Notes for Achaemenes Apical Ancestor of the Achaemenid DYNASTY


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This article is about the founder of the Persian dynasty. For other uses, see
Achaemenes (disambiguation).
"Hakhamanish" redirects here. For the administrative subdivision of Iran, see
Hakhamanish District.
Achaemenes
Apical ancestor of the Achaemenid dynasty
Achaemenid lineage.jpg
Position of Achaemenes in the Achaemenid lineage.
Successor	Teispes
Issue	Teispes
Old Persian	Hakhāmaneš
House	Achaemenid
Hakhamanesh (Modern Persian: هخامنش, Old Persian:
𐏃𐎧𐎠𐎶𐎴𐎡𐏁, romanized: Haxāmaniš) was the apical ancestor
of the Achaemenid dynasty of rulers of Persia.

Other than his role as an apical ancestor, nothing is known of his life or
actions. It is quite possible that Achaemenes was only the mythical ancestor
of the Persian royal house, but if Achaemenes was a historical person, he
would have lived around the end of the 8th century and the beginning of the
7th century BC.[1]

Contents
1	Name
2	Historicity
2.1	Behistun inscription
2.2	Greek writers
3	See also
4	References
Name
The name used in European languages (Greek: Ἀχαιμένης
(Achaiménēs), Latin: Achaemenes) ultimately derives from Old Persian
Haxāmaniš (𐏃𐎧𐎠𐎶𐎴𐎡𐏁), as found together with Elamite
𒄩𒀝𒋡𒉽𒉡𒆜 (Ha-ak-ka-man-nu-iš or Hâkamannuiš) and Akkadian
𒀀��𒈠𒉌𒅖𒀪 (A-ḫa-ma-ni-iš-ʾ) in the non-contemporaneous
trilingual Behistun Inscription of Darius I. The Old Persian proper name is
traditionally derived from haxā- "friend" and manah "thinking power",
yielding "having a friend's mind."[2] A more recent interpretation reads
haxā- as "follower", giving "characterized by a follower's spirit."[2] The
name is spelled هخامنش (Haxâmaneš) in Modern Persian.

Historicity
In the Behistun inscription (c. 490 BC), Darius I portrays Achaemenes as the
father of Teispes, ancestor of Cyrus II (Cyrus the Great) and Darius I.[1] The
mid-5th century BC Histories (7.11) of Herodotus has essentially the same
story, but fuses two parallel lines of descent from "Teispes son of
Achaemenes". Beyond such brief mentions of the name, nothing is known of the
figure behind it, neither from indigenous sources nor from historiographic
ones. It may be that Achaemenes was just a mythical ancestor, not a historical
one.[1][3] Many scholars believe he was a ruler of Parsumash, a vassal state
of the Median Empire, and that from there he led armies against the Assyrian
king Sennacherib in 681 BC.[4]

Behistun inscription
It may be that the Behistun inscription's claim of descent from Achaemenes was
an invention of Darius I, in order to justify the latter's seizure of the
throne. Cyrus II does not mention Achaemenes at all in the detailed genealogy
given in the Cyrus cylinder.[1] While the patronym haxāmanišiya-"of [the
clan of] Achaemenes"-does appear in an inscription at Pasargadae attributed to
Cyrus II, this inscription may have been written on the order of Darius I
after Cyrus' death.[1][5] As such, Achaemenes could be a retrograde creation
of Darius the Great,[6] made in order to legitimize a dynastic relationship to
Cyrus the Great. Darius certainly had much to gain in having an ancestor
shared by Cyrus and himself (however, Teispes was already one), and may have
felt the need for a stronger connection than that provided by his subsequent
marriage to Cyrus' daughter Atossa.

Greek writers
The Greek writers of antiquity preserve several legends surrounding the
figure:[7] The Pseudo-Platonic dialogue First Alcibiades (120e), written in
the late 4th-century BC, portrays Achaemenes as the hero-founder of the
Persái in the same way that the Greeks are descended from Heracles, and that
both Achaemenes and Hercules were sons of Perseus, son of Zeus. This is
generally assumed to be an identification of Achaemenes with Perses (i.e. the
son of Perseus and Andromeda) who in Greek mythology was imagined to be the
ancestor of the "Persians". Another version of the tale makes Achaemenes the
son of Aegeus, yet another founder-hero of legend. The 3rd-century Aelianus
(De nat. anim. 12.21) has Achaemenes being bred by an eagle.[8]
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