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امسال هم در روزنگارها درباره روز 29 اکتبر و کورش نوشته اند
برگرفته از صفحه ی روزانه ی «استراتژی» در سايت «تاريخ نظامی جهان»: October 29th Military History
http://www.strategypage.com/military_history_oct.asp
برگرفته از بخش کتابخانه ی سايت «مطالعات روزمره کتاب مقدس» Daily Bible Study Library This Day in History: October 29 539 BC: Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon (2 Chronicles 36:22-23) (see Ancient Empires - Babylon and Ancient Empires - Persia) 1618: Sir Walter Raleigh was executed at age 66 for alleged (but never proven) treason against King James I (of the King James Bible fame). Raleigh was a writer, statesman, explorer. He is noted for introducing potatoes and tobacco to England. 1682: William Penn arrived from England in what is today Pennsylvania, which was named after him. 1727: A (rare) severe earthquake struck the New England region of North America. 1814: The first steam-powered warship, the USS Fulton, was launched at New York. It was designed by Robert Fulton. 1889: The British South Africa Company, headed by Cecil Rhodes, was granted a charter by the British government. The charter gave extensive powers over the area which later became Rhodesia. 1911: Hungarian-born American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer died at age 64. The Pulitzer Prizes are named after him. 1922: Italian King Victor Emmanuel II called on Benito Mussolini to form a government. 1923: Turkey became a republic under its first president Kemal Ataturk. 1927: Russian archaeologist Peter Koz1off discovered the tomb of Genghis Khan in the Gobi Desert. 1929: Wall Street "Black Tuesday" marked the final collapse of the stock market and the beginning of the Great Depression. 1945: The first ballpoint pen went on sale. 1956: Israel invaded the Sinai in response to belligerent actions by Egyptian president Gamal Nasser, including refusing access of Israeli ships to the Suez Canal and Gulf of Aqaba, and forming a unified military command with Jordan and Syria. In the brief war that followed, Israeli, British and French troops landed in the Canal Zone. By the end of the conflict, Israel had conquered the whole of the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza. It was the second major Israeli-Arab war since the founding of the modern state of Israel. Known as the Sinai War, it was code-named Operation Kadesh by the Israelis - Kadesh is the place in the Sinai wilderness where the Israelites stayed for most of the 40 years after leaving Egypt during the Exodus while awaiting entry into the Promised Land (see Wilderness Journey) 1972: A "Black September" terrorist group hijacked a Lufthansa airliner as it flew over Turkey. They demanded the release of 3 of their members who were being held for the murders of Israeli athletes at the Olympics. 1998: John Glenn returned to space at age 77 aboard the space shuttle Discovery. His only other flight was on February 20 1962, over 36 years before. http://www.keyway.ca/htm2005/20051029.htm
برگرفته از سايت «رونالد بروس ماير»، نويسنده، محقق و برنامه ساز راديو و تلويزيون در آمريکا جريان فتح بابل بوسيلهء کورش بزرگ
Cyrus the Great Conquers
Babylon (539 BCE): By: Ronald Bruce Meyer It was on this date, October 29, 539 BCE, that the city of Babylon fell to the army led by Cyrus the Great (576-7/529 BCE), Emperor of Persia.[1] The city of Babylon, located south of Baghdad in what is now Iraq, never lived up to its scarlet reputation: it was reviled by Christians as a sink of immorality, vice and depravity, based on its characterization in the biblical book of Revelation. This was the legacy of Babylon, during the Hebrew captivity, before it was conquered by Cyrus, told in delicious detail by the Greek historian Herodotus, who never saw the city. The description was later given a measure of currency by the usually careful historian Sir James G. Frazer. Here is what Herodotus tells and Frazer repeats 2340 years later: ...at Babylon every woman, whether rich or poor, had once in her life to submit to the embraces of a stranger at the temple of Mylitta, that is, of Ishtar or Astarte, and to dedicate to the goddess the wages earned by this sanctified harlotry. The sacred precinct was crowded with women waiting to observe the custom. Some of them had to wait there for years.[2] This lurid slander on the ancient city was lapped up by Christians eager to show their moral superiority to pagans. But here history gets in the way of mythology: Babylon is the soil in which the Hammurabi Code matured about 4,000 years ago, in a time when the Hebrews were illiterate polytheists. That code, which its author says was man-made, not handed down from any god, asserts more rights for women and more justice for working people than any code of law until modern times. Temple prostitution was sometimes known in ancient cultures, but not in Babylon: indeed, marriage-tablets discovered in archaeological research show that brides were commonly listed as virgins. The Babylonians had their moral code and their religion — including the belief that the gods would punish sin in this life — which is a significantly better moral enforcer than the hell of the Christians who later sneered at the Babylonians. When Cyrus came calling, he took the city peacefully. Then he did something amazing: he let the people keep their religions and customs. He even sacrificed to their local gods. Cyrus was more administrator than tyrant over Babylon.
