Empire and Borderlands at Interplay: A Structural Approach (First Millennium BCE – First Millennium CE)
2022 Biennial Ehsan Yarshater Lecture Series: The Achaemenid Persian World Empire
The series of lectures offers a novel and fresh perspective on one of the largest and most successful empires in world history, namely, the Achaemenid Persian World Empire (sixth to fourth century BCE), the central power of a (proto-)globalized world, and the driving force behind many cultural developments, whose manifold repercussions we may observe from Gibraltar to the Taklamakan Desert, from the Aegean and Scythian lands to the sub-Saharan worlds, and from the Bay of Bengal to eastern Africa. Our sources, both written and archaeological, are but a faint palimpsest bearing witness to the grandeur of the Achaemenid civilization, and its impress on the antique world.
The present Yarshater Lectures are an attempt at deducing, from among the many ideological layers still cluttering our (narrative) sources, including the many biases, old and new, that still guide modern scholarship, the unique identity, sense of purpose, and political awareness that distinguished the Achaemenids, eventually enabling them to forge a capacious vision of the world. In these lectures, the Achaemenid Persian World Empire will be presented as a political formation that not only profoundly impacted its immediate and more distant surroundings, but also served as an imperial model that most lastingly transformed its posterity.
Lecture 4: Empire and Borderlands at Interplay: A Structural Approach (First Millennium BCE – First Millennium CE)
The Achaemenid Empire represents a major evolutionary step in the longue durée of Afro-Asian state formations. The fourth lecture aims at illustrating the indebtedness of the Achaemenid polity to ancient Near Eastern and Afro-Asian precedents, while exploring its unicity in light of the interplay between the imperial center and the borderlands.
Citation
Rollinger, Robert. "Empire and Borderlands at Interplay: A Structural Approach (First Millennium BCE – First Millennium CE)." Pourdavoud Center: The Biennial Ehsan Yarshater Lecture Series (April 20, 2022).