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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 13.
IRAN
The plains of the Euphrates and Tigris are
bounded on the east by the long mountain walls which, one behind the other,
fence the tableland of Iran. This name, of course, belongs to an ethnological,
rather than a physical, demarcation of the earth —the country possessed by
Iranian man. And in this sense Iran embraces more than the tableland; it
includes the mountainous country which forms a bridge between the tableland and
the Pamir; it includes also the regions to the north of the bridge as far as
the Jaxartes (Syr-daria); to use modern political divisions, it includes,
besides the kingdom of Persia, which coincides with the tableland, the
principalities of Afghanistan and Bokhara. Within this region, in the dim
centuries which precede recorded time, a peculiar national type had shaped
itself as distinctive as that of the kindred Indians farther east, or as that
of the Semitic kingdoms on the west. Into this old Iran, when the tribal
organization of society had not yet been overlaid by an imperial system after
the Assyrian model, we can get barely a glimpse. The Greek historians and Old
Testament writers, to whom well-nigh everything we know of the Median and Persian
Empires is due, show us almost exclusively the Iranian monarch in his relation
to the foreign peoples dwelling west of Iran, his subjects, his enemies, or his
allies; they show us the Achaemenian court established for the most part
outside Iran on the ground of those older monarchies which it imitated, in
Babylon, or in Susa; beyond the court, into Iran itself, into the land and the
life, in which the Achaemenian house had its roots, they give us little
insight.
The Iranian people, before Deioces the Mede
built an Empire, were split into a number of small princedoms and clan
chieftainships. Their necks had not been bent under the yoke of a Great King.
They stood in very much the same stage of social development as Macedonia up to
the days of Philip, or as the mediaeval princedoms of Europe. We see in all of
these an aristocracy of great houses, of chiefs ruling by virtue of blood and
inherited authority in the tribe, the clan, or the family. The typical Persian
nobleman was known for his magnificent airs. His manner of life was very like
that of his Macedonian counterpart. He had the same passion for dogs and
horses, for hunting and the profession of arms. He had the same love of wine
and night-long wassails, although he combined this with a great capacity for
abstinence, where need was, in forced marches through the starved regions of
Iran. Lying was the cardinal sin, and the chaffering of the marketplace
he held a thing with which only lower breeds of men would have to do. But to
till the ground in ancestral fashion and tend flocks and herds was labor
honorable and well-pleasing to God.
None of these qualities are, however, very
distinctive. Most warlike aristocracies are proud in bearing, devoted to sport
and good company, and contemptuous of trade. To find the distinctive expression
of the old Iranian spirit we must turn to the Zoroastrian religion. It is
certainly impossible to determine how far the actual religion of Achaemenian
days conformed to the true Zoroastrian type. The royal houses of Media and
Persia, as we can gather from some of the proper names in use, from the fact
that the Achaemenian kings worship Ahuramazda as the One Creator, were
professed Zoroastrians. But certain salient differences appear between their
practice and what was, later on at any rate, held orthodox —their custom of
burial, for instance. In the worship of the clan deities we may see a survival
of old pre-Zoroastrian heathenism, in the cult of Anabita the adulteration of
the Faith through foreign influences. But even if we cannot infer that this or
that prescript of Zoroastrianism was observed in the Persia of Darius
Codomannus, the Avesta sheds a flood of light on the fundamental religious
conceptions, on the peculiar religious temperament of old Iran. And we are led,
I think, to place it high in the scale. The earliest form of Zoroastrianism to
which we can get back is practically monotheistic. And not only is God one
God—the Egyptians and Indians spoke sometimes of the One in a pantheistic
sense—Ahuramazda is a Person, a strongly moral Person. He differs altogether
from the old non-moral nature gods whom even the ordinary Greek still
worshipped, and equally so from the non-moral abstractions into which the old
nature-gods became resolved by the speculative thought of Greek and Indian
philosophers. And with such a God, the attitude of the Iranian to the world and
its ways formed a strange contrast to that which we loosely talk of as
“Oriental,” to the attitude of his Indian kinsman, for instance. The material
world was not a vain process, a burden from which the wise man would, as far as
possible, withdraw himself; it was that which Ahuramazda created good, though
the wicked spirits were now doing their best to spoil it. We speak of the
“brooding East”; the religion of Zarathushtra was above all things a religion
of honest work. Its supreme object was that “the Cow” (i.e. agriculture
generally) should no longer, through the craft of lying spirits, suffer
neglect. It is true that the piety required by Ahuramazda was to some extent
narrow and formal, that no voice in old Iran proclaimed, “Bring no more vain
oblations; incense is an abomination unto me; your new moons and your appointed
feasts my soul hateth.” But it is also true that in the Zoroastrian conception
of God and His service we, who have derived our thoughts of God from Jerusalem,
find something strangely responsive.
Two centuries of empire made indeed a great
difference in the aristocracy of Iran. The Persian nobles who fought against
Alexander were very unlike the rude highland chiefs who had gathered round the
standard of Cyrus. The good things of the world, the riches and refinements of
great industrial cities, the precious wares of India and Ionia, had not been
laid open to their fathers in vain. Even in the time of Cyrus the Persians had
discarded their primitive kilts for flowing robes, such as the Medes had
already borrowed from Assyria, for the purples of Tyre, and the rainbow
embroideries of Babylon. Their inbred passion for carousing and hunting was
gratified in artificial modes on a magnificent scale. A Persian banquet became
to the Greeks the type of extravagant luxury. All Asia was ransacked to furnish
the table of the Great King. Armies of cooks, confectioners, and butlers waited
on a Persian nobleman. His banqueting hall must be richly hung, and blaze with
gold and silver plate. The couches must be overlaid with gold and spread with
costly fabrics. In fact, the art of spreading couches was brought to such nice
perfection that to satisfy the Persian sense required a special training, and
when the King made a present of valuable carpets to Greek visitors, the
couch-spreader was an indispensable adjunct. So too with the Persian love of
hunting. Huge parks were now enclosed, stocked with all manner of game, for his
diversion—a declension, it seemed to the fine instinct of the sportsman
Xenophon, from the true spirit of the field, “like slaying beasts chained
up.” Horse-breeding was passionately studied, and horses, in the
estimation of a Persian, among the most honorable presents he could give or
receive. The Indian hounds kept, in the time of Herodotus, by the satrap of
Babylon were so numerous that their maintenance was the sole charge laid upon
four substantial villages.
