What is the personality type of Cassandane? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Cassandane from Historical Figures 1st Millenium Bce and what is the personality traits.
Cassandane personality type is INTP, and she has been an INTP since she was young. I never really knew what INTP was until I read an article about it. Basically, it said that INTPs were always mentally curious, always looking at the big picture, and always trying to understand the situation. It said that INTPs were always thinking about how things work, and always trying to understand why things are the way they are.
It said that they like to take things apart and put them back together again. It said they keep questioning everything, and constantly try to make sense of things. And it said that they are very objective and analytical, and don't have any patience for people who are lazy.
And I thought, "Wow, that's me." So I leaned towards that. And then I looked at the other careers I had thought about, and I thought, "Well, I'm not good at any of those, so it's probably best to stick with being an INTP."
I've always had a really hard time focusing on anything for too long.
Cassandane or Cassandana was an Achaemenian Persian noblewoman and the "dearly loved" wife of Cyrus the Great. She was a daughter of Pharnaspes. She bore four children for Cyrus (it may be 5 based on the documented children listed under Cyrus the Great): Cambyses II, who succeeded his father and conquered Egypt; Smerdis (Bardiya), who also reigned as the king of Persia for a short time; a daughter named Atossa, who later wed Darius the Great; and another daughter named Roxana.[1]
Her daughter Atossa later played an important role in the Achaemenid royal family, as she married Darius the Great and bore him the next Achaemenid king, Xerxes I. Atossa had a "great authority" in the Achaemenid royal house and her marriage with Darius I is likely due to her power, influence and the fact that she was a direct descendant of Cyrus.[2] When Cassandane died, all the nations of Cyrus' Persian empire observed "a great mourning". This is reported by Herodotus.