Worlds Collide: Persians and Greeks

By Bennett Sherry
All societies rise, grow, and decline. How they do so depends on their geography, type of government, and relations with other societies. In this article, we will look at the Persian Empire and the Greek Peninsula 2,500 years ago. You’ll learn about these two very different societies and how they changed between 559 and 323 BCE.

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A Greek red figure vase depicting the war council of Darius, King of Persia 549 BCE—486 BCE.

Geography and Environment

As early states grew, they needed more and more resources. They needed more land, more food, and more goods. As they expanded, they often came into conflict with other states over land and resources. Take, for example, the mighty Persian Empire and the city-states of the Greek Peninsula. The conflicts between these two very different societies changed world history.

A map showing the geography of the Persian Empire and city-states of the Greek Peninsula.

The Persian Empire

The Persian Empire began in a region that was in the middle of an ancient trade route between Mesopotamia and the Indus River Valley. Persian society expanded overland toward wealthy areas to the east (India) and west (Mesopotamia). Less than 50 years after its formation in 559 BCE, the Persian Empire had become the largest empire in the world. The Persians ruled over nearly 50 million people. That was almost one-third of all the people on Earth at the time.

The Greek Peninsula

To the west of the Persian Empire was the mountainous peninsula of Greece. By 500 BCE, the Greek Peninsula was divided into hundreds of city-states. These city-states were independent, but they shared the same culture. They were all small at first, but some—such as Athens and Sparta—became large and powerful. Poor soil and rugged geography gave the Greeks plenty of reason to want to expand. But in a mountainous area, it was hard to expand overland. The Greeks lived by the Aegean Sea, so they expanded across the seas instead. Greek colonists established new city-states all around the Mediterranean.

Infographic timeline for The Persians and the Greeks spanning 559 BCE–323 BCE.
A map showing the stages of the Persian Empire’s expansion. The areas in purple and pink are its earliest territories, with orange, brown, and green coming from later conquests.

A map showing the stages of the Persian Empire’s expansion. The areas in purple and pink are its earliest territories, with orange, brown, and green coming from later conquests. By World History Encyclopedia, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

Map of Greek and Phoenician Settlements in the Mediterranean Basin. Red, blue, and dark purple indicate the areas colonized by Greek city-states around the Mediterranean and Black Seas.

The areas colonized by Greek city-states around the Mediterranean and Black Sea (red, blue, and dark purple).

Big Question #1:
How did geography and the environment shape the development of the Persian Empire and the Greek Peninsula?

Political Structure

Let’s explore the different ways in which Greek and Persian societies were organized.

The Persian Empire

The story of the Persian Empire begins in 559 BCE. In that year, the first Persian emperor, Cyrus the Great, set out on a series of conquests. By his death in 530 BCE, he had conquered Egypt, Babylonia, Assyria, most of Central Asia, and Anatolia. His descendants, especially Darius I (he ruled 522–486 BCE), expanded the empire even further.

The Persian emperors were absolute rulers. They controlled everything. They were treated almost as gods, and their word was law. They took the title “King of Kings.” Persian governors ruled the faraway districts of the empire called satraps. However, local elites among conquered peoples filled other administrative positions. This bureaucracy (administration system) helped the emperors maintain control of and collect taxes from their huge empire.

What is a state?
There are many kinds of states. We define a state as an organized community living under a unified political system. An empire—like the Persian Empire—is one kind of state that rules over a large territory and many different groups of people. A city-state—like Athens—is a small type of state that rules just one city and the surrounding countryside. Modern countries like the one you live in are states, too.


A long memory
A later Greek historian, named Herodotus, claimed that Darius was really angry about the Athenians helping the rebels. So angry that he made his servant remind him “remember the Athenians” three times before every meal. Darius was angry and had an army that was much larger than the Greeks. But both Darius and his son, Xerxes I, failed to conquer Greece. The Greeks worked together against a common enemy. They also had better military tactics and equipment, along with a little luck.

A stone carving depicting war scenes and the “Behistun Inscription.” It tells about the conquests of Darius the Great and shows him speaking to people he defeated. The inscription is written in three different languages.