And yet, sumptuous as the Iranian nobility had
grown in its style of living, much of the old spirit survived. There was still
a social code which prompted the Persian baron to adventure himself hardily in
battle and to close with great beasts. The fresher spirits of the Greek world,
men like Xenophon and Alexander, found much in the better type of Persians to
admire. There was indeed such a fundamental resemblance between the tastes and
ideals of the Macedonian and Iranian aristocracy as to naturally create a kind
of fellow-feeling. And the struggle which brought Macedonian and Persian into
close contact led, as we know, in the case of Alexander himself, and those of
his entourage who were in sympathy with him, to a generous eagerness to make
friends. It is no part of Alexander’s policy in the latter years of his life to
depose the Iranian race from its position as the ruling race of Asia. He
aspired to make of Iranian and Macedonian and Hellene one people. Device after
device is put forth in order to promote their fusion—intermarriage, association
in the army, transportation in the mass. When his schemes are cut short by his
death, the situation in Iran is one of counterpoise. Some of the satraps are
natives, some are Macedonian. A Hellenic element has been introduced by the
planting of new cities; in the villages, no doubt, and along the countryside
the authority of the old families is still cherished.
The great geographical divisions into which
Iran, according to the usage prevalent at the time of the Macedonian conquest,
fell were twelve: two on the west and south-west of the central desert—(1)
Media (Mada) and (2) Persis (Parsa, mod. Fars); two to the north and north-east
of it, (3) Hyrcania (Varkana) and (4) Parthia (Parthava); on the east of the
desert, adjoining the mountain country which connects Iran with Central Asia,
came (5) Aria (Haraiva) and (6) Drangiana (Zaranka); the mountain-country
itself fell into the two divisions of (7) Paropanisidai on the north, including
the Cophen (Kabul) valley, and (8) Arachosia on the south; the region which
sloped down, north of the Paropanisidai, to the Oxus formed (9) Bactria
(Bakhtrish, mod. Balkh); the country between the Oxus and Jaxartes (10)
Sogdiana (Suguda, mod. Sughd); and, lastly, along the south of the Iranian
plateau lay (11) Gedrosia and (12) Carmania (mod. Kirman). The number of
administrative provinces or satrapies which these twelve regions constituted
varied naturally according to the convenience of the hour. At Alexander's death
we can probably make out eight: Parthia and Hyrcania were under one satrap, so
were Aria and Drangiana, Arachosia and Gedrosia, Bactria and Sogdiana.
Of the rule of Alexander’s successors in this
part of the world we know even less than of their rule in Syria. The native
tradition, as it was gathered in later centuries under Mohammedan rule, had
forgotten even the names of the kings who ruled Iran between Iskander and the
Sassanians. We can discern the work of the Seleucid house only in the Greek
cities which here also are shown us by the geographers. But we can gather further
from the history that this Greek element was an extremely important political
factor in Iran.
Media, as has been said,
was the most important of the Iranian provinces. Alexander had put in a native
nobleman as satrap, controlling him by the presence of Macedonian commanders.
At his death this arrangement was changed by the chiefs in Babylon. Media was
now divided into two satrapies. The principal part of it, from Persis northward
as far as the river Amardus (mod. Kizil Uzen), containing Ecbatana and Rhagae,
its two most illustrious cities, was made over, as we saw, to Pithon the son of
Crateuas. The northernmost part, the country at the corner of the Iranian
plateau, about Lake Urumiya, was divided off as “Lesser Media” and left in the
hands of Atropates, the satrap appointed by Alexander.
Lesser Media is a lovely “Alpine” land,
belonging by its character to Armenia almost as much as to the Iranian plateau.
By the action of the chiefs it was abandoned more or less to native government.
Atropates was the father of a dynasty, and the country came to be called
Atropatene after him, a name which still cleaves to it in the form Adharbaijan,
although Atropates and his house have long been forgotten there. It is a holy
land in Zoroastrian tradition. When Kai-Khosru, the legend ran, destroyed an
idol-temple in the land, the divine fire, Adar-Gushasp, played about his
person—an occasion commemorated by the great temple of Adar-Gushasp upon Mount
Asnavanta (mod. Savelan). There were other religious centres in the land,
Vesaspe (mod. Ardebil), called after the heavenly Being worshipped there, and
the great fire-temple, Adarakhsh, at Gazaca (mod. Takht-i-Sulaiman), the
capital of Atropatene, and, according to one tradition, the birthplace of
Zoroaster. Whether this prestige of Atropatene is due to the dynasty of
Atropates, or whether it is of earlier date, has not, as far as I know, been
determined.
In the other part of Media, “Greater Media, the
work of Hellenization was prosecuted vigorously. The hills, indeed, were left
to the warlike Kurdish tribes who inhabited them. It was, in fact, their
neighborhood which led Alexander and his successors to protect civilization in
these parts by multiplying new foundations, although the hill-tribes, it must
be remembered, did not only appear to the kings as a menace, but as a valuable
element to be incorporated in their own armies. The case of the Greek cities of
Media shows with peculiar force how unsafe it is in this department to be
guided by the fullness with which our fragmentary authorities inform us of any
matter in estimating the real proportions of things. It is not possible to
gather more than the names of one or two cities. And yet Polybius expressly
tells us that “Media was covered with Greek cities after the plan prescribed by
Alexander, to form a defense against the neighboring barbarians.” Whether
Ecbatana received a Greek colony is doubtful. Polybius makes it an exception,
but he may mean no more than that it was not a new foundation of the Macedonians.
Pliny says that “King Seleucus built it.” The magnificent cedar palace of the
Achaemenians, covering over twenty-five acres with its colonnades, was left
standing, and was an occasional residence of the Seleucid kings. Rhagae (mod.
Ehei), the older capital of Media, is distinctly said by Strabo to have been
refounded by Seleucus Nicator as a Greek city, and given the name of
Europus—his own birthplace. Apparently near Rhagae was the Heraclea founded by
Alexander, and restored by Antiochus (the First, presumably) with the new name
or surname of Achais. We hear further of a Laodicea and an Apamea Rhagiana.
The course of things in the province which
adjoined Media on the south-east, Persis, where lay the seats of that
part of the Iranian race which had so long held the supremacy, and the royal
burg in which the Achaemenian kings had been at home, is involved in complete
darkness during the rule of the Seleucid house. That the national or tribal
feeling was strong in these valleys we may see by the case of Peucestas, who
found it good policy to adopt the guise of a Persian when satrap, and the bold
declaration of the native nobleman in the council of Antigonus, that if
Peucestas were deposed no other Macedonian governor would be accepted. And that
this feeling continued under Seleucid dominion we may see by the fact that as
soon as the authority of that house weakens, the country is found under the
government of native princes. The work of the Seleucids can be discerned only
in the frontier city of Laodicea, founded by Antiochus, the Antioch-in-Persis
of which we know by a decree which its citizens once passed in their ekklesia,
the Stasis, “on a huge rock,” which again is connected with the name of
Antiochus I and, if we can argue from its Greek name, Methone. At some time or
other a revolt seems to have broken out among these soldier-colonists in
Persis, like the revolt among the Bactrian Greeks after Alexander’s death. The
stratagem is described by which Oborzus, apparently a Persian employed by the
Seleucid government, had 3000 of them put to the sword.
