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People: John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough

Mesopotamia, for two thousand years a stronghold …

Years: 621BCE - 478BCE

Mesopotamia, for two thousand years a stronghold of Semitic-speaking peoples, now falls to Indo-European rule that will persist for one thousand one hundred and seventy-six years years.

Cyrus, one of history's truly great leaders, rules with a firm hand, but he is also well attuned to the needs of his subjects.

Upon assuming power, he immediately replaces the savagery of the Assyrians with a respect for the customs and the institutions of his new subjects.

He appoints competent provincial governors (the predecessors of the Persian satraps), and he requires from his subjects only tribute and obedience.

Following Cyrus's death, a brief period of Babylonian unrest ensues that climaxes in 522 BCE with a general rebellion of Iranian colonies.

Between 520 and 485 BCE, the efficient and innovative Iranian leader, Darius the Great, reimposes political stability in Babylon and ushers in a period of great economic prosperity.

His greatest achievements are in road building—which significantly improves communication among the provinces—and in organizing an efficient bureaucracy.

Darius's death in 485 BCE is followed by a period of decay that leads to a major Babylonian rebellion in 482 BCE.

The Iranians violently quell the uprising, and the repression that followa severely damages Babylon's economic infrastructure.

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