Seizing the throne
Darius took power during a crisis after Cambyses II, killing the ruler he called Gaumata and claiming to restore rightful order.
Darius I, known as Darius the Great, ruled the Achaemenid Persian Empire from 522 to 486 BC. He restored control after revolt, strengthened imperial administration, and fought the Greeks at Marathon.
Achaemenid king of Persia (522-486 BC)

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Darius took power during a crisis after Cambyses II, killing the ruler he called Gaumata and claiming to restore rightful order.
After taking the throne, Darius fought revolts across the empire and presented victory as the restoration of order.
The Ionian Revolt and the defeat at Marathon drew Darius into the conflict between Persia and mainland Greek cities.
Darius left an empire that was larger, more organized, and more ideologically confident than the one he seized.
Follow Darius from contested accession to imperial reform, royal roads, and the Greek frontier.
Darius took power during a crisis after Cambyses II, killing the ruler he called Gaumata and claiming to restore rightful order.
After taking the throne, Darius fought revolts across the empire and presented victory as the restoration of order.
Darius strengthened satrapies, taxation, roads, records, and court systems so the empire could rule across vast distances.
The Ionian Revolt and the defeat at Marathon drew Darius into the conflict between Persia and mainland Greek cities.
Darius left an empire that was larger, more organized, and more ideologically confident than the one he seized.
Move from the profile into the wider events and settings this figure belongs to.




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