scythian archers and cavalry, plus Indians and their elephants. According to him, this event took place north-east of the headwaters of the Syr Darya.

An alternative account from Xenophon's Cyropaedia contradicts the others, claiming that Cyrus died peaceably at his capital.
The final version of Cyrus's death comes from Berossus, who only reports Cyrus met his death while warring against the Dahae archers north-west of the headwaters of the Syr Darya.
[edit] Tomb

Cyrus' tomb lies in the Pasargadae of Iran, a UNESCO World Heritage Site (2006).
Cyrus' remains were interred in his capital city of Pasargadae, where today a tomb still exists which many believe to be his. Both Strabo and Arrian give nearly equal descriptions of the tomb, based on the eyewitness report of Aristobulus of Cassandreia, who at the instigation of Alexander the Great visited the tomb two times. Though the city itself is now in ruins, the burial place of Cyrus the Great has remained largely intact; and the tomb has been partially restored to counter its natural deterioration over the years. According to Plutarch, his epitaph said,

O man, whoever you are and wherever you come from, for I know you will come, I am Cyrus who won the Persians their empire. Do not therefore grudge me this little earth that covers my body.”

Cuneiform evidence from Babylon proves that Cyrus died in August 530 BC, and that his son Cambyses II had become king. His younger son, Smerdis, died before Cambyses left to invade the eastern front. From Herodotus' account, Cambyses killed his brother to avoid a rebellion in his absence. Cambyses continued his father's policy of expansion, and managed to capture Egypt for the Empire, but soon died after only seven years of rule. An imposter named Gaumata, claiming to be Smerdis, became the sole ruler of Persia for seven months, until he was killed by Darius the Great.

Cyrus was praised in the Tanakh (Isaiah 45:1-6) and (Ezra 1:1-11) for the freeing of slaves, humanitarian equality and costly reparations he makes. However he has been criticized for believing the false report of the Cuthites, who wanted to halt the rebuilding of the Temple. They accused the Jews of conspiring to rebel, so "the king of Persia" in turn stopped the construction of the temple, which would not be completed until 516BCE,[citation needed] during the reign of Darius the Great.


Cyrus The Geat Illustration
Legacy,

Cyrus the Great helped the Hebrew exiles to resettle and rebuild Jerusalem, earning him an honored place in Judaism.
In scope and extent his achievements ranked far above that of the Macedonian king,Alexander("the great") who was to demolish the empire in the 320's but fail to provideany stable alternative.
—Charles Freeman in 'The Greek Achievement'Such extraordinary achievements of Cyrus the Great , which exceeded all other leaders' throughout antiquity is well reflected in the way he is remembered today. His own nation, the Iranians, regarded him as "The Father", the Babylonians as "The Liberator", the Greeks as the "Law-Giver", and the Jews as the "Anointed of the Lord".'

Cyrus was distinguished equally as a statesman and as a soldier. By pursuing a policy of generosity instead of repression, and by favoring local religions, he was able to make his newly conquered subjects into enthusiastic supporters. Due in part to the political infrastructure he created, the Achaemenid empire endured long after his demise.

The rise of Persia under Cyrus's rule had a profound impact on the course of world history. Persian philosophy, literature and religion all played dominant roles in world events for the next millennia. Despite the Islamic conquest of Persia in the 7th century CE by the Islamic Caliphate, Persia continued to exercise enormous influence in the Middle East during the Islamic Golden Age, and was particularly instrumental in the growth and expansion of Islam.
]
Many of the Iranian dynasties following the Achaemenid empire and their kings saw themselves as the heirs to Cyrus the Great and have claimed to continue the line begun by Cyrus. However there are different opinions among scholars whether this is also the case for the Sassanid Dynasty.[59] Mohammad Reza Shah of Pahlavi dynasty celebrated the 2500th anniversary of the Iranian monarchy in 1971, though it ended with the 1979 revolution. Even today many consider him the equal if not the greater than Alexander the Great in his accomplishment.
According to Professor Richard Frye:

