Persia in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Ezekiel 27:10; Ezekiel 38:5. "Persia proper" was originally
a small territory (Herodot. 9:22). On the N. and N.E. lay
Media, on the S. the Persian gulf, Elam on the W., on the E.
Carmania. Now Furs, Farsistan. Rugged, with pleasant valleys
and plains in the mid region and mountains in the N. The S.
toward the sea is a hot sandy plain, in places covered with
salt. Persepolis (in the beautiful valley of the Bendamir),
under Darius Hystaspes, took the place of Pasargadae the
ancient capital; of its palace "Chehl Minar," "forty
columns," still exist. Alexander in a drunken fit, to please
a courtesan, burned the palace. Pasargadae, 40 miles to the
N., was noted for Cyrus' tomb (Arrian) with the inscription,
"I am Cyrus the Achaemenian." (See CYRUS.) The Persians came
originally from the E., from the vicinity of the Sutlej
(before the first contact of the Assyrians with Aryan tribes
E. of Mount Zagros, 880 B.C.), down the Oxus, then S. of the
Caspian Sea to India. There were ten castes or tribes: three
noble, three agricultural, four nomadic; of the last were
the "Dehavites" or Dali (Ezra 4:9).
The Pasargadae were the noble tribes, in which the
chief house was that of the Achaemenidae. Darius on the rock
of Behistun inscribed: "from antiquity our race have been
kings. There are eight of our race who have been kings
before me, I am the ninth." frontELAM on its relation to
Persia.) The Persian empire stretched at one time from India
to Egypt and Thrace, including all western Asia between the
Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Caspian, the Jaxartes upon the
N., the Arabian desert, Persian gulf, and Indian ocean on
the S. Darius in the inscription on his tomb at Nakhsh-
irustam enumerates thirty countries besides Persia subject
to him, Media, Susiana, Parthia, Aria, Bactria, Sogdiana,
Chorasmia, Zarangia, Arachosia, Sattagydia, Gaudaria, India,
Scythia, Babylonia, Assyria, Arabia, Egypt, Armenia,
Cappadocia, Saparda, Ionia, the Aegean isles, the country of
the Scodrae (European), Ionia, the Tacabri, Budians,
Cushites, Mardians, and Colchians. The organization of the
Persian kingdom and court as they appear in Ezra, Nehemiah,
and Esther, accords with independent secular historians.
The king, a despot, had a council, "seven princes of
Persia and Media which see his face and sit the first in the
kingdom" (Esther 1:14; Ezra 7:14). So Herodotus (iii. 70-79)
and Behistun inscription mention seven chiefs who organized
the revolt against Smerdis (the Behistun rock W. of Media
has one inscription in three languages, Persian, Babylonian,
and Stythic, read by Grotefend). "The law of the Persians
and Medes which alters not" (Esther 1:19) also controlled
him in some measure. In Scripture we read of 127 provinces
(Esther 1:1) with satraps (Esther 3:12; Esther 8:9; Xerxes
in boasting enlarged the list; 60 are the nations in his
armament according to Herodotus) maintained from the palace
(Ezra 4:14), having charge of the revenue, paid partly in
money...
Read More about Persia in Fausset's Bible Dictionary