The Persians (c. 539- 332BC)
History of Palestine
Up to now it
seemed as though the whole-civilized world was to be dominated
by Semitic rulers. Thus, when Cyprus the Great of Persia
destroyed Babylon in 539 BC, he marked an important turning
point; the Persians put an end to the Semitic supremacy until
some 1,200 years later when the tribes of Arabia began spreading
Islam.
Nevertheless
the Canaanite ships and sailors became indispensable to the
Persians in their wars against Greece. The Canaanites welcomed
the opportunity to weaken Greece, their ancient maritime rival,
and the wars between Persia and Greece were actually a contest
between the sea powers of Greece and Canaanite Phoenicia.
In 481 BC,
the Persian king Xeras launched the greatest attack ever on
Greece. The Greek historian Herodotus (c. 484- 425 BC), often
called the 'Father of History', estimated (no doubt
overgenerously) the Phoenician fleet as having been manned by
about half a million oarsmen, sailors and marines. He also tells
us that 674 vessels were used to support two bridges constructed
over the narrows of the Hellespont (today the Dardanelles in
Turkey) to permit the passage of the Persian army.
The chief
architects were the men of Tyre and Sidon, who proved to have
more advanced knowledge of marine architecture and of rope and
cable work than any other nation in the Mediterranean. They also
built landing craft vessels, designed to land horses for the
Persian army. The Greeks were able to repulse the Persian
attack, which, if successful, may have given the Western world
the Persian religion of Zoroaster in place of the Greek gods and
Greek philosophy and literature.
Cyrus the
Great permitted the exiled Jews to return to Judah- now called 'Judaea'-
though many Jews remained in Babylon, unwilling to leave their
possessions. Those who returned to Jerusalem built the Second
Temple on the place where Solomon's Temple once stood.
But the
number of Jews in Palestine was now small, estimated as between
20,000 to 40,000. The Samaritans, regarding Judaea and Samaria
as theirs, resented the influx of strangers claiming Jerusalem
as their own on the grounds that their fathers had been banished
some fifty years before. Thus began a long and drawn out
hostility between Jews and Samaritans.
During the
reign of the Persian king Artaxerxas II (404- 358 BC), Egypt and
Palestine revolted. The Persians moved into Palestine and
ruthlessly crushed all opposition.
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