"It is a testimony to the capability of the founder of the Achaemenian empire that it continued to expand after his death and lasted for more than two centuries. But Cyrus was not only a great conqueror and administrator; he held a place in the minds of the Persian people similar to that of Romulus and Remus in Rome or Moses for the Israelites. His saga follows in many details the stories of hero and conquerors from elsewhere in the ancient world. The manner in which the baby Cyrus was given to a shepherd to raise is reminiscent of Moses in the bulrushes in Egypt, and the overthrow of his tyrannical grandfather has echoes in other myths and legends. There is no doubt that the Cyrus saga arose early among the Persians and was known to the Greeks. The sentiments of esteem or even awe in which Persians held him were transmitted to the Greeks, and it was no accident that Xenophon chose Cyrus to be the model of a ruler for the lessons he wished to impart to his fellow Greeks.
In short, the figure of Cyrus has survived throughout history as more than a great man who founded an empire. He became the epitome of the great qualities expected of a ruler in antiquity, and he assumed heroic features as a conqueror who was tolerant and magnanimous as well as brave and daring. His personality as seen by the Greeks influenced them and Alexander the Great, and, as the tradition was transmitted by the Romans, may be considered to influence our thinking even now. In the year 1971, Iran celebrated the 2,500th anniversary of the founding of the monarchy by Cyrus."

Dhul-Qarnayn is thought to refer to Cyrus by many Qur'anic commentators.
Religious policy of Cyrus is well documented in Babylonian texts as well as Jewish sources. Cyrus initiated a general policy that can be described as a policy of permitting religious freedom throughout his vast empire. He brought peace to the Babylonians and is said to have kept his army away from the temples and restored the statues of the Babylonian gods to their sanctuaries. Another example of his religious policies, as evidenced by the Cyrus cylinder (see below), was his treatment of the Jews during their exile in Babylon after Nebuchadnezzar II destroyed Jerusalem. The Jewish Bible Ketuvim ends in Second Chronicles with the decree of Cyrus, which returned the exiles to the Promised Land from Babylon along with a commission to rebuild the temple.

'Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia: All the kingdoms of the earth hath the LORD, the God of heaven, given me; and He hath charged me to build Him a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Whosoever there is among you of all His people--the LORD his God be with him--let him go up.' (2 Chronicles 36:23)
This edict is also fully reproduced in the Book of Ezra.
“In the first year of King Cyrus, Cyrus the king issued a decree: ‘Concerning the house of God at Jerusalem, let the temple, the place where sacrifices are offered, be rebuilt and let its foundations be retained, its height being 60 cubits and its width 60 cubits; with three layers of huge stones and one layer of timbers. And let the cost be paid from the royal treasury. ‘Also let the gold and silver utensils of the house of God, which Nebuchadnezzar took from the temple in Jerusalem and brought to Babylon, be returned and brought to their places in the temple in Jerusalem; and you shall put them in the house of God.’ (Ezra 6:3-5)
As a result of Cyrus' policies, the Jews honored him as a dignified and righteous king. He is the only Gentile to be designated as a messiah, a divinely-appointed king, in the Tanakh (Isaiah 45:1-6).

However, at the time, there was also Jewish criticism of him after he was lied to by the Cuthites, who wanted to halt the building of the Second Temple. They accused the Jews of conspiring to rebel, so Cyrus in turn stopped the construction, which would not be completed until 515 BCE, during the reign of Darius I.

Some contemporary Muslim scholars have suggested that the Qur'anic figure of Dhul-Qarnayn is Cyrus the Great. This theory was proposed by Sunni scholar Abul Kalam Azad and endorsed by Shi'a scholars Allameh Tabatabaei, in his Tafsir al-Mizan and Makarem Shirazi and Sunni scholar Abul Ala Maududi.

Politics and philosophy,

During his reign, Cyrus maintained control over a vast region of conquered kingdoms, achieved partly through retaining and expanding Median satrapies. Further organization of newly conquered territories into provinces ruled by vassal kings called satraps, was continued by Cyrus' successor Darius the Great. Cyrus' empire was based on tribute and conscripts from the many parts of his realm.
Cyrus' conquests began a new era in the age of empire building, where a vast superstate, comprising many dozens of countries, races, religions, and languages, were ruled under a single administration headed by a central government. This system lasted for centuries, and was retained both by the invading Seleucid dynasty during their control of Persia, and later Iranian dynasties including the Persian Parthians and Sassanids.In 1992, he was ranked #87 on Michael H. Hart's list of the most influential figures in history. On December 10, 2003, in her acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize, Shirin Ebadi evoked Cyrus, saying:

"I am an Iranian, a descendant of Cyrus the Great. This emperor proclaimed at the pinnacle of power 2,500 years ago that he 'would not reign over the people if they did not wish it.' He promised not to force any person to change his religion and faith and guaranteed freedom for all. The Charter of Cyrus the Great should be studied in the history of human rights.”

