Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast
The Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast is dedicated to unerasing the erased peoples of the world. Too often, history is written by the powerful, leaving entire communities, cultures, and truths out of the dominant narrative. This show seeks to tell those stories.
Through these conversations, Dr. Roy digs for the truth, weeds out misinformation, and challenges conventional wisdom. The conversations span politics, world history, philosophy, and culture, always with an eye toward justice and a deeper understanding of where we've been, where we are, and where we are heading.
This is the official podcast of Dr. Roy Casagranda and Sekhmet Liminal Productions, FZCO.
Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast
Cyrus The Great
Cyrus the Great ruled at a rare moment when empires could have chosen domination or cooperation. In this lecture, Dr. Roy traces the rise of the Persian Empire under Cyrus, exploring how conquest, restraint, and an unprecedented vision of tolerance reshaped the ancient world. Dr. Roy examines how Cyrus combined military brilliance with ethical governance, creating the first known model of an empire built on pluralism, legal limits, and respect for human dignity.
Takeaways
- Cyrus emerged from the convergence of Iranian, Median, and Persian cultures during the collapse of older Near Eastern empires.
- Horse warfare, mobility, and strategic restraint allowed Persian forces to defeat much larger armies.
- Cyrus repeatedly chose incorporation over annihilation, turning conquered peoples into partners rather than subjects.
- The defeat of Lydia demonstrated how innovation in currency, logistics, and battlefield tactics could overturn numerical advantage.
- Babylon fell without a battle due to engineering ingenuity and restraint rather than mass violence.
- The Cyrus Cylinder represents the first known declaration limiting state power over individuals.
- Religious freedom under Cyrus went beyond tolerance to active protection and restoration of temples.
- Slavery and human sacrifice were curtailed, redefining the moral boundaries of imperial authority.
- The return of displaced peoples, including Jewish communities, marked a radical break from earlier imperial practices.
- Cyrus’s empire functioned as a federation of cultures rather than a single imposed identity.
- His death on campaign underscored the limits of even the most visionary leadership.
- The Persian model influenced later ideas of rights, governance, and multicultural states.
Resources & References:
- The Cyrus Cylinder
- The History of Media
- The Battle of Pteria
- The Neo-Babylonian Empire
- The Battle of Opis
- The Persian Satrapy System
Beyond the podcast:
- Want to watch this lecture? Check out the full video.
- Want to support the show? Buy Dr. Roy a coffee!
This lecture was originally recorded at the Museum of the Future for the series Lessons from the Past (2025).