Cyrus The Great
and his influence upon Alexander
One of the historical figures most admired by Alexander The Great
is also most often overlooked; he is Cyrus The Great. Alexander revered
and respected the achievements of Cyrus. He visited his tomb and took
stern measures against those who had allowed it to be desecrated.
Even a brief look at the life of Cyrus will at once reveal to you
why Alexander so admired Cyrus as their careers display a salient parallel.
Both were born princes and became kings in small outland kingdoms and
both sought through conquest to enlarge them. Some outstanding differences
shall at once occur to anyone who studies this parallel.
To quote Charles Freeman in his book, 'The Greek Achievement',
' 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 provide any stable alternative.'
There is ample opportunity for debate in this statement, but there
is indeed, some truth in it. Cyrus created the greatest empire the
world had ever seen and his successors added to it; this cannot be
said of Alexander. There are certainly extenuating circumstances in
the short life of Alexander, but the fact remains that he did not create
an empire; the great conqueror, conquered.
In past years Alexander has been lauded as an enlightened ruler with
a vision of the brotherhood of man, but here too it must be pointed
out that he was following the previously written and implemented policies
of Cyrus which had been in place for years.
Cyrus must be credited with creating the first human rights document
in history. The stone cylinder now in The British Museum clearly states
his policy of toleration of individual cultures and religions. He presents
himself as a liberator rather than a conqueror and is scrupulous in
his public support of all the many religions which he encounters. It
was Cyrus The great who freed the Jews from their many years of slavery
in Babylon and sent 40,000 of them back to Israel with lavish gifts
to enable the building of a great temple to their
God.
It can be argued that it is only through this apparent and magnificent
benevolence that it was possible to rule so vast and diverse an empire,
but whether it was benevolence or pragmatism, it was very much admired
throughout the world and emulated, not innovated, by Alexander.
As Westerners we receive our early knowledge of The Persian Empire
from the most hostile of sources, The Greeks and therefore, our perception
of this culture is based upon highly biased information. Despite their
understandably antagonistic disposition towards The Persians The Greeks
were impelled to grant a grudging admiration to the governance of Cyrus.
Xenophon's ' Cyropaedia ' was well known through the world into The
Roman Era. Publius Fabius Scipio is said to have had a copy of it with
him at all times. It is impossible that Alexander was unfamiliar with
this work and it would appear that his attempt at governing his great
empire was based upon a foreknowledge of Cyrus through Xenophon and
others Again we see Alexander as not innovating a government based
upon a concept of humanitarianism. but rather taking over an established
system of governance which had proven to be eminently successful over
the years.
An understanding of the life and works of Cyrus The Great at once
illuminates many of the acts of Alexander which seem so problematic
without this background. In many cases actions which appear so contra
to traditional Greek culture are so indeed, as Alexander in The Orient
is not emulating the ideas of his Greek teachers; he is following diligently
in the footsteps of Cyrus The Great. Once again the pragmatist Alexander
has astutely recognized a good thing and commandeered it.
If, through the millennia, Alexander scholars have swallowed whole
the concept of his enlightened and anti racist benevolence, the cause
is their own racial bias which prevents them from seeing Cyrus as the
originator of all the humanitarian ideas accredited to Alexander.
Cyrus was not just a great conqueror, he was a great and innovative
ruler. The original and unprecedented governmental structure which
he created endured long past his time and past the time of Alexander.
It was the genius of Cyrus which created this tolerant style of governance
and it was the genius of Alexander which allowed him to transcend the
cultural imperatives of his day and accept Persian ideas, something
the Greeks never forgave.
The links to the left of this page will provide you with most of the
knowledge we have of Cyrus The Great. Until quite recently there has
been a scarcity of ancient Persian writings available and few translations
published. Our primary sources are spare. We have been fortunate to
have found in the ruins of Persopolis a large number of inscribed
clay tablets. Originally of unbaked clay they would not have survived
but for Alexander's burning of the city founded by Cyrus. The flames
baked them hard.
"Then was it the fiery touch of beautiful Thaïs which
saved forever the wisdom of mighty Persia?"...........Kallistos |