On the north the Iranian plateau is fenced by
the high line of the Elburz range from the Caspian. Along the southern, that
is, the interior, face of this range runs a narrow belt of habitable country which
forms the connection between Western and Eastern Iran. Here the province of
Media adjoined Parthia, the country which included the easternmost part of the
belt just named as well as the mountains which bend southwards in a sort of
crescent from the Elburz to meet the mountains of Aria. It corresponded with
the modern Khorassan, or the northern part of it. It is a country of which the
greater part is barren—sterile ranges bordering the great desert, but with
tracts here and there in the valleys of extreme fertility. Such was the region
of Nisa—one of the places cited as especially blessed in the Zoroastrian
scriptures, in which an Alexandropolis is mentioned by Pliny as having been
founded by Alexander. Hecatompylus, the capital of the province, owed its name,
according to Polybius, to the roads from all quarters which here converged; in
a land where the lines of communication are so restricted the centre of a
road-system is all the more important. That such a point, therefore, should
have been secured by the Macedonian kings is a matter of course. And indeed we
find Hecatompylus reckoned among the foundations of Seleucus Nicator. The only
other Greek city in Parthia whose name has come down to us is Calliope,
likewise founded, according to Appian, by the first Seleucus. It must have been
on the extreme west of the province, since it is said by Pliny to have been at
one time a frontier fortress against the Medes.
Closely connected in the administrative system
with Parthia was the country on the northern side of the Elburz range along the
southern shore of the Caspian, Hyrcania (mod. Mazanderan). Physically, no
contrast could be greater than that between the regions to the north and those
to the south of the Elburz. Instead of the arid terraces of the Parthian side,
the Hyrcanian slopes, receiving moisture from the Caspian, are clothed with
rank forest. The sea-board at their feet has an almost Italian character. The
exuberant fertility of the country is described by Strabo. Its inhabitants were
perhaps of another stock than the Iranians, and the hills were tenanted here,
as elsewhere, by unruly tribes, Mardi and Tapyri. Several “considerable cities”
are mentioned by Strabo as being in Hyrcania, and as the names are native, we
may perhaps infer that the fertility of the country had favored the growth of
larger communities even before the Macedonian conquest. The chief place at the
time of Alexander is Zadracarta (probably where the modern Asterabad stands).
Polybius in the time of Antiochus III speaks of Sirynca as the seat of government
and Strabo uses the same expression of Tape. Whether these are different names
of the same place is impossible to say. Of Greek towns in this region, although
such must needs have existed, in view of the country’s richness and the
interest taken by Seleucus and his son in the navigation of the Caspian, we
have no names given us except that of Eumenea. It is noticeable, however, that
there was a community of resident Greeks at Sirynca in 209.
Hyrcania and Parthia, by the system which
obtained at the death of Alexander, were under a single satrap, a native, who
was replaced by the Macedonian Philip in 321. This was the man whom Pithon
killed in 318 in order to put in his own brother Eudamus. Eudamus was almost
immediately ejected by the confederate satraps, and after the triumph of
Antigonus in 316 the province seems to have been annexed to Bactria, and to
have formed part of the governorship of Stasanor. A few years later it passed
with the rest of the East to Seleucus.
The eastern half of the Iranian upland
consists, as we have said, not of a central desert surrounded by mountains, but
of a mountain mass pushed out from Central Asia. The backbone of this mass is
formed by the Paropanisus (Hindu-Kush), and round about it are the provinces
fed by the rivers which it sends down. On the west of it, adjoining Parthia,
was the province which drew its life and its name from the river Arius (mod.
Hare-Rud), the province of Aria (old Pers. Haraiva). The name bears
witness to the grateful contrast of its well-watered valleys with the
neighboring desolation of mountain and desert. It was a land of vineyards,
among the six blessed regions of the Vendidad. Here Alexander began the work of
colonization by planting an Alexandria, and the old capital Articoana was rebuilt
in more splendid fashion by Antiochus I. From Alexandria-of-the-Arians two
important roads diverged. One ran round the north side of the mountain mass to
Bactria, the other went south to Drangiana, and thence reached India by way of Alexandria
Arachoton (Kandahar). Alexandria Arion was thus a station through which all
traffic between Western Iran and the lands farther east must almost necessarily
pass, a knot where the great lateral lines of the world’s communications were
drawn together.
Two other Greek cities are found in Aria
bearing witness to the activity of the Seleucid government, Achaia, whose
founder Achaeus was no doubt the general and father-in-law of Seleucus II, or
an elder Achaeus of the same family, and Sotira, called probably after Antiochus
I Soter. The Charis mentioned by Appian must also have been either in Parthia
or here.
Two regions geographically distinct from the
valley of the Arius seem to have been included in the satrapy as it was marked
out under Alexander and his successors. Somewhat east of the Arius, another
river, the Margus (mod. Murghab), comes down from the mountains and flows out
into the desert parallel with the Arius, where it meets with the like fate,
perishing in the sand. But it does not disappear before it has created in
mid-desert the oasis which the ancients called Margiana and the moderns
call Merv. Under careful irrigation this spot was turned into a paradise. It
also was among the blessed lands of the Vendidad. “Report affirms,” said Strabo,
“that vines are often found whose stock it takes two men to compass, with
clusters two cubits long”. To balance its advantages, the oasis was by its
position more than ordinarily exposed to be ravaged by the nomads of the
desert. The Alexandria placed here by Alexander was actually overwhelmed within
a few years of its foundation. The city rose again under the hand of Antiochus
I as an Antioch, “Antioch-in-the-waters,” standing among its network of canals.
Its new founder took the precaution of surrounding the whole oasis with a wall,
1500 stadia long (about 173 miles). Thenceforward Merv, under various masters,
Macedonian, Parthian, Mohammedan, maintained its contest with the children of
the desert These in the long run got the better of every wall. Century after
century the swarms broke upon it, till at the coming of the Russians the other
day it was found little better than a heap of desolations.
The other region attached to Aria lay to the
south of it. The rivers on the southern slopes of the Afghan country tend south-westerly,
and find their ultimate meeting-place in the swampy basin of Seistan, where
they form a lake of varying extent. This lake, which is now called Hamun, was
known to the old Iranians as Daraya, the “Sea,” in the eastern dialect Zaraya,
and the people who dwelt about it were called Daranka or Zaranka, the
dialectical variation giving rise to the two Greek names of Drangai and
Zarangai (in Herodotus Sapdyyees). The chief city of Drangiana became already
under Alexander a Greek colony, with the name Prophthasia, which at once
commemorated the discovery of the plot of Philotas and rendered something of
the sound of the native name, written by Stephen of Byzantium as Phrada. It was
the principal station on the road to India between Alexandria of the Arians
(Herat), and Alexandria of the Arachosians (Kandahar).
