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Achaimenēs ( Old Persian '''Haxāmaniš''' "Friendly in Nature", Hellenised as ''Αχαιμενης'') was the Eponym ous ancestor of the royal house of the first Persian Empire , the Achaemenids . He lived about 2700 years ago. Achaemenes did not rule all of Iran , but a small place in the northwestern part of the country near Lake Urmia , which Assyria n inscriptions call ''Parsumaš'' "Land of the ''Parsu'' ' Persians '".

Due to the lack of historical sources on Achaemenes, his rule and existence are sometimes doubted. He may have been legendary. Darius I The Great may even have invented him so as to legitimize his rule. Since Darius was not an heir to the previous Shah , Cyrus The Great ), it is contended that Darius invented an earlier ancestor shared by Cyrus and himself. In this way he was able to claim royal ancestry.

In any case, the Persian royal dynasty from Darius onward revered Achaemenes and credited him as the founder of their dynasty. Very little, however, was remembered about his life or actions. Assuming he existed, Achaemenes was most likely a warrior-chieftain who led the Persians, or a tribe of Persians, as a Vassal of the Median Empire . An Assyrian inscription from the time of King Sennacherib mentions that the Assyrian king repelled a raid by the ''Parsu'', who may have been led by Achaemenes.

". Plato , when writing about the Persians, identified Achaemenes with Perses , ancestor of the Persians in Greek Mythology . According to Plato, Achaemenes/Perses was the son of the Ethiopian queen Andromeda and the Greek hero Perseus , and a grandson of Zeus . Later writers believed that Achaemenes and Perses were different people, and that Perses was an ancestor of the king.

The old Graeco-European version of the story states that Achaemenes was succeeded by his son Teispes , who would lead the Persians to conquer and settle in the city of Anshan (Persia) . His great-grandson was Cyrus II , who conquered the Medes and established the Persian Empire. However, Teispes is never referred to as a son of Achaemenes in Old Persian texts, but as 'an Achaemenid'. So the name might have just identified the family and not necessarily a person.