Cyrus' legacy has been felt even as far away as Iceland and colonial America. Many of the forefathers of the United States of America sought inspiration from Cyrus the Great through works such as Cyropaedia. Thomas Jefferson, for example, had two personal copies of the book, "which was a mandatory read for statesmen alongside Machiavelli's The Prince."

The Cyrus cylinder, a contemporary cuneiform document proclaiming Cyrus as legitimate king of Babylon.

United Nations Under-Secretary General Shashi Tharoor with replica of the Cyrus Cylinder at UN headquarters, New York
One of the few surviving sources of information that can be dated directly to Cyrus's time is the Cyrus cylinder, a document issued by Cyrus the Great in the form of a clay cylinder inscribed in Babylonian cuneiform. The cylinder was created following the Persian conquest of Babylon in 539 BC. The text of the cylinder denounces Nabonidus as impious and portrays the victorious Cyrus as pleasing to the chief god Marduk. It goes on to describe how Cyrus had improved the lives of the citizens of Babylonia, repatriated displaced peoples and restored temples and cult sanctuaries.The cylinder had been placed under the walls of Babylon as a foundation deposit. It was discovered in 1879 by the Assyro-British archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam in the foundations of the Esagila (i.e., the Marduk temple of Babylon) and is kept today in the British Museum in London. There have been reports of attempts by the directors of the British Museum and the National Museum of Iran in Tehran to arrange a loan of the Cyrus Cylinder to be temporarily displayed in the National Museum of Iran for a special exhibition.

According to the British Museum, the cylinder "reflects a long tradition in Mesopotamia where, from as early as the third millennium BC, kings began their reigns with declarations of reforms." It is composed in a form that matched long-standing Babylonian styles and themes. The cylinder is seen as an example of Cyrus seeking the loyalty of his new Babylonian subjects by stressing his legitimacy as king, and showing his respect for the religious and political traditions of Babylonia. It has been regarded for over a century as an instrument of ancient Mesopotamian propaganda. In the early 1970s, the Shah of Iran adopted it as a symbol of his reign and celebrating 2,500 years of Iranian monarchy, asserting that it was "the first human rights charter in history", The cylinder has also attracted attention in the context of the repatriation of the Jews to Jerusalem following their Babylonian captivity[72]; it has generally been viewed as corroboration of the biblical account in the Book of Ezra (see: Ezra 1.1-6, 6.1-5; Isaiah 44.23-45.8; 2 Chronicles 36.22-23).

Siapa Alexander Agung Sebenarnya..!?

Peta Empayar Alexander Agung

Alexander Agung,

Alexander Agung (Alexander III dari Macedonia; bahasa Greek Μέγας Αλέξανδρος, ditransliterasikan sebagai Megas Alexandros; Julai 356 SM - 10 Jun 323 SM) dianggap sebagai salah satu daripada komander yang amat berjaya dalam sejarah dunia. Beliau menakluk hampir seluruh dunia yang dikenali oleh orang Yunani sebelum kematiannya.
Selepas penyatuan kesemua negara kota Yunani di bawah pemerintahan ayahandanya, Philip II dari Macedonia, (suatu tugas yang Alexander terpaksa ulangi kerana orang Yunani selatan memberontak selepas kematian Philip), Iskandar menakluk Empayar Parsi, termasuklah Anatolia, Syria, Phoenicia, Gaza, Mesir, Bactria, serta Mesopotamia, dan memperluaskan sempadan empayarnya sehingga kawasan Punjab. Alexander menyerap orang-orang asing (bukan orang Macedonia dan Yunani1) ke dalam angkatan tentera dan pentadbirannya, dan oleh itu, menyebabkan sebilangan cendekiawan memberikan penghargaan kepadanya untuk "polisi pergabungan". Beliau menggalakkan perkahwinan antara askar-askarnya dengan orang-orang asing, serta turut mengamalkan galakannya itu. Selepas dua belas tahun kempen tentera yang berterusan, Alexander meninggal dunia, mungkin disebabkan oleh demam malaria atau tifoid, atau juga virus ensefalitis. Penaklukannya mengambil kira penempatan orang Yunani serta pemerintahan kawasan asing selama berabad-abad lamanya dan tempoh itu dikenali sebagai Zaman Yunani. Alexander terus dikenang dalam sejarah dan mitos kebudayaan Yunani serta bukan Yunani. Semasa hidupnya dan khususnya, selepas kematiannya, kehandalan Alexander telah menjadi ilham sebuah tradisi kesusasteraan yang mana beliau muncul sebagai wira legenda dalam tradisi Achilles.