Aria, together with Drangiana, and presumably
Margiana, had at Alexander’s death Stasanor, a Cypriot of Soli, for governor.
By the partition of Triparadisus, when Stasanor was transferred to Bactria, his
place in Aria was taken by another Cypriot, Stasander. This man appears among
the confederate satraps who were beaten by Antigonus in 316, and in the case
of Aria, Antigonus was able after his victory to make a change of satrap in his
own interest. The province, being next to Parthia on the main road east and
west, was perhaps more accessible than Carmania and Bactria. Nominees of
Antigonus, first Euitus and then Euagoras, replaced Stasander. Whether Seleucus
found Euagoras still installed in Alexandria-Arion when he brought the province
under his authority we do not know.
On the east of Drangiana came Arachosia.
The Erymanthus (Haitumant, mod. Hilmend) perhaps constituted the frontier for
part of its course. Arachosia, corresponding to the southern part of modern
Afghanistan, is a land of mountain ranges running south-west from the
watershed, which divides the tributaries of the Kabul and the Hilmend. On its
eastern sides the valleys run steep down to the Indus. Its inhabitants, like
their descendants, the Afghans of today, formed a connecting link between the
pure Iranians and the races of India. They called themselves, as the Afghans do
now, Pakhtun. The Greek name Arachosia, in use after Alexander, was taken from
the main eastern tributary of the Hilmend, the river Harahmti, which the Greeks
called Arachotus (mod. Argandab). Here, too, the hand of Alexander was busy.
Kandahar was once undoubtedly an Alexandria. Through Alexandria of the
Arachosians, the capital of the province, went the great road to India.
We know of only one satrap of Arachosia between
the death of Alexander and the rise of Seleucus, Sibyrtius. He was among the
confederate satraps, but having conspired to supplant Eumenes, he was accused
before the army and barely escaped with his life. Antigonus naturally looked
upon him as an ally, and restored him to his province in 316. Megasthenes, the
historian of India, had resided at the court of Sibyrtius before he was
employed as the ambassador of King Seleucus to the Indian king.
Not only Arachosia, but the country to the
south as far as the sea, belonged to the province of Sibyrtius. This country
consisted of Gedrosia (Beluchistan) and the coast, inhabited by races
different from those of the interior. The Iranian plateau falls to the sea in
wastes of shifting sand. Although Gedrosia has its habitable valleys and its
caravan routes, “ in which one can always rely after a day s march, at least,
on a well of brackish water and a little fodder for the camels,” in
an area of 100,000 miles there are less than 500,000 inhabitants. The
prevalence of desert all along the sea-board from the Indus to the Persian Gulf
diverted commerce to other roads. Gedrosia seems, therefore, to have been an
unknown land to the Greeks before Alexander. Herodotus calls the people of this
part of the world Parikanioi, a Greek form of the Persian term, which described
them as “worshippers of the Pairika,” the unclean spirits of the desert. After
Alexander the Greeks called them Gedrosoi, a name of unknown origin and meaning.
They were of another stock, probably, than the Iranians. The Beluchis, who now
inhabit the land, do belong to the Iranian family, but they represent a
drifting of the Iranian race eastwards in later centuries. There is, however, a
people of darker skin, the Brahui, who live alongside of the Beluchis in the
land, and these are supposed to be the remnant of the ancient Gedrosians. Their
affinity is with the black Dravidian peoples of India. An extension of the
Aryan civilization of India to this country in ancient times is indicated (if
it is safe to build anything upon a proper name) by the name of the chief city
of the Gedrosians, Pura, which seems to be good Sanskrit for “city.”
But whilst Gedrosia was of little consequence
for land traffic, the coast formed part of the maritime high-road between India
and the West. It was inhabited by different peoples again from the Gedrosians,
Arbies and Oritae, belonging, like the Gedrosians, to the Indian group, and
west of these, in what is now called the Mekran, people whom the Greeks
described simply as Ichthyophagoi, Fish-eaters—a race of squalid beings living
in huts by the shore and catching the fish in which that sea is peculiarly
rich. The intense interest taken by Alexander in the sea-route to India could
not fail to stir his activity in this region also as a city-builder. But here,
too, the scattered notices of the ancients do not make clear how many cities
were founded by Alexander and his captains, or even satisfy us to which of the
landmarks of today the names they use refer. Rambacia, the principal village of
the Oritae, was transformed into a city by Hephaestion on Alexander’s
direction, a city for which Alexander divined a great future; an Alexandria
rose on the coast near a place of good harborage; Nearchus founded a city at
the mouth of the river Arbis; but whether all these passages as well
as the statement of Curtius refer to one city, or to several, is debatable. Distinct, at any rate, must be the Alexandria in Macarene (Mekran), near
the river Maxates (Mashkid).
The mountain-mass of Afghanistan north of
Arachosia is cloven from its centre down to the Indus by the valley of the
river Kabul. This valley must always be important as the main way of entrance
from the west into India, its door being familiar to English ears as the
Khaibar pass. By it Alexander entered, and the highway of traffic under the
Macedonian kings struck north from Kandahar (Alexandria) across the hills to
Kabul, instead of following the directer, but more difficult tracks by the
valleys of the Bolan or the Gumal. From Kabul (the ancient name is written by
the Greeks as Ortospana) a road ran down the valley to the Khaibar. Another
great road entered the Kabul valley from the north, from Balkh, making by its junction
with the Kandahar-Kabul-Khaibar road the “Three-ways from Bactra”. The
importance of holding strongly this country north of the Kabul valley, the
Paropanisus (old Persian, Paruparanisana; mod. Hindu-Kush), with its passes
commanding the communication between the Kabul valley and Bactria, led to its
being constituted a separate satrapy, described as that of the Paropanisidai.
At the death of Alexander the satrap was Oxyartes, the father of Roxane; he
continued to hold his place through the partitions both of Babylon and of
Triparadisus, and was even unmolested by Antigonus in 316, although he had sent
troops to the confederate army. It is after this that the cloud comes down upon
the East, in which the conquests of Seleucus Nicator are involved.
Here, too, as in Beluchistan, the people of
Iranian stock (Afghans), who are the ruling race today, are late-comers. At the
time of Alexander the population of the Kabul valley was Indian, Gandara; the
hills, of course, were then as now held by fierce fighting tribes, who gave
Alexander considerable trouble on his way to India. It was their neighborhood,
like that of the Kurds in Media, which led presumably to the multiplication of
new foundations, which we seem to discern in the Paropanisus. The chief of these,
Alexandria-on-the-Caucasus, seems to have stood in one of the side valleys
leading up from the Kabul to the passes into Bactria. In the old Buddhist books
Alasanda is spoken of as the chief city of the Yonas (Ionians, Greeks). The
other cities mentioned are Cartana, afterwards called Tetragonis, Cadrusi, and
Asterusia, a settlement of Cretans, called after the Cretan mountain.