Then, in as an act of piety, or as a shrewd political move, he released the Jews from their 70 years of "Babylonian Captivity." Whatever his motivation, Cyrus returned the idols and accoutrements of the many religions to their Babylonian devotees, including the Hebrews. It was a strange sort of captivity: Babylon was wealthy and cosmopolitan, and there the Hebrews learned literacy. After their release, during what we call the Post-Exilic period, they forged their best moral and ethical works, revised their history to erase most traces of their earlier polytheism, improvised a cult of Jahveh and a biography Moses, and generally created a justification for their priesthood. Indeed, the story of the baby Moses, born in secret and set adrift on the Nile in an ark of reeds, who is fortuitously rescued and becomes a great leader (Ex. 2:2-7) was adapted from the Babylonian legend of Sargon of Akkad, the famous king of Mesopotamia! [3] The "Whore of Babylon," which in the Book of Revelation (chapters 17 and 18) refers either to the Roman emperor, or to the power of the Roman Empire, cannot be taken literally to refer to the city of Babylon itself: there was no Christian community there until after the Revelation was written. And the Hebrews Cyrus released to return to Jerusalem? They considered Babylon so evil that most of the exiled Hebrews preferred to stay in "captivity": they had gotten used to a cultured community without the yoke of Yahveh! [1] Some sources give this date as 538 BCE. http://www.ronaldbrucemeyer.com/rants/1029almanac.htm
برگرفته از تقويم تاريخ در سايت «توسکان» ـ آمريکا
On This Date in History: October 29
539BC Babylon falls to Cyrus the Great of Persia
http://www.dotcomtucson.com/today_in_history/october-29.html
برگرفته از تقويم سالانه ی «ويلسن»
29 539 BCE Babylon fell to Cyrus the Great of Persia. 437 Valentinian III, Western Roman Emperor, married Eudoxia, daughter of his cousin Theodosius II, Eastern Roman Emperor in Constantinople. This unified the two branches of the House of Theodosius. 969 Byzantines troops occupied Antioch Syria. 1061 Peter Cadalus (d. 1072), the Bishop of Parma, was elected Pope (actually, Antipope) Honorius II. 1138 Death of Boleslaw III Kryzwousty, (Scheefmond), duke of Poland. 1422 Charles VII of France became king in succession to his father Charles VI of France. Charles VI (Charles the Well Beloved, or Charles the Mad) probably suffered from schizophrenia. At times he forgot he was king; he also heard voices and was known to physically assault even his closest supporters. 1467 Battle of Brusthem: Charles the Bold defeated Liege. http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/oct29.html
برگرفته از تقويم روزانه «اسکوپ سيستمز» SCOPE SYSTEMS On this day, October 29
539
-BC- Babylon falls to Cyrus
the Great of Persia Holidays Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given
"day of the week"
http://www.scopesys.com/cgi-bin/today2.cgi
برگرفته از سايت انجمن غيرانتفاعی و فرهنگی «شورای ميسولا»که مرکز آن در ايالت آتلانتای آمريکا استMissoula Arts & Humanities CoalitionSCOPE UpdateWednesday October 29, 2003Today is Wednesday, October 29, the day in 539 BC that Cyrus the Great of Persia led his mighty army into Babylon — now known as Iraq's Baghdad — according to most historical accounts. That city had been captured earlier by Nebuchadrezzar II who reconstructed it into a splendid city, known as one of the "seven wonders of the world." He also razed Jerusalem and took the Jews into captivity at Babylon. Cyrus permitted the Jews to return to their homeland. Over the centuries Babylon was repeatedly occupied by hostile armies. So, what else is new? Well, this was a day that Sir Walter Ralegh, who was one of the earlier occupiers of America, would never forget. See why at ENDNOTE. http://www.missoulacultural.org/scope/2003.10.29.html
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