Turkish-Persian relations started with the activity of Turkish tribes who migrated from Central Asia in the regions of Mesopotamia geography located in Iran. This interaction continued when the Medes were on the rise in Iran, as a result of the loss of their lands by the Scythians, following the Cimmerians and entering Anatolia and heading towards Iranian lands. II. Cyrus adopted an expansionist policy with the establishment of the Persian Empire in Iran. As a result of this, it entered into a struggle with the Scythian groups in its eastern borders. His successors continued this struggle. The Turkish-Persian interaction continued through the Scythians until the Persian empire disappeared from the stage of history. The Sassanids fought with the Turkish states such as Sabir, Avar, Göktürk, especially the Huns. In the struggles between the Sassanids and the Turks, the expansionist policies of both sides and the idea of domination on the Silk Road were decisive. This situation inevitably brought along cultural interactions. The Sassanids, who continued their long-term struggle with the Turks, who were mostly located on the eastern border, managed to influence each other in their relations with the Turks, sometimes commercially and sometimes on the battlefield. In addition, during the Göktürk and Uyghur periods, there was political, commercial |