Son of Cyrus
Bardiya was remembered as a son of Cyrus the Great and brother of Cambyses II, placing him close to the Achaemenid throne.
Bardiya, also known in Greek sources as Smerdis, was a son of Cyrus the Great and brother of Cambyses II. The disputed events around his name shaped Darius I's seizure of power in 522 BC.
Achaemenid prince and disputed king (522 BC)

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Bardiya was remembered as a son of Cyrus the Great and brother of Cambyses II, placing him close to the Achaemenid throne.
Darius later claimed Cambyses had secretly killed Bardiya before a usurper took his name, but the story remains debated.
In 522 BC, the empire was ruled by a figure known as Bardiya, or by someone claiming to be him.
Darius killed the ruler he identified as Gaumata and carved his version of the crisis into the Behistun Inscription.
Follow Bardiya through dynasty, disappearance, disputed kingship, and Darius's version of legitimacy.
Bardiya was remembered as a son of Cyrus the Great and brother of Cambyses II, placing him close to the Achaemenid throne.
Darius later claimed Cambyses had secretly killed Bardiya before a usurper took his name, but the story remains debated.
In 522 BC, the empire was ruled by a figure known as Bardiya, or by someone claiming to be him.
Darius killed the ruler he identified as Gaumata and carved his version of the crisis into the Behistun Inscription.
Move from the profile into the wider events and settings this figure belongs to.
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