Alexander juga dikenali:
dalam Arda Wiraz Nāmag, sebuah karya bahasa Parsi Zaman Pertengahan Zoroaster, sebagai "Alexander Keji" kerana penaklukan Empayar Parsi serta pemusnahan ibu kota Persepolis. Bagaimanapun, dalam tradisi Parsi kemudian sehingga Iran pada hari ini, beliau telah dikenali sebagai Eskandar dan juga disanjung sewaktu pembinaan Dinding Agung Sadd-e Eskandar oleh Dinasti Parthia.
dalam tradisi-tradisi Timur Tengah sebagai Dhul-Qarnayn dalam bahasa Arab, dan Dul-Qarnayim dalam bahasa Ibrani dan bahasa Aramia (bertanduk dua), kerana gambarnya pada duit-duit syiling yang ditempah semasa pemerintahannya kelihatan seakan-akan dua tanduk biri-biri jantan Amun yang merupakan salah satu daripada dewa Mesir.
sebagai Sikandar dalam bahasa Hindi; istilah "Sikandar" digunakan di India sebagai sinonim untuk "pakar" atau "terlalu mahir".


Arca Iskandar Agung
Kehidupan Awal,

Alexander Agung ialah anak kepada Maharaja Philip II dari Macedonia dan Puteri Olympias dari Epirus. Menurut Plutarch (Alexander 3.1,3), Olympias dibuntingkan oleh Zeus Ammon, dan bukannya Philip yang takut akan Olympias dan kegemaran Olympias untuk tidur dengan ular. Plutarch (Alexander 2.2-3) menceritakan bahawa kedua-dua Philip dan Olympias bermimpi tentang anak yang akan dilahirkan. Olympias bermimpi tentang dentuman guruh dan kilat yang memanah rahimnya. Dalam mimpi Philip, baginda mengecap rahim isterinya dengan mohor singa. Berasa cemas oleh mimpi-mimpi itu, baginda berunding dengan peramalnya, Aristander dari Telmessus, yang menentukan bahawa isterinya hamil dan anaknya akan mempunyai sifat singa. Menurut lima orang ahli sejarah kuno (Arrian, Curtius, Diodorus, Justin, dan Plutarch), selepas lawatannya ke tempat keramat Amun di Siwa, khabar-khabar tersebar bahawa ramalannya telah mendedahkan ayahanda Iskandar sebagai Zeus, dan bukannya Philip. Menurut Plutarch (Alexander 2.1), ayahandanya adalah dari keturunan Heracles melalui Caranus, dan ibundanya dari keturunan Aeacus melalui Neoptolemus dan Achilles.
Aristotle ialah guru peribadi Alexander. Beliau memberikan latihan yang teliti kepada Iskandar dalam bidang retorik dan kesusasteraan serta merangsangkan minatnya terhadap sains, perubatan dan falsafah. Aristotle juga memberikan beliau sebuah salinan Illiad dan sebilah pisau yang beliau sentiasa sorokkan di bawah bantal pada waktu malam.

Kebangkitan Macedonia,

Ketika Philip mengetuai serangan terhadap Byzantium pada 340 SM, Alexander yang berumur 16 tahun dilantik untuk memerintah Macedonia. Pada 339 SM, Philip mengambil isteri kedua, dan menyebabkan ibunda Alexander, Olympias, berasa sedih. Ini pula menyebabkan perkelahian antara Alexander dengan ayahandanya, sehingga pewarisan takhta Alexander terhadap Macedonia hampir-hampir terjejas.
Pada tahun 338 SM, Philip mencipta Liga Corinth. Alexander juga membantu ayahandanya dalam Perang Chaeronea yang berlaku pada tahun itu. Sayap pasukan askar berkuda yang diketuai oleh Iskandar memusnahkan Kumpulan Suci dari Thebes, kor elit yang sebelum itu dianggap tidak dapat dikalahkan. Philip berpuas hati dengan merampas Boeotia daripada Thebes dan meninggalkan sekumpulan garison di dalam kubu kota.

Alexander Agung bertempur dengan Maharaja Parsi, Darius III (tiada dalam gambar). Gambar itu merupakan sebahagian daripada lukisan Yunani abad ke-3 SM, Mozek Alexander, yang berasal dari Pompeii tetapi kini telah hilang.
Pada tahun 336 SM, Philip dibunuh sewaktu menyertai istiadat perkahwinan anak perempuannya, Cleopatra dari Macedonia, dengan Maharaja Alexander dari Epirus. Pembunuhnya, Pausanias yang merupakan seorang bangsawan muda yang bersungut, dikatakan bekas kekasih Philip yang berdendam dengannya kerana baginda tidak mengendahkan satu rungutan yang dikemukakan olehnya. Pada suatu masa, pembunuhan Philip dianggap telah dirancang dengan pengetahuan dan penglibatan Alexander atau Olympias. Lagi satu kemungkinan adalah Darius III yang merupakan Maharaja Parsi yang baru sahaja menaiki takhta. Plutarch menyebut sepucuk surat berang dari Alexander kepada Darius yang menyalahkan Darius dan wazir agungnya, Bagoas, terhadap pembunuhan ayahandanya. Surat itu menyatakan bahawa Darius ialah orang yang bercakap besar dengan bandar-bandar Yunani tentang bagaimana baginda dapat membunuh Philip.

Selepas kematian Philip, angkatan tentera mengisytiharkan Alexander yang berumur 20 tahun sebagai maharaja baru untuk Macedonia. Bandar-bandar Yunani seperti Athens dan Thebes, yang telah dipaksa berikrar untuk taat setia kepada Philip, melihat maharaja baru itu sebagai peluang untuk menuntut balik kemerdekaan penuh mereka. Alexander bertindak dengan pantas dan Thebes, yang paling aktif menentanginya, menyerah sewaktu baginda muncul di depan pintu kotanya. Orang-orang Yunani yang berhimpun di Segenting Corinth, dengan kekecualian Sparta yang tunggal, memilihnya sebagai komander untuk menentangi Parsi. Darjah kebesaran itu dahulunya telah dikurniakan kepada ayahandanya.
Pada tahun yang berikut, iaitu 335 SM, Alexander berasa lapang untuk bertempur dengan Thrace dan Illyria supaya dapat memperoleh Danube sebagai sempadan utara untuk kerajaan Macedonia. Sewaktu baginda berkempen dengan berjaya di utara, orang Thebes dan Athens memberontak sekali lagi. Alexander bertindak balas dengan segera, dan sewaktu bandar-bandar yang lain teragak-agak tentang apa yang hendak dibuat selanjutnya, Thebes memutuskan untuk menentang dengan segala keupayaan mereka pada kali ini. Penentangan itu sia-sia; pada akhirnya, bandar itu ditewas dengan banyak petumpahan darah. Orang-orang Thebes menghadapi penderitaan yang amat teruk sewaktu bandar mereka dibakar dan wilayah mereka dibahagikan kepada bandar-bandar Boeotia. Tambahan pula, kesemua orang-orang bandar itu dijual sebagai hamba, kecuali bagi pendeta-pendeta, ketua-ketua parti pro-Macedonia dan keturunan-keturunan Pindar yang merupakan rumah tunggal yang tidak dikacau. Pengakhiran Thebes menakutkan Athens untuk menyerah, dan Athens sanggup menerima desakan Alexander untuk membuang semua ketua parti anti-Macedonia, terutamanya Demosthenes.

Ilustrasi Alexander Agung Dengan Kuda Kesayagannya Bernama Bucephalus

Tempoh penaklukan,

Angkatan tentera Alexander melintasi Hellespont dengan kira-kira 35,000 orang askar yang terdiri khusus daripada orang Macedonia dan orang Yunani, dan termasuk juga sebilangan orang Thrace, Paionia dan Illyria. Selepas kemenangan awal menentang angkatan Parsi dalam Perang Granicus, Alexander menerima penyerahan kalah oleh ibu kota daerah Parsi serta perbendaharaan Sardis dan menuju ke arah pantai Ionia. Di Halicarnassus, Alexander berjaya membuat pengepungan yang pertama dari bayang yang berikutnya, dan akhirnya memaksa musuhnya, Memnon dari Rhodes yang merupakan kapten askar upahan dan Orontobates, pelindung Parsi dari Caria, untuk berundur melalui laut. Alexander meninggalkan Caria dalam tangan Ada (perempuan) yang merupakan pemerintah Caria sebelum digulingkan oleh adiknya, Pixodarus. Dari Halicarnassus, Alexander menuju ke Lycia yang bergunung-ganang serta dataran Pamphylia, dan mengawal semua bandar di persisiran pantai. Oleh sebab tiada pelabuhan yang utama dari Pamphylia, Alexander menuju ke pedalaman.

Lukisan untuk arca kecil askar Yunani yang diperoleh dari tapak perkuburan abad 4-3 SM di yang terletak di utara Tian Shan. Tian Shan merupakan kemaraan Alexander yang paling jauh di Timur (Muzium Xinjiang, Ürümqi, China).

Di Termessus, Alexander menundukkan Pisidia, tetapi tidak menggempur bandar itu. Di Gordium, ibu kota Phrygia kuno, Alexander "menguraikan" Simpulan Gordius (Gordian Knot), satu pencapaian dalam menunggu bakal "raja Asia". Menurut cerita yang paling jelas, Alexander mengisytiharkan bahawa cara untuk membuka simpul itu tidak mustahak, dan menetak simpul itu dengan pedangnya. Satu versi lain mendakwa bahawa baginda tidak menggunakan pedang, tetapi tahu akan cara untuk membukanya.
Angkatan tentera Alexander merentasi Genting Cilicia, bertemu dan menewaskan angkatan tentera Parsi yang utama di bawah arahan Darius III dalam Perang Issus pada tahun 333 SM. Darius melarikan diri dan meninggalkan isteri, anak-anak dan ibundanya, bersama-sama dengan kebanyakan harta peribadi. Sisygambis, ibunda Darius, tidak pernah memaafkan Darius kerana meninggalkannya. Oleh kerana itu, beliau tidak mengaku Darius sebagai anaknya dan sebaliknya, mengambil Alexander sebagai anak angkat. Menuju pantai Mediterranean, baginda menakluk Tyre dan Gaza selepas melakukan pengepungan-pengepungan yang termasyhur (sila lihat Pengepungan Tyre). Alexander melalui berhampiran (mungkin tidak mengunjungi) Al Quds (Jerusalem).

Dari 332 SM sehingga 331 SM, Alexander dialu-alukan sebagai pembebas dalam Mesir dan baginda diisytiharkan sebagai anak Zeus oleh pendeta-pendeta Amun, dewa Mesir, di tempat keramat dewa itu yang terletak di Siwa di gurun Libya. Iskandar mengasaskan Alexandria di Mesir yang kemudian menjadi ibu kota yang makmur untuk Dinasti Ptolemy selepas kemangkatannya. Selepas meninggalkan Mesir, Alexander menuju ke arah timur ke Assyria (kini Iraq utara) dan menewaskan Darius dan angkatan tentera Parsi yang ketiga di Perang Gaugamela. Darius terpaksa melarikan diri selepas pemandu ratanya dibunuh, dan Iskandar mengejarnya hingga keArbela. Sewaktu Darius lari melintasi gunung-ganang ke Ecbatana (Hamadan moden), Iskandar menuju ke Babylon.

Dari Babylon, Alexander pergi ke Susa yang merupakan salah satu ibu kota Achaemenid, dan menawan perbendaharaannya. Dengan menghantar sebahagian besar angkatan tenteranya ke Persepolis, ibu kota Parsi, melalui Jalan Diraja, Iskandar menawan Genting Parsi (di Gunung-ganang Zagros moden), dan kemudiannya memecut ke Persepolis sebelum perbendaharaannya dirampas. Alexander membenarkan angkatan-angkatan Liganya untuk merampas Persepolis. Kebakaran terjadi di bahagian timur istana Xerxes dan merebak ke seluruh bandar. Tidak diketahui adakah kebakaran itu merupakan kemalangan mabuk ataupun tindakan sengaja yang diambil sebagai membalas dendam bagi kebakaran Akropolis Athen sewaktu Perang Parsi Kedua. Buku Arda Wiraz yang merupakan karya Zoroaster yang disusun pada abad ke-3 atau ke-4, juga menggambarkan arkib-arkib yang mengandungi "semua Avesta dan Zand yang ditulis di atas kulit-kulit lembu, dan dengan dakwat emas" telah dimusnahkan; bagaimanapun, kenyataan ini sering diterima oleh para cendekiawan dengan sedikit skeptisisme, kerana secara amnya, Avesta telah dianggap selama berabad-abad bahawa ia diturunkan secara lisan oleh puak Magi.

Mozek Pompei yang menggambarkan Alexander bertempur dengan Darius di Perang Issus.
Alexander kemudian bertolak untuk mengejar Darius yang diculik dan kemudiannya dibunuh oleh pengikut-pengikut Bessus, iaitu pelindung dan saudara Bactrianya. Bessus kemudian mengisytiharkan dirinya sebagai waris Darius dengan nama "Artaxerxes V", dan berundur ke Asia Tengah untuk melancarkan kempen gerila terhadap Alexander. Dengan kematian Darius, Alexander mengisytiharkan penamatan perang balas dendam, dan melepaskan sekutu-sekutunya daripada perkhidmatan dalam kempen Liga. Bagaimanapun, sesiapa yang ingin berkhidmat semula sebagai askar upahan dalam angkatan tentera maharajanya akan dibenarkan).

Kempen Iskandar selama tiga tahun menentang Bessus buat permulaanya dan kemudiannya Spitamenes, pelindung Sogdiana, membawanya ke Media, Parthia, Aria, Drangiana, Arachosia, Bactria, dan Scythia. (Pada akhirnya, kedua-dua tokoh itu dikhianati oleh orang-orang sendiri, Bessus pada tahun 329 SM dan Spitamenes pada tahun yang berikutnya.) Dalam proses itu, Iskandar menewaskan dan mengasaskan semula Herat dan Maracanda. Tambahan pula, Iskandar juga mengasaskan satu siri bandar-bandar yang baru, kesemuanya digelarkan "Alexandria", termasuknya Kandahar moden di Afghanistan, dan Alexandria Eschate (diterjemahkan sebagai "Alexandria yang Paling Jauh") di Tajikistan moden.

Permusuhan terhadap Iskandar,

Ketika itu, Iskandar mengamalkan beberapa unsur pakaian dan adat resam Parsi di dalam istananya, terutamanya adat proskinesis, iaitu ciuman tangan yang orang Parsi memberikan kepada orang atasan sebagai simbol rasa hormat, tetapi amalan itu tidak disetujui oleh orang Yunani. Orang-orang Yunani menganggap bahawa perbuatan itu hanya dikhaskan untuk dewa-dewa, dan percaya bahawa Iskandar bermaksud hendak menjadikan dirinya sebagai dewa. Ini menyebabkan baginda bukan sahaja kehilangan sebahagian besar sokongan daripada teman-teman senegerinya, tetapi juga menyebabkan komplot terhadap nyawanya. Philotas, seorang teman pasukan askar berkudanya, dihukum mati atas tuduhan penderhakaan kerana tidak sengaja telah gagal menarik perhatian Iskandar terhadap komplot itu. Parmenion, ayahanda Philotas yang merupakan ketua angkatan tentera di Ecbatana, dibunuh atas perintah Iskandar kerana baginda bimbang bahawa Parmenion mungkin akan membalas dendam terhadap kematian anaknya.

Banyak perbicaraan penderhakaan menyusul, dan ramai orang Macedonia dihukum mati. Kemudian, dalam perkelahian mabuk di Maracanda, Iskandar juga membunuh Clitus si Hitam, seorang yang pernah menyelamatkan nyawa baginda di Granicus. Dalam kempen Asia Tengah, komplot kedua terhadap nyawa Iskandar oleh salah seorang suruhan peribadinya didedahkan. Callisthenes dari Olynthus, seorang ahli sejarah rasmi yang tidak lagi disayangi oleh Iskandar kerana mengetuai penentangan untuk memperkenalkan proskinesis telah dibabit. Kebanyakan ahli sejarah menganggap bahawa tuduhan-tuduhan terhadapnya adalah dibuat-buat. Bagaimanapun, terdapat bukti yang kukuh bahawa Callisthenes, yang merupakan guru untuk orang-orang suruhan, pasti memujuk mereka untuk membunuh maharaja mereka.

Serangan India,

Pada tahun 326 SM, selepas kematian Spitamenes dan perkahwinannya dengan Roxana ( bahasa Bactria: Roshanak) untuk mengeratkan persahabatan dengan pelindung-pelindung barunya dari Asia Tengah, Alexander akhirnya berasa lapang untuk mengalihkan perhatiannya ke atasIndia. Maharaja Ambhi, pemerintah Taxila, menyerahkan bandarnya kepada Iskandar tanpa pertempuran. Ramai penduduk lari ke bandar berkubu Aornos, dan Iskandar menawan bandar itu dengan kekerasan.

Duit syiling yang dicetak di Babylon untuk memperingati kempen-kempen Iskandar di India, pada sekitar 323 SM.Kepala syiling: Alexander berdiri dengan bersenjata penuh sewaktu dimahkotai oleh Nike, serta memegang Zeus, dewa petir.Ekor syiling: Penunggang Yunani, kemungkinan Alexander, menyerang gajah perang India, mungkinnya semasa perang Porus.
Alexander bertempur dalam perang agung menentang Porus, seorang pemerintah untuk kawasan Punjab dalam Perang Hydaspes pada tahun itu. Selepas mencapai kejayaan, Alexander membuat perikatan dengan Porus dan melantik pemerintahnya sebagai pelindung untuk kerajaannya. Alexander kemudian menamakan salah satu daripada dua buah bandar yang baru diasaskannya sebagai "Bucephala", untuk menghormati kuda yang membawanya ke India. Alexander meneruskan penaklukan ke atas semua punca-punca sungai yang mengalir ke Sungai Indus.

Di timur kemaharajaan Porus yang berdekatan dengan Sungai Ganges, terletaknya sebuah empayar Magadha yang sangat kukuh yang diperintah oleh Dynasti Nanda. Oleh kerana takut terhadap prospek untuk menghadap lagi seangkatan tentera India yang amat kuat, serta berasa amat letih selepas kempen bertahun-tahun, angkatan tentera Alexander memberontak dan enggan bergerak lagi ke timur. Selepas perjumpaannya dengan Coenus, pegawainya, Alexander diyakinkan untuk kembali. Baginda dipaksa membelok ke arah selatan dan dari sana, baginda menakluk kesemua kawasan di Indus sehingga Lautan India. Alexander menghantar Jeneral Craterus dengan sebahagian besar angkatan tenteranya ke Carmania (Iran selatan moden), dan memerintah seangkatan kapal di bawah Laksamana Nearchus untuk menerokai pesisir Teluk Parsi. Baginda mengetuai tentera-tentera yang tinggal untuk kembali ke Parsi melalui Gedrosia (kini, Makran di Pakistan selatan) di arah selatan.

Selepas India,

Alexander dan Porus oleh Charles Le Brun, 1673.
Selepas mendapat tahu bahawa ramai daripada pelindung dan gabenor tenteranya telah berkelakuan tidak senonoh semasa ketiadaannya, Alexander menjalankan hukuman mati terhadap sebilangan mereka sebagai contoh untuk yang lain semasa dalam perjalannya ke Susa. Sebagai rasa terima kasih, baginda membayar hutang bagi pihak askar-askarnya, dan mengumumkan bahawa askar-askar yang cukup umur dan yang kehilangan upaya akan dihantar balik ke Macedonia di bawah Craterus. Askar-askarnya salah faham akan maksudnya dan memberontak di bandar Opis, dan menolak perintah untuk dihantar balik. Mereka juga mengkritik dengan perasaan pahit terhadap pengamalan adat-adat resam dan pakaian Parsi, serta penyerapan masuk pegawai-pegawai dan askar-askar Parsi ke dalam unit-unit Macedonia. Iskandar menjalankan hukuman mati ke atas ketua kumpulan pemberontak itu, dan memaafkan orang-orang yang berpangkat rendah.

Dalam percubaannya untuk mencipta keharmonian yang kekal antara orang taklukan Macedonia dan Parsi, Alexander mengadakan kahwin beramai-ramai antara pegawai-pegawai kanannya dengan wanita-wanita bangsawan Parsi dan bangsawan yang lain di Opis, tetapi tidak banyak daripada perkahwinan itu dapat berlanjutan melebihi setahun. Percubaannya untuk menggabungkan kebudayaan Parsi dengan kebudayaan Yunani untuk askar-askar Yunani termasuklah melatih sepasukan rejimen Parsi dalam cara orang Macedonia. Tidak pasti sama ada Alexander pernah menggunakan gelaran kerabat Parsi, shahanshah ("maharaja agung" atau "maharaja antara maharaja-maharaja"), tetapi kebanyakan ahli sejarah percaya bahawa baginda berbuat demikian.

Alexander kemudian mengumumkan tujuannya untuk melancarkan kempen terhadap puak-puak Arab. Selepas mereka tewas, Alexander dianggap akan membelok ke arah barat untuk menyerang Carthage dan Itali. Selepas perjalanannya ke Ecbatana untuk mendapatkan semula sebahagian besar daripada harta karun Parsinya, Hephaestion, teman Alexander yang paling rapat (dan kemungkinan merupakan kekasihnya) mati kerana penyakit. Alexander menjadi tidak keruan dan kembali ke Babylon, di mana baginda jatuh sakit dan kemudian mangkat.