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      • The central idea of Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones's Persians: The Age of the Great Kings is simple. The Achaemenid Persian Empire, which flourished from the sixth to fourth centuries BCE, was unjustly smeared by its Greek enemies as barbaric and effeminate.
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  2. Jul 2, 2022 · Persians: The Age of the Great Kings by Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones seeks to upend the propaganda and misrepresentations of hostile historians and give greater emphasis to Persian voices. Unfortunately, despite a valiant effort, Llewellyn-Jones fails in the attempt.

  3. Mar 3, 2023 · Persia was, as Llewellyn-Jones rightly notes, the world’s first great superpower, a multicultural and multiethnic superstate that stretched across three continents and was a hub of art, culture, and civilization too caustically dismissed by the partisans of Hellenic exceptionalism.

  4. Apr 15, 2022 · In his effort to give “ear to a genuine ancient Persian voice,” Mr. Llewellyn-Jones synthesizes what can be gleaned from artifacts, inscriptions and fragmentary accounts. From Cyrus to Xerxes...

  5. Aug 5, 2022 · Llewellyn-Jones’s habit of referring to Persian chiefs by the Turco-Mongolian title of “khan” is a clue that he may be overplaying the similarities between the steppe nomads of the 13th century AD and the shadowy, Aryan origins of the Persians.

  6. Overview. Written and first performed in 472 BC, the ancient Greek tragedy The Persians by Aeschylus is the oldest extant example of the genre. Known as the father of Greek tragedy, Aeschylus was also a veteran of the Greco-Persian wars, on which The Persians is based.

  7. Complete summary of Aeschylus' The Persians. eNotes plot summaries cover all the significant action of The Persians.

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