This is the “Behistun Inscription.” It tells about the conquests of Darius the Great and shows him speaking to people he defeated. The inscription is written in three different languages. © Getty Images.

One example of the empire’s effective administration was the Royal Road. This road ran from the heart of the Persian Empire to Anatolia, over 1,500 miles away. It helped speed up communication and allowed the emperor to manage his large empire better.

A map of the Persian Empire in the fifth century BCE. The brown line represents the Royal Road and links Persia to the Mediterranean.

A map of the Persian Empire in the fifth century BCE. Notice the Royal Road (brown) linking Persia to the Mediterranean. © Getty Images.

Big Question #2:
What type of leader did the Persian Empire have? What were some ways that the empire was governed?

The Greek city-states

In contrast to Persia’s centralized political system in which one king ruled everything, the Greeks lived in independent city-states ruled by many people. In most city-states, some citizens had a say in governing. However, each city-state worked differently. For example, Sparta was ruled by two kings and a council of nobles. Athens, on the other hand, practiced direct democracy. All male citizens voted in the Assembly that ruled the city.

Persia and Greece were both expanding and wanted the same land and resources. That soon led to conflict. In 546 BCE, the Persian Empire conquered several Greek city-states on the coast of Anatolia. In 499 BCE, these city-states rebelled against Persian rule, and Athens supported the rebels. After he defeated the revolt, the Persian emperor Darius I set off to punish the Greeks. The result was a 50-year period of conflict known as the Greco-Persian Wars. The much smaller Greek city-states managed to unite and defeat the world’s largest empire—twice.

Big Question #3:
What were the major differences between the Persian and Greek political systems? Why did these two systems come into conflict?

Culture

Persian and Greek cultures were very different.

Persian culture

The Persians adopted many of the customs of the different peoples they conquered. They were relatively tolerant rulers who allowed conquered peoples to keep their own religions and traditions so long as they paid taxes and obeyed the emperor. Many conquered kings were even allowed to keep their titles. That’s where the Persian emperor’s title “King of Kings” comes from.

The legacy of Zoroaster
The Persian religion, Zoroastrianism, was the world’s first monotheistic religion. The Zoroastrian holy book is called the Avesta. This book includes the teachings of a man named Zoroaster. He preached about a single creator god named Ahura Mazda. Zoroastrianism had a big impact on Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Today, the largest community of Zoroastrians lives in Los Angeles, California.

Big Question #4:
How were the cultures of Greece and Persia shaped by their political expansion and conflicts?

Greek culture

The Ancient Greeks were isolated from outsiders and suspicious of foreign cultures. As a result, the city-states of the Greek Peninsula developed a distinctly Greek culture. Greece’s victories in the Greco-Persian Wars allowed Greek culture to flourish and spread to new places. Thinkers like Socrates, Plato, and Euripides made Athens a cultural center of the Mediterranean world. Meanwhile, the Athenians started conquering other city-states and built their own sea-based empire.

Society

Terms like “direct democracy” and “independent city-states” might make you think Athens valued equality. But the truth was more complicated. The amount of freedom and democracy a person enjoyed depended on who they were. A single, all-powerful man might have ruled Persia, but the emperor tolerated differences and respected the many different cultures under his rule. For example, when he captured Babylon, Cyrus the Great freed the Jewish people there. The Persians also issued what is perhaps the world’s first statement about human rights. It is known as the Cyrus Cylinder.

In Athens, however, women, enslaved people, and non-Greeks were not considered citizens and were not allowed to participate in government. In many other Greek city-states, participation was even more limited. Often, only very wealthy males enjoyed citizens’ rights.

Barrel-shaped clay cylinder known as the Cyrus Cylinder showing wear. The Cyrus Cylinder displays writing that represents a Babylonian account of the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus in 539 BC.

The Cyrus cylinder; clay cylinder; a Babylonian account of the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus in 539 BC. © The Trustees of the British Museum.

