Medes
Ancient Iranian People / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Medes were an ancient Iranian people and one of the ancestors of modern Kurdish people[2][3][4][5][6][7] who lived in the northwestern portions of present-day Iran. This area was known in Greek as Media or Medea[8] They entered this region with the first wave of Iranian tribes, in the late second millennium BC (at the end of the Bronze Age).[9]
Median Empire | |||||||||
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c. 625 BCE–549 BCE | |||||||||
![]() Median Empire, ca. 600 BC | |||||||||
Capital | Ecbatana | ||||||||
Religion | Zoroastrianism possibly also Proto-Iranian religions such as Yazidism | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
King | |||||||||
Historical era | Iron Age | ||||||||
• Cyaxares united Median tribes[1] | c. 625 BCE | ||||||||
549 BCE | |||||||||
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By the 6th century BC, the Medes were able to make their own empire.[10] It stretched from southern shore of the Black Sea and Aran province (in modern Azerbaijan) to north and central Asia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.
The Medes are credited with the foundation of the first Iranian empire, the largest of its day until Cyrus the Great established a unified Iranian empire of the Medes and Persians, often referred to as the Achaemenid Empire.