The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 3: Media by Rawlinson
Let's be honest, most of us have a giant gap in our ancient history knowledge between Egypt/Greece and the rise of Rome. This book tries to fill one crucial piece of that gap. It's not a novel, so there's no traditional 'plot,' but the story it tells is the rise and fall of the Median Empire.
The Story
Rawlinson starts by admitting the Medes are a puzzle. He gathers every clue he can find, which in his time (the mid-1800s) wasn't much. He walks us through the foggy early history of the Medes as nomadic tribes, their subjugation by the brutal Assyrian Empire, and then their dramatic rebellion. The central figure is Cyaxares, the king who supposedly unified the Medes, created a professional army, and led the coalition that finally sacked Nineveh, the Assyrian capital, in 612 BC. The book then traces the short-lived peak of Median power under his successors, setting the stage for its final act: the internal coup by Cyrus the Persian, who was actually a Median vassal. Almost overnight, the Median Empire became the core of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, and its distinct identity faded away.
Why You Should Read It
I love this book because it feels like watching a historian think in real time. Rawlinson doesn't pretend to have all the answers. He'll present a claim from the Greek historian Herodotus, then cross-check it with a fragment of a Babylonian chronicle, and often conclude, "We just don't know." That honesty is refreshing. You get a real sense of the fragility of historical memory. It also makes the Medes fascinating—they're this ghost of an empire, foundational yet forgotten. Reading about their military reforms and political structure shows how they directly created the template for Persia's later world domination.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for history buffs who are tired of the same old Roman legions and Egyptian pharaohs and want to explore the roots of something bigger. It's also great for anyone who enjoys a good historical mystery. A word of warning: it's a 19th-century scholarly work, so the prose can be dense in places, and some of his archaeological info is outdated. But if you can push through that, you'll be rewarded with a deep dive into the origin story of one of the ancient world's most important empires. Think of it as the essential 'prequel' to understanding ancient Persia.
Matthew Clark
2 weeks agoAmazing book.
Dorothy Allen
1 year agoTo be perfectly clear, the arguments are well-supported by credible references. I couldn't put it down.
Elijah Lewis
1 year agoI had low expectations initially, however the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. Absolutely essential reading.