Pretty great
The Cyrus Cylinder was written to justify Persia’s conquest and to show everyone just how great Cyrus was:

“I am Cyrus, king of the universe, the great king, the powerful king, king of Babylon, king of Sumer and Akkad, king of the four quarters of the world.… My vast troops marched peaceably in Babylon, and the whole of [Sumer] and Akkad had nothing to fear. I sought the welfare of the city of Babylon and all its sanctuaries. As for the population of Babylon […, who as if without divine intention] had endured a yoke not decreed for them, I soothed their weariness, I freed them from their bonds.”

Big Question #5:
How were these two societies organized? What were their social hierarchies like? What is one way that Persian society seems equal? What is one way that Greek society seems more equal?

Decline and Transformation

The Greek city-states defeated Persia by fighting together. Yet, after their victory, a rivalry developed between the different city-states. From 431 to 404 BCE, the Athenian Empire fought Sparta and their allies in the Peloponnesian War. Sparta was the eventual victor. The war weakened the whole Greek world. This opened the door for a new state to arise. On the northern border of the Greek Peninsula, the Macedonian kingdom of Phillip II (r. 359–336 BCE) took advantage of the weakened Greek city-states and conquered most of Greece. Phillip’s son, Alexander, then led an army of Greeks and Macedonians into the heart of the Persian Empire. Alexander, known as “Alexander the Great,” conquered all Persian territories as far east as India.

After Phillip and Alexander’s conquests, the Persian Empire’s power faded. Yet, its influence didn’t disappear. Persia’s political system was used as a model by many later states. In a similar way, many societies in Europe and America drew inspiration from Ancient Greece long after its power had faded away.

A mosaic showing the Battle of Issus in 333 BCE, during which Alexander the Great defeated the Persian Emperor Darius III. Alexander is seen on the far left, Darius is seen right of center, they are amongst horsemen fighting with spears and shields.

A mosaic showing the Battle of Issus in 333 BCE, during which Alexander the Great defeated the Persian Emperor Darius III. © Getty Images.

A map showing the areas of Alexander the Great’s empire and the successor kingdoms it broke into.

A map of Alexander’s empire and the successor kingdoms it broke into. By WHP, CC BY 4.0. Explore the map here.

Big Question #6:
What led to the decline and transformation of Persian and Greek societies?

Bennett Sherry

Bennett Sherry holds a PhD in history from the University of Pittsburgh and has undergraduate teaching experience in world history, human rights, and the Middle East. Bennett writes about refugees and international organizations in the twentieth century and is one of the historians working on the OER Project courses.

Credit: Sherry, Bennett. “Worlds Collide: Persians and Greeks.” OER Project, 2023. https://www.oerproject.com/

Image credits

Creative Commons This work is licensed under CC BY 4.0 except for the following:

Cover image: The war council of Darius, presented on a Greek red figure vase. Darius King of Persia 549 BCE—486 BCE. © Culture Club/Getty Images.

Map showing the Greek Peninsula and the Persian Empire. By WHP, CC BY 4.0.

A map showing the stages of the Persian Empire’s expansion. The areas in purple and pink are its earliest territories, with orange, brown, and green coming from later conquests. By World History Encyclopedia, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. https://www.worldhistory.org/image/16107/the-achaemenid-persian-empire-c-500-bce/

The areas colonized by Greek city-states around the Mediterranean and Black Sea (red, blue, and dark purple). © Universal Images Group / Getty Images.

This is the “Behistun Inscription.” It tells about the conquests of Darius the Great and shows him speaking to people he defeated. The inscription is written in three different languages. © Moment / Getty Images.

A map of the Persian Empire in the fifth century BCE. Notice the Royal Road (brown) linking Persia to the Mediterranean. © Universal Images Group / Getty Images.

The Cyrus cylinder; clay cylinder; a Babylonian account of the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus in 539 BC. © The Trustees of the British Museum.

A mosaic showing the Battle of Issus in 333 BCE, during which Alexander the Great defeated the Persian Emperor Darius III. © Hulton Archive/ Getty Images.

A map of Alexander’s empire and the successor kingdoms it broke into. By WHP, CC BY 4.0. https://www.oerproject.com/OER-Materials/OER-Media/Images/WHP-Maps/300bce-layer-2


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