North of the Hindu-Kush lay the last region
towards the wildernesses of Central Asia, in which the Iranian man had, till
the coming of the Greeks, borne rule. Beyond was the outer darkness of Turanian
barbarism. So long as the great rivers, the Oxus (Amu-darya) and Jaxartes
(Syr-darya), are accompanied by offshoots of the mountain mass whence they take
their rise, the country about them can nourish a settled population. This land
of hills between the sand-wastes on the west and the mountains on the east
formed the two outlying provinces of Bactria and Sogdiana,
Bactria being in fact the lower slopes of the Hindu-Kush towards the Oxus, and
Sogdiana the country between the two rivers.
In both these provinces the ruling race at any
rate was Iranian. They formed not only a genuine part of Iran, but a most
illustrious part. According to one view here were the oldest seats of the
Iranian civilization. The Zoroastrian religion had perhaps its cradle in this
region; at any rate its stronghold was here. Nowhere else did the Iranians
offer so desperate a resistance to Alexander. Again and again cities like
Cyrescheta on the Jaxartes rose in rebellion. Intersected, too, as the country
was by spurs of the lofty ranges to the south and east, it furnished the great
lords like Oxyartes with castles lodged high on precipitous crags where they
could long defy the Macedonian. The two provinces were similar in their physical
character and their population. In Sogdiana there seems, as one might expect to
have been the case, some infusion of Turanian elements. Under the Achaemenian
kings their governor was commonly a son of the Great King, or a prince of the
blood-royal. Even so the great resources of the country and its outlying
position had tempted the rulers of Bactria and Sogdiana to revolt from the
central authority on almost every opportunity. The case was not altered when a
Seleucid was substituted for an Achaemenian king.
Bactria (the northern part of the principality
of Afghanistan), although it contains some barren tracts, and the lowlands by
the river have a bad name for malaria, is on the whole singularly favored by
nature. Strabo describes it as producing everything, except the olive, and
quotes Apollodorus of Artemita, who called it the “pride of all Iran” . Its
eastern end, the modern Badakshan, is rich in minerals, in rubies, and lapis
lazuli. But its special fame, has in all times rested upon its breed of horses.
In the old Indian epics we hear of the “Turanian” (i.e. the Bactrian)
steeds, and today the horses of Andkhoi are a name in Asia. The ancient capital
Zariaspa itself recalls by its name (açpa, a horse) the prominent place
of the horse in Bactrian life. And it was not only from its own soil that
Bactria drew its wealth. It was well placed for commerce, one of the countries
binding India to the West. For besides the road we have seen, skirting the
southern side of the mountains of Afghanistan and reaching the Kabul valley by
way of Kandahar, there was an alternative road from Alexandria-Arion (Herat) by
way of Bactria and the passes of the Hindu-Kush.
The country on the other side of the Oxus,
included under the name Sogdiana, is divided into three strips by the double
range of mountains sent through it lengthwise from the mass of Central Asia.
The southern strip slopes down to the Oxus, and coincides with the modern
Bokhara, the northern to the Jaxartes, and between these lie the parallel
ranges, making a sort of trough down which the river Polytimetus (mod.
Zarafshan) flows toward the desert, where it disappears. This middle district,
the valley of the Polytimetus, is the most fertile of the province. Here was
the capital Maracanda, destined, as Samarkand, to bear the finest flower of
Mohammedan learning.
In these two provinces, so important from their
resources and their character as frontier provinces against the Scythians, and
yet so difficult to hold because of their remoteness and the proud spirit of
their inhabitants, Alexander established masses of Greeks. Strabo gives the
number of cities as eight, Justin as twelve. But the most striking figures are
those of the army formed by these colonists, when after Alexander’s death they
attempted to return—more than 20,000 infantry and 3000 horse. The names of most
of the new cities are no longer recoverable. We know of an Alexandria Eschate
on the Jaxartes (mod. Khojend) looking across the river into the illimitable
wilderness—the last outlying station of Hellenism, in whose market-place, in
the centuries after Alexander, the Greek trader from the West saw the Indian
caravans which had come across the snowy ridges of the Tian-shan mountains,
bringing the new substance of silk and stories of the great cities of the
Silk-people, which lay in some distant world far away to the east. We hear also
of an Alexandria Oxiana, of an Alexandria-by-Bactra? of perhaps another
Alexandria Eschate on the upper Oxus towards the Pamir, and of an Antioch in Scythia.
Lastly, the capital of the southern province, Zariaspa, or, as the Greeks
called it, Bactra, was in all probability occupied by Greek colonists even
before a separate Greek kingdom came to exist in this quarter, when indeed
Bactra was a royal capital, fortified so strongly as to make its siege by
Antiochus III one of the great sieges of the age.
At the death of Alexander a certain Philip is
over both Bactria and Sogdiana. The experiment of leaving the farther province
under a native satrap had not succeeded, and since the first revolt of the
Greek colonists in 325 Philip had governed both provinces. By the partition of
Triparadisus (321), Stasanor, the Cypriot of Soli, was transferred from Aria to
Bactria and Sogdiana. It may well have been that a governor who was a Greek,
not a Macedonian, was more likely to manage the restive Greek colonists. In
fact we are told expressly that in 316 Antigonus did not dare to disturb
Stasanor; “ it was not easy to depose him by a letter, as he had dealt adroitly
with the natives, and he would have many friends to fight in his cause.” It has
been noticed that the “one piece of information on record as to the way in
which Seleucus Nicator came into possession of the Upper Satrapies is that he
subdued the Bactrians by force of arms.”
We have still one province of Iran to speak of,
that which lies on the south side of the plateau between Persis and Gedrosia,
the province of Carmania, corresponding with the modern Kirman and
Laristan. The description of Carmania closely coincides with that of Bactria.
It is a land of hills and rivers. Here, too, everything prospered, according to
Strabo, except the olive. It was famed for its noble trees, and a sort of vine
with immense clusters. Here, too, was much mineral wealth, river-gold, and
mines of silver, of copper, and vermilion. The division between Carmania and
Persis was probably an artificial one; the physical character of the two
regions is similar; the Carmanians did not differ sensibly from the Persians of
Persis, except that they maintained less impaired the fighting qualities of
their ancestors. The only Greek town which we know of for certain in Carmania
is an Alexandria. Harmuza, the port, whose name was to become famous in the
markets of the world, was perhaps a foundation of the Greeks; at any rate it
would seem that Nearchus found no settlement here in 325. Carmania, as has been
remarked, was not on the principal line of traffic between east and west, which
went along the north of the Iranian plateau. It remained undisturbed by the political
convulsions which followed Alexander’s death. The satrap appointed by
Alexander in 325, Tlepolemus, continued to hold his position till the cloud
comes down upon the East after the departure of Antigonus in 316. Tlepolemus
had taken part, indeed, with Eumenes and the confederate satraps, but he also,
like Stasanor, had rooted his position too well in his province for Antigonus
to overthrow him by a letter from Persepolis.
