Síro II pe Tuicháva (amo 600 térã 575 Kirito mboyve – 530 Kirito mboyve) ha'e akue peteĩ mburuvicha guasu Péysia omboypýva pe Mburuvi akeménida (ha'éva pe Péysia Mburuvi peteĩha), ipu'aka rire Astiages rehe, Mburuvi médo sãmbyhyhára pahague (550 K. m.) ha omyasãi hetã pokatu Mesopotámia tuichakuére. Ipoguýpe oĩ Mburuvi médo, Lídia ha Vavilónia, para Yvy mbytépe rembe'y guive pe yvytyrysýi Hindu Kush peve, upéicha omoheñói pe mburuvi tuichavéva ojeikuaáva upe peve. Ko mburuvi katu hi'are 200 ary pukukue, ho'a peve Alehándoro pe Tuicháva poguýpe.

Síro pe Tuicháva
Mburuvi akeménida mburuvicha guasu
Hekove rehegua
Oiko mburuvichavete ramo 559 a. C.-530 a. C.
Heñói circa 600 a. C.
Anshan, Persis
Omano 4 jasypakõi 530 Kirito mboyve[1]
Entierro Pasargada
Mboyve Cambises I
Rire Cambises II
Hogaygua
Ñemoñare oporokuáiva Akeménida
Omendáva Casandana
[editar datos en Wikidata]

Síro II pe Tuicháva oñangareko tetãnguéra ipoguýpe ohechakuaávo hekotee ha jeroviapy,[2] upéicha ndahasýi ichupe oisãmbyhy porã hetã tavusúpe ha umi tetãyguápe avei iporãite ikatúgui hikuái oiko hekoteépe.[3] Omohenda hetã sátrapa rupive, oñemboguata porãve hag̃ua, ha ojapo hetã tavusurã Pasargadae-pe.[4] Tupã ñe'ẽngue ryrúpe oĩ peteĩ Síro rembiapokue, ohejárõguare hudiokuéra oho jey hetã teépe ha omomba'eguasu jey ijerovia.[5]

Ojehechakuaa avei Síro II pe Tuichávape ohupytykuévo mba'eguasu tekoiterape, jokuaikuaa ha ñorairõkuaápe.[6][7][8] Mburuvi akeménida pu'aka ha herakuã porã oguahẽ táva Aténa-pe, upépe umi Gyrésia Ymaguare retãygua oñemomba'e akeménida rekoteére ha omomba'eguasu Péysia arandupy.[9]

Mandu'apy

jehaijey
  1. Muhammad A. Dandamayev (1993). «CYRUS iii. Cyrus II The Great».
  2. Dandamayev Cyrus (iii. Cyrus the Great) Cyrus's religious policies.
  3. Schmitt Achaemenid dynasty (i. The clan and dynasty)
  4. The Cambridge Ancient History Vol. IV p. 42. See also: G. Buchaman Gray and D. Litt, The foundation and extension of the Persian empire, Chapter I in The Cambridge Ancient History Vol. IV, 2nd edition, published by The University Press, 1927. p. 15. Excerpt: The administration of the empire through satrap, and much more belonging to the form or spirit of the government, was the work of Cyrus ...
  5. Jona Lendering (2012). "Messiah – Roots of the concept: From Josiah to Cyrus." livius.org.
  6. Birth of the Persian Empire. I.B. Tauris. 2005. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-84511-062-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=a0IF9IdkdYEC&pg=PA7. Tembiecharã:Verify source
  7. The Persian Empire: A Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period. Routledge. 2007-12-03. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-134-07634-5. https://books.google.com/books?id=S6BevAUWSGAC&pg=PA47. 
  8. Defining Iran: Politics of Resistance. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. 2011. pp. 38–40. ISBN 978-1-4094-0524-5. https://books.google.com/books?id=J-7dsRInkOEC&pg=PA38. 
  9. Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century BC: A Study in Cultural Receptivity. Cambridge University Press. 2004. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-521-60758-2. https://books.google.com/books?id=oGXMMD5rXBQC&pg=PA243.