Background Tomyris was the widow of the king of the Massagetae, whom she succeeded as the queen of the tribe after he died.
War with Persia When the founder of the
Persian Achaemenid Empire,
Cyrus, asked for the hand of Tomyris with the intent of acquiring her kingdom through the marriage, she understood Cyrus's aims and rejected his proposal. On the advice of the
Lydian Croesus, Cyrus responded to Tomyris's rejection by deciding to invade the Massagetae.
Aftermath According to another version of the death of Cyrus recorded by
Ctesias, Cyrus died in battle against the Derbices, who were either identical with the Massagetae or a Massagetaean sub-tribe: according to this version, he was mortally wounded by the Derbices and their
Indian allies, after which Cyrus's ally, the king Amorges of the
Amyrgians, intervened with his own army and helped the Persian soldiers defeat the Derbices, following which Cyrus endured for three days, during which he organised his empire and appointed
Spitaces son of
Sisamas as satrap over the Derbices, before finally dying. Little is further known about Tomyris after the war with Cyrus. By around 520 BC and possibly earlier, her tribe was ruled by a king named
Skuⁿxa, who rebelled against the Persian Empire until one of the successors of Cyrus, the Achaemenid king
Darius I, carried out a campaign against the Sakas from 520 to 518 BC during which he conquered the
Massagetae, captured Skuⁿxa, and replaced him with a ruler who was loyal to Achaemenid power. == Legacy ==