SASSANID

Sasanidboth: săsˈənĭd, or Sassaniansăsāˈnyən, last dynasty of native rulers to reign in Persia before the Arab conquest. The period of their dominion extended from c.a.d. 224, when the Parthians were overthrown and the capital, Ctesiphon, was taken, until c.640, when the country fell under the power of the Arabs. The last Sassanian king died a fugitive in 651, but he had been forced to yield Ctesiphon to the Arabs in 636. Under the Sassanids, who revived Achaemenid tradition, Zoroastrianism was reestablished as the state religion. The name of the dynasty was derived from Sassan, an ancestor of the founder of the dynasty, Ardashir I, who took and ruled Ctesiphon (224–40). During his reign and many that followed, war with the Romans occupied much attention. Sassanian persecution of Christians led to wars with Byzantium. Syria and Armenia suffered particularly from invading armies. Ardashir I was succeeded by his son Shapur I, who was victorious over Roman Emperor Valerian and ruled until 272. The next reign of importance was that of Shapur II (309–79), a period of particular significance and glory. Bahram V, ruling 420–38, was defeated by the Emperor Theodosius but succeeded against the White Huns. The Armenians were overwhelmed by Yazdagird II in 451, and their land was overrun by Sassanians under Khosrow I, who reigned 531–79 and who also invaded Syria. Both countries were again overrun by Khosrow II (ruled 590–628), whose conquest of Egypt was the final victorious achievement of the dynasty. The last representative of the family on the throne was Yazdagird III, who began his reign in 632. His struggle against the Arabs ended in the fall of the Sassanid dynasty. See Persia.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Sassanid
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books on: Sassanid  - 362 results

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...various Persian empires, especially the Sassanid, and, to a lesser extent, the Parthian...patrimonial empires, like Egypt or the Sassanid Empire; 2 dualistic nomad-sedentary...Drioton and Vandier, 1952 . For Sassanid Persia , G Christensen, 1936...
...Parthian art did not die out when the Sassanid dynasty took over the reins of power...Achaemenian empire and the rise of the Sassanid dynasty. During this period the Iranian...priests among whom the ancestors of the Sassanid dynasty had figured prominently. In...
...16. End of the Sassanid Empire 201...Palestine. Subsequently, the Persian Sassanid Empire adopted Zoroastrianism as the...and Roman writers, while the history of Sassanid Persia must be constructed from a variety...
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journal articles on: Sassanid  - 12 results

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...Ptolemy-Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Sassanid Persians, and the Islamic empires of...successors, the Byzantines (AD 330-630); and Sassanid Persians (AD 229-637) in the case of...and added to) by the Byzantines and Sassanid Persians from the first century BC to...
...third millennium (recent discoveries at Tell Mozan) to the Sassanid dynasty (tombs at Yorgan Tepe). Geographically, they embrace...this way, some Nuzi tombs are datable to the first half of the Sassanid period. Part III contains briefer notes on Nuzi Subjects...
...thereof men would swallow each other alive." Samuel, the Amoraic leader of the Babylonian Jewish community at the time of the Sassanid conquest, went further, declaring it a religious principle that Jews should observe the law of the land as binding ("Dina De-Malkhuta...
...owing to a mythological fable dating from the Sino-Iranian Sassanid dynasty (226-651 A.D.), the dragon evokes the mythological...literally "little key." First used by the Hittites and the Sassanids, the wing (al-janah) is another symbol that holds a prominent...
...al-Bahrayn in the vicinity of Hormuz, and Ratto Kot on the Indus River delta - in the context of their commercial significance from Sassanid times to the sixteenth century, when the straits were dominated by independent princes of Hormuz. Kosei Morimoto assesses the...
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magazine articles on: Sassanid  - 10 results

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...Persians were so fond of cliff carvings! The sassanid era In a.d. 224, the Sassanid Ardashir, a descendant of the Achaemenian line...to me by God. I am his agent on earth." The Sassanid dynasty, which ruled until the Arab conquest...
...than the Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and Sassanid empires. In its golden period the Muslim...Eastern imperial societies of Byzantine and Sassanid Persia (Lapidus, 2002). Muhammads family...Arab Muslims of Medina demolished the Sassanid Persia Empire and shook the Byzantine...
...favour and state office. In this era the Sassanid Persians who ruled Iran had a virtual...the inflated prices that enriched the Sassanid treasury. The situation became intolerable during the Byzantine-Sassanid war of the 540s...
...control of Persia, but their successors the Sassanids came from the Persian heartland of Fars...great phase of the Persian Empire. The Sassanid empire encompassed not only modern Iran...acknowledged by Rome as a second superpower. The Sassanid period is revered in Persian literature...
...Empire, the Achaemenid Persian Empire, the Parthian Empire, the Sassanid Persian Empire, the Arab Caliphate, and the Western Roman Empire...German tribes devastated the empires European provinces, the Sassanid Persians overran most of the Asian provinces, and the rebellious...
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newspaper articles on: Sassanid  - 3 results

 
 
...method of abrogation" to bypass the peaceful verses and uphold the verses of the sword. They also adopted several laws from Sassanid Persia, which included the specifications for the second-class status of conquered Jews and Christians as dhimmis. In premodