Median Empire
The Median Empire, was the
first Iranian dynasty corresponding to the northeastern
section of present-day Iran, Northern-Khvarvarana and
Asuristan (now days known as Iraq), and South and Eastern
Anatolia. The inhabitants, who were known as Medes, and their
neighbors, the Persians, spoke Median languages that were
closely related to Aryan (Old Persian). Historians know very
little about the Iranian culture under the Median dynasty,
except that Zoroastrianism as well as a polytheistic religion
was practiced, and a priestly caste called the Magi existed.
 |
Traditionally, the creator of the Median kingdom was one
Deioces, who, according to Herodotus, reigned from 728 to 675
BCE and founded the Median capital Ecbatana
(Hâgmatâna or modern Hamadan). Attempts have
been made to associate Daiaukku, a local Zagros king mentioned
in a cuneiform text as one of the captives deported to Assyria
by Sargon II in 714 BCE, with the Deioces of Herodotus, but
such an association is highly unlikely. To judge from the
Assyrian sources, no Median kingdom such as Herodotus
describes for the reign of Deioces existed in the early 7th
century BCE; at best, he is reporting a Median legend of the
founding of their kingdom.
According to Herodotus (History of Herodotus),
Deioces was succeeded by his son Phraortes (675-653 BCE), who
subjugated the Persians and lost his life in a premature
attack against the Assyrians. Some of this tale may be true.
Assyrian texts speak of a Kashtariti as the leader of a
conglomerate group of Medes, Scythians, Mannaeans, and
miscellaneous other local Zagros peoples that seriously
threatened the peace of Assyria's eastern borderlands during
the reign of Esarhaddon (680-669 BCE). It is possible that
Phraortes is this Kashtariti, though the suggestion cannot be
proved either historically or linguistically. That a Median
king in this period exerted political and military control
over the Persians is entirely reasonable, though it cannot be
proved.
 |
|
The lion of Ecabtana, Hephaestion's tomb |
Beginning as early as the 9th century, and with increasing
impact in the late 8th and early 7th centuries, groups of
nomadic warriors entered western Iran, probably from across
the Caucasus. Dominant among these groups were the Scythians,
and their entrance into the affairs of the western plateau
during the 7th century may perhaps mark one of the important
turning points in Iron Age history. Herodotus speaks in some
detail of a period of Scythian domination, the so-called
Scythian interregnum in Median dynasty history. His dating of
this event remains uncertain, but traditionally it is seen as
falling between the reigns of Phraortes and Cyaxares and as
covering the years 653 to 625 BCE. Whether such an interregnum
ever actually occurred and, if it did, whether it should not
be dated later than this are open questions. What is clear is
that, by the mid-7th century BCE, there were a great many
Scythians in western Iran, that they, along with the Medes and
other groups, posed a serious threat to Assyria, and that
their appearance threw previous power alignments quite out of
balance.
Herodotus reports how, under Cyaxares of Media (625-585 BCE),
the Scythians were overthrown when their kings were induced at
a supper party to get so drunk that they were then easily
slain. It is more likely that about this time either the
Scythians withdrew voluntarily from western Iran and went off
to plunder elsewhere or they were simply absorbed into a
rapidly developing confederation under Median hegemony.
Cyaxares is a fully historical figure who appears in the
cuneiform sources as Uvakhshatra. Herodotus speaks of how
Cyaxares reorganized the Median army into units built around
specialized armaments: spearmen, bowmen, and cavalry. The
unified and reorganized Medes were a match for the Assyrians.
They attacked one of the important Assyrian border cities,
Arrapkha, in 615 BCE, surrounded Nineveh in 614 BCE but were
unable to capture it, and instead successfully stormed the
Assyrian religious capital, Ashur. An alliance between Babylon
and the Medes was sealed by the betrothal of Cyaxares'
granddaughter to Nabopolassar's son, Nebuchadrezzar II
(605-562 BCE). In 612 BCE the attack on Nineveh was renewed,
and the city fell in late August (the Babylonians arrived
rather too late to participate fully in the battle). The
Babylonians and the Medes together pursued the fleeing
Assyrians westward into Syria. Assyrian appeals to Egypt for
help came to nought, and the last Assyrian ruler,
Ashur-uballit II, disappeared from history in 609 BCE.
 |
Golden rhyton from Ecbatana
Tehran (National Museum) |
The problem, of course, was how to divide the spoils among
the victors. The cuneiform sources are comparatively silent,
but it would seem that the Babylonians fell heir to all of the
Assyrian holdings within the fertile crescent, while their
allies took over all of the highland areas. The Medes gained
control over the lands in eastern Anatolia that had once been
part of Urartu and eventually became embroiled in war with the
Lydians, the dominant political power in western Asia Minor.
In 585 BCE, probably through the mediation of the Babylonians,
peace was established between Media and Lydia, and the Halys
(Kizil) River was fixed as the boundary between the two
kingdoms. Thus a new balance of power was established in the
Middle East among Medes, Lydians, Babylonians, and, far to the
south, Egyptians. At his death, Cyaxares controlled vast
territories: all of Anatolia to the Halys, the whole of
western Iran eastward, perhaps as far as the area of modern
Tehran, and all of south-western Iran, including Fars. Whether
it is appropriate to call these holdings a kingdom is
debatable; one suspects that authority over the various
peoples, Iranian and non-Iranian, who occupied these
territories was exerted in the form of a confederation such as
is implied by the ancient Iranian royal title, king of kings.
Astyages followed his father, Cyaxares, on the Median throne
(585-550 BCE). Comparatively little is known of his reign. All
was not well with the alliance with Babylon, and there is some
evidence to suggest that Babylonia may have feared Median
power. The latter, however, was soon in no position to
threaten others, for Astyages was himself under attack.
Indeed, Astyages and the Medians were soon overthrown by the
rise to power in the Iranian world of Cyrus II the Great.
|