satrapy

(noun)

The territory under the rule of a satrap.

Related Terms

  • Behistun Inscription
  • Cyrus Cylinder
  • Aramaic
  • satrap
  • Zoroastrianism

Examples of satrapy in the following topics:

  • Government and Trade in the Achaemenid Empire

    • Cyrus, whose rule lasted between 29 and 31 years, until his death in battle in 530 BCE, controlled the vast Achaemenid Empire through the use of regional monarchs, called satrap, who each oversaw a territory called a satrapy.
    • The basic rule of governance was based upon the loyalty and obedience of the satrapy to the central power, the king, and compliance with tax laws.
    • This structure precisely tailored the taxes of each satrapy based on its projected productivity and economic potential.
    • The satrapies were linked by a 2,500-kilometer highway, the most impressive stretch of which was the Royal Road, from Susa to Sardis.
    • Despite the relative local independence afforded by the satrapy system, royal inspectors regularly toured the empire and reported on local conditions using this route.
  • Rise of the Maurya Empire

    • Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire in 322 BCE when he conquered the kingdom of Magadha and the northwestern Macedonian satrapies.
  • The Decline of Ancient Egypt

    • Egypt was joined with Cyprus and Phoenicia in the sixth satrapy of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, also called the Twenty-seventh Dynasty.
  • Expansion of the Maurya Empire

    • In 305 BCE, Emperor Chandragupta Maurya led a series of campaigns to retake the satrapies left behind by Alexander the Great when he returned westward.
    • The Greeks offered a Macedonian princess for marriage to Chandragupta, and several territories, including the satrapies of Paropamisade (modern-day Kamboja and Gandhara), Arachosia (modern-day Kandhahar), and Gedrosia (modern-day Balochistan).
  • Break from the Seleucid Empire and Rise of the Parthian Empire

    • He founded the Parthian Empire in 247 BCE when he conquered the region of Parthia, then a satrapy (province) in rebellion against the Seleucid Empire.
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