Such fragments can still be made out of that
system of Greek cities with which Iran, like Syria and Babylonia, was
overspread by Alexander and his first successors. Besides the name of Alexander
himself, two others recur among the founders, those of Seleucus Nicator and his
son, the first Antiochus. It may not be mere chance that while Alexander
appears as founder over the whole tract, Seleucus and Antiochus (except in the
case of Antioch in Scythia) do not leave traces east of Merv and Herat. That
the further provinces were under their authority is of course unquestionable,
but their main activity as founders was perhaps in Media, Parthia, and Aria. It
is impossible to draw a line between the foundations of Seleucus and those of
Antiochus. The activity of Antiochus in Iran belonged, no doubt, in great
measure to the time when he reigned in the East as viceroy, and his acts might
be indifferently ascribed to himself or to the father whom he represented.
Of the elements of which the population of the
new cities was composed we have some sparse indications. It is noteworthy that
in some of the foundations of Alexander a body of natives is said to have been
incorporated with those Greek or Macedonian soldiers who were to give the city
its Hellenic character. In the case of Alexandria Eschate we are told that the
population was composed (1) of a body of Greek mercenaries (settled, no doubt,
by compulsion); (2) of all the natives who voluntarily associated themselves in
the new city; (3) of the Macedonian veterans who were past service. The
population of the city or cities near Alexandria-on-the-Caucasus consisted of
(1) 7000 natives; (2) 3000 of the camp followers, and (3) all the Greek
mercenaries who wished to join. So too we are told of the city founded among
the Oritae that a body of Arachosians were settled there. That the Hellenic
character, however, continued in the case of these cities to be dominant may be
inferred from the way in which Alexandria- on-the-Caucasus is referred to, as
we saw in the Buddhist books, as a city of the Ionians. The European colonists
were, of course, either Macedonians or Greek mercenaries—the latter therefore,
no doubt, of those Greek races in the main which sent out most soldiers of
fortune, Cretans, Arcadians, Aetolians, and so on, or men of the Thessalian
horse, or, thirdly, they belonged to some of those less civilized nations of
the Balkan peninsula, Thracians and Illyrians, which furnished contingents to
the Macedonian king. It was not for the first time in these cities that a Greek
population and a barbarian coalesced.
An extremely interesting document in this
connection is the decree passed by Antioch-in-Persis, which a stone found in
Asia Minor has preserved for us. It is dated by the eponymous magistrate of the
year, who in this city is the priest of the deceased Seleucid kings and the
reigning kings, Antiochus III and his son Antiochus, and shows the normal forms
of the Greek city-state, a boule and an ekklesia, who introduces
the decree in the popular assembly, and who put it to the vote. The occasion is
a request sent by Magnesia-on-the-Meander to the cities of the eastern
provinces to recognize as a festival of Panhellenic standing that celebrated by
Magnesia in honor of Artemis Leucophryene. To this Antioch gives a cordial
answer, and praises Magnesia for its zeal in Hellenism and its loyalty to the
Seleucid King. It also recalls the old ties of kinship between the Greeks of
Antioch-in-Persis and the Greeks of Magnesia, and in so doing throws light upon
the procedure of colonization. The city of Antioch was called after Antiochus I
Soter; whether it was his own foundation or an earlier colony renamed we do not
know; but Antiochus at any rate was concerned to increase it by a fresh body of
colonists. To do this he makes an appeal to Magnesia-on-the-Meander (and
others, presumably, of the Greek cities of the west) to send out some of their
citizens. It is a matter which touches the glory of Hellenism, and the
Magnesians respond by sending out men “adequate in number and distinguished for
virtue” who go to reproduce the Hellenic life among the hills of Iran. And
locked within those hills, we cannot doubt, are many similar decrees, awaiting
the modern European excavator to reveal the European civilization which once
flourished there.
Once, then, in its long past has Iran—including
regions which today are a shut-up land to Europeans—been for a brief space
under “western” rule. And it is striking to observe how the ancient world was
as conscious of the essential difference between this rule and the spirit of
Oriental government as we are in our own time. Then also it was the
characteristic of the western rulers that they must be carrying things forward,
curious to discover the nature and conditions of the country under their hands,
restless to develop and improve. “Considerate management” was what the
countries got from them, and could not get from Asiatic kings. In speaking of
Hyrcania and the Caspian, Strabo describes their undeveloped resources. The
considerate management has here been lacking. “And the reason is that the
rulers have here always been barbarian (i.e. non-Hellenic), Medians, Persians,
and, last and worst of all, Parthians.” In this long history the period of
Macedonian rule was a momentary taste of better things, but too brief, and
spoilt by the continual wars.
We may then probably think of the reigns of
Seleucus Nicator and Antiochus Soter as a period when a new spirit of inquiry
and enterprise was active in Iran. Obscured as those days are for us, we have
seen some indications of that activity in the building of cities and such works
as the great wall of Merv. We have further evidence of it in the work of
exploration and research connected with the two names of Patrocles and
Demodamas. Already under Alexander the best information as to the measurements
and local conditions of the Empire had been collected by qualified agents and
laid up in the royal archives. This valuable body of documents was in time
handed over by Xenocles, Alexander’s treasurer, to Patrocles, the minister of
Seleucus. Patrocles carried the work further. We have already seen
this man taking a prominent part in the affairs of the kingdom. At one time he
held a command in the eastern provinces, when he was commissioned to explore
the coasts of the Caspian, and report on the possibility of a northern waterway
to India. The development of trade-routes was a main concern of the Hellenic
kings. Alexander had ordered the exploration of the Caspian shortly before his
death with this end. An exploration, imperfect indeed and obviously
provisional, was actually carried out by Patrocles. Patrocles seems to have
made two voyages from some port at the south-west extremity of the sea, one in
which he proceeded as far north as the mouth of the Cyrus (mod. Kur), another
in which he sailed up the east side of the Caspian to some point impossible to
determine with certainty. He embodied the result of these voyages in a book, a Periplus,
which was thenceforward the standard authority for these regions. Strabo speaks
of Patrocles with great respect, of his trustworthiness and knowledge of
scientific geography, and contrasts his sober report with the fabulous stories
of Megasthenes and Deimachus. The curious thing is that this authority, so
conscientious and intelligent, should have fixed for generations the error that
the Caspian did communicate with the ocean, and that it was possible to sail
that way to India.
