
          
          WOMEN IN THE IRANIAN (PERSIAN) 
            EMPIRE
            
            Private dinners of the Persian king's included the presence of the 
            King's wife and the king's mother. 
            Heracleides of Kyme knew that the King's wife joined the King at breakfast 
            and dinner. It was generally
            believed by the Greek's that the Persian women and men feasted together, 
            drinking wine as did the
            Scythians and Carthaginians (Plato, Laws 637d-e). 
            
            It becomes clear that the participation of women in royal banquets 
            and the Persian court life, was a
            cause of resentment by the Greeks. In contrast to the Greek custom, 
            women at the Persian court took
            part in feasts, it marked an important difference between the two 
            cultures. In Greek understanding it
            was inappropriate for wives, or in fact any respectable woman, to 
            be seen in such gatherings.
            
            The implication is that such behaviour befitted only barbarians (cf. 
            Plato, Laws 637c; Theopompos, FGrH
            115 F 204), as it revealed their lack of order and their inferiority.
            
            The apparent direct involment of Persian women with the social affairs 
            of the court, was observed and
            understood by the Greeks in comparison with their social and moral 
            code. It not only was an _expression
            of the otherness of the Persians in general, but also another example 
            of the King's extravagance.
            
            Even the Macedonian court resented the women's participation in banquets, 
            as we gather from the
            Macedonians who had to accept it as a change introduced by Alexander 
            (Curt.6.2. I).
            
            Herodotus describes Persian women as individuals who acted in complete 
            independence from their husbands.
            The underlying attitude of all Greek writers was that royal women 
            of the Achaemenid court were active
            and dangerous protagonists. 
            
            Later Greek authors like Plato and Xenophon knew of land owned by 
            the Kings wife (Plato, Alc. I 123c-124a;
            Xen. an. I. 4. 9; 2. 4. 27).
            
            
            SHAHROOZ D.V ASH ORANGE COUNTY, SOUTHERN CALIFORNI