The first Iranian kings to rule Iraq …

Years: 333BCE - 190BCE

The first Iranian kings to rule Iraq had followed Mesopotamian land-management practices conscientiously.

Between 485 BCE and the conquest by Alexander the Great in 331 BCE, however, very little in Babylon had been repaired and few of its once-great cities remain intact.

Trade also has greatly reduced during this period.

The established trade route from Sardis to Susa does not traverse Babylonia, and the Iranian rulers, themselves much closer to the Orient, have been able to monopolize trade from India and other eastern points.

As a result, Babylonia and Assyria, which together form the ninth satrapy of the Persian Empire, have become economically isolated and impoverished.

Their poverty is exacerbated by the extremely high taxes levied on them: they owe the Iranian crown one thousand talents of silver a year, in addition to having to meet the extortionate demands of the local administrators, and they are responsible for feeding the Iranian court for four months every year.

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