While Patrocles explored the Caspian, his
contemporary, Demodamas of Miletus, was employed by Seleucus or Antiochus to
investigate the course of the Jaxartes. As in the case of the Caspian,
commercial interests were no doubt largely the motive of the enterprise. The
Jaxartes might be a waterway, connected with a landway from India across
Central Asia. That India, at any rate, fell within the purview of Demodamas is
suggested by the fact that the one express quotation from his writings refers
to a town in India. By the side of the Jaxartes, on the edge of the Scythian
waste, Demodamas erected altars to the Didymaean Apollo, the god of his home.
Of a piece with this policy of discovering or
opening trade-routes along the north of Iran is the intention which is ascribed
to Seleucus Nicator at the end of his reign of making a canal between the
Caspian and the Black Sea. It may well be that the first voyage of Patrocles to
the mouth of the Cyrus had relation to this scheme, and that it was his
discoveries which showed its impracticability. But in fact it was not one
scheme only, it was the whole system of policy, which collapsed with the
Bactrian and Parthian revolts. The exploration of the Caspian was only begun by
Patrocles; had Seleucid rule lasted in these regions the work would surely have
been completed, but the great Hellenic Empire was broken up before it could
bring its vast designs to accomplishment.
The danger from the unsettled peoples beyond
the pale— this constituted the main preoccupation of civilized rule in Iran,
just as in the West a similar danger was forced upon the attention of the Greek
kings in the irruption of the Gauls. The danger in the East confronted the
heirs of Seleucus in an ominous form when an independent dynasty established
itself, defying their authority, in Parthia. We have very divergent statements
as to the rise of this Parthian dynasty; when it became great in the world, its
origins gathered round them a halo of mist. Its rise also proceeded gradually,
by successive advances, and it was possible, no doubt, for different traditions
to take different moments in this process as its true beginning. But certain
facts stand out. It was not a revolt of the native Parthians. That province,
consisting, as we saw, of sterile mountains, with a few fruitful valleys and
plains, could not nourish a large population. Its inhabitants were homogeneous
with the other peoples of Iran; they are mentioned in the inscriptions of the
Achaemenian kings as one of the peoples of the realm; in the revolt they play,
as far as our existing records show us, a merely passive part. The blow is
struck by a tribe issued out of the dim wilderness to the north, who seize the
Parthian country and reduce the natives to the position of serfs. It was no
doubt by continual reinforcement from the north that the power of the invading
tribe grew. It consisted of Parni, a division of the people whom the Greeks
called Daae, and who ranged the steppes to the east of the Caspian. The Daae
are described as a “Scythian” people, but this tells us nothing of their
affinities, since the name Scythian was applied by the Greeks to all the
peoples of Russia and Turan indiscriminately. When they entered the Parthian
province and wrested it from the body of the Seleucid Empire, a separate
Parthian dynasty may be said to begin, in the sense of a dynasty with its basis
in that province, but that moment had been led up to both by events in Parthia and
by the earlier history of the family which now came to rule there. Parthia
itself had showed a tendency before the Scythian irruption to break away from
the Empire; at least something of the sort is to be inferred from the coins
which Andragoras, the satrap, strikes in his own name. On the other
hand the Scythian chief Arsaces seems, before his invasion of Parthia proper,
to have established a petty sovereignty in the neighboring region of Astabene,
with his seat at a place called Asaak. The conquest of Parthia did not, apparently,
take place till the battle of Ancyra (soon after 240) had crippled the Seleucid
power in the West. It was, however, an earlier moment in the history of the
dynasty, perhaps that of the establishment of Arsaces at Asaak, or some victory
won over the army of a satrap, that the later reckoning fixed upon as the
birth-year of the Arsacid power. And this much is at any rate plain, that as
the difficulties of the house of Seleucus in the West had not begun with the
battle of Ancyra, but for the thirty years preceding it the wars with Egypt and
the Gauls drained its strength, its hold upon the East had already begun to
relax under Antiochus II, and that the earlier stages in the formation of the
Arsacid power go back to his reign.
It is these earlier stages which the later
tradition wrapped in an atmosphere of romance, through which it is difficult to
detect the truth of things. Beyond the Arsaces who conquered Parthia looms the
shadowy figure of another Arsaces, his brother, whose image, as that of the divine
founder of the kingdom, all the Parthian drachmae bear; he sits, bow in hand,
upon the omphalos, from which he has ousted the Seleucid Apollo. Only
two years did this first Arsaces reign on the confines of the desert. He was
succeeded by his brother, whose personal name was Teridates, but who assumed
his brother’s name, Arsaces, on his accession, this becoming thenceforth the
royal name of all the dynasty. It was this second Arsaces, Teridates, who
conquered Parthia soon after 240.
It may, however, be questioned whether, in the
case even of the first shadowy king, Arsaces was a personal name, and not
rather adopted deliberately in order to affiliate the new dynasty to the old
Achaemenian house. For Arsaces had been the name of Artaxerxes II (Mnemon) before
his accession, and we are expressly told that the Arsacid dynasty drew their
descent from “the Persian king Artaxerxes”. It was the same motive which made
the court tradition give five companions to the brothers Arsaces and Teridates
in their assault upon the Macedonian power, their enterprise being thus
assimilated to the overthrow of the False Smerdis by the Seven.
The story of their rebellion, as we have it in
a mutilated form, says that in the reign of Antiochus II they attacked
Pherecles, the satrap appointed by the Seleucid government, because he had
offered a gross insult to Teridates, the younger of the two brothers, and slew
him. Of what province, however, Pherecles was satrap the abstract of Arrian
given by Photius does not specify; we may presume he was really eparch or
hyparch of the district in which Asaak was situated. That the establishment of
the Scythian tribe in this region involved some collision with the Macedonian
officers, especially if it maintained itself by marauding, is no doubt true.
About the same time that the house of Arsaces
emerged from the wilderness, the provinces of Bactria and Sogdiana ceased to
obey the Seleucid King. We have already seen that the new colonies in this
region, being mainly composed of Greeks, had shown themselves impatient of
Macedonian rule, and a leader who could play upon this national feeling could
make himself very strong. Diodotus the satrap, probably a Greek like his
predecessor Stasanor and his successor Euthydemus, abjured allegiance to his
Seleucid master and declared himself an independent king.
We do not know whether the revolt of Diodotus
preceded or followed the appearance of Ptolemy III in the eastern provinces,
which must have loosened the whole fabric of Seleucid government in that part
of the world. Nor do we know what order of things Ptolemy left here on his
retirement, except for the statement that he confided the government of the
East to his general Xanthippus. If his conquest consisted in little but his
obtaining the recognition of his authority from the existing administrators of
the country, the Seleucid authority, such as it was, would be quietly
re-established so soon as the provincial magnates thought it advisable to
regard Seleucus once more as their overlord. In this way the Egyptian conquest
would be a mere transitory phase, which, except in weakening the power and
prestige of the Seleucid court, would not permanently modify the situation.
This situation, then, as it appears in the
early years of Seleucus II, presents three more or less independent powers in
the Far East, that of Andragoras in Parthia, of Diodotus in Bactria, and of
Arsaces in the region of Astabene. The relations of the three to each other
cannot be distinctly made out. Arsaces seems to have been regarded by Diodotus
as one would expect the Hellenic ruler of Bactria to regard the marauding
chiefs of the wilderness. The fields and villages, no doubt, suffered. The
district of Astabene was perhaps one which had been attached to the Bactrian
province, and was considered by Diodotus part of his legitimate domain. One
account, Strabo tells us, spoke of Arsaces as “a Bactrian”, and asserted his
attack on Parthia to have been due to the pressure of the power of Diodotus.
The relations of Arsaces to Andragoras are still more problematical. On the one
hand, Andragoras is spoken of as holding Parthia against Arsaces and his
Scythians till he is swept away by their onset; on the other hand, Justin says
elsewhere that from Andragoras, the satrap put over Parthia by Alexander, the
“kings of the Parthians” professed to descend.
The conquest of Parthia by Arsaces Teridates
made the situation in the East far more grievous for the house of Seleucus. The
province was of great importance as the link between western and eastern Iran.
And if Andragoras had been semi-independent, the new ruler of the country was
not only independent but aggressive, and already styled himself king. He
had soon conquered, not only Parthia proper, but Hyrcania, so that his power reached
from the interior desert to the Caspian. Seleucus Kallinikos had not long
rallied in Syria the broken forces left him by the battle of Ancyra before he
set out to win back the East. About this time Diodotus of Bactria died and was
succeeded by his son Diodotus II. The Greek ruler of the lands by the Oxus had
now to choose whether he would range himself with Seleucus or Arsaces. On
either side there was danger: Seleucus would hardly allow a rebel to retain his
authority, and the reestablishment of Seleucid rule must probably mean the
disappearance of Diodotus; on the other hand, by the Scythian occupation of
Parthia, Bactrian Hellenism was cut off from connection with the Hellenic
powers of the West, and left isolated among barbarians. Arsaces feared that
Diodotus would make his peace with the Seleucid King, and that he would be
attacked on both sides. The elder Diodotus had been his enemy, but the
accession of the son seems to have brought a change of policy. Diodotus II
granted the new Scythian power a treaty which left Arsaces at rest as to his
eastern frontier.
Seleucus advanced. Before the disciplined
armies of Macedonian Syria the barbarian chief thought it the better strategy
to vanish into the desert out of which he came. He took refuge in the camping
grounds of a tribe whose name is given as Apasiacae. It was the eternal trick
by which the arm of Oriental governments is evaded. Whether Seleucus plunged
into the waste in pursuit of him we do not know. Some fighting between his army
and the Scythian hordes took place, but it can hardly have been the desire of
Arsaces to come to close quarters, unless he had got his pursuer in a tight
place. In after times the anniversary of some encounter was celebrated in the
Parthian kingdom as of the victory which had been “the beginning of liberty.”
Whether it was in reality a skirmish or a great battle we do not know. No
decisive result had been obtained when troubles in the West compelled Seleucus
to withdraw. This was equivalent to complete failure. Diodotus, as far as we
know, he never reached.
Immediately, of course, that Seleucus was gone,
Arsaces reoccupied Parthia, and there was none now to hinder the consolidation
of his power. He worked hard at putting the country into a thorough state of
defense, organizing his rude Scythians as a regular army and fortifying
strongholds. Among the latter Dara in the region of the Apaorteni is especially
mentioned. Any new attempt to establish Seleucid authority in the East was not
likely to find the task any easier for the expedition of Seleucus Kallinikos.
And with his retirement we leave Iran in obscurity till we follow Antiochus,
the son of Seleucus, into the eastern provinces some twenty-five years later.
It remains to ask what traces we have of the
relations of the native Iranians to the Hellenic kings. The indications do not
point to altogether friendly ones. In Alexander, as in the British rulers of
India, the “western” spirit had to deal with practices which are abhorrent to
it, and with a great desire in both cases to show extreme tolerance, there are
certain limits beyond which the superior civilization has to repress by force.
The British have abolished Sati (Suttee); Alexander prohibited the custom,
which the extravagant form of Zoroastrianism followed in Bactria prescribed, of
exposing persons at the point of death, while still alive, to the sacred dogs.
It is perhaps due to this and similar actions on the part of the Greek rulers
that we find Alexander appearing in the Zoroastrian tradition in a light which is
strangely at variance with his main policy. Alexander, who was concerned above
all things to patronize the national cults and conciliate the native
priesthoods, here figures as the great enemy of the religion, the destroyer of
the sacred books.
Perhaps this conflict between Hellenic humanity
and barbarian religion was confined to the east of Iran; but in the west the
memories of their former position must have worked in the hearts of Medes and
Persians. Of actual revolts we are not told much. Thespias, the native nobleman,
threatened Antigonus with one in Persis, under any other satrap than Peucestas.
The revolt which broke out in Media after Pithon’s removal, although led by the
Macedonian and Greek adherents of Pithon and Eumenes, drew in a part of the
natives and may have been supported by the national feeling. One, at any rate,
of the leaders themselves was a native Mede.
We are told definitely of one revolt among the
Persians under the house of Seleucus. Siles, the officer representing the
Macedonian king (whether it was the first Seleucus or the second there is no
indication, and does not much matter), enticed 3000 of them into a village
called Rhanda among marshes, where he surrounded them with Macedonian and
Thracian troops and made away with them all.
On the other hand, numbers of Persians served
both as administrators and soldiers under Seleucus and his successors. The
satrap of Cilicia at the beginning of the reign of Seleucus Kallinikos is
proved by his name Aribazus to have been an Iranian. Another Aribazus is the
governor of Sardis under Achaeus. Oborzus, who crushes the revolt of katoikoi
in Persis, is by his name a Persian. The Smyrnaean inscription mentions “Omanes
and the Persians under Omanes” among the troops stationed in the neighborhood.
A force commanded by Antiochus I in Syria celebrates a Persian festival. There
was a Zoroastrian temple on Mount Silpius at Antioch —a temple of the Eternal
Fire. Considering that our whole knowledge of the organization of the Seleucid
kingdom is derived from chance notices gathered here and there, such references
as those above indicate a larger Iranian element than we can actually trace
with our imperfect sources. These references are enough to prove that the
policy of Alexander, which set Macedonian and Iranian side by side, was not
altogether abandoned by those who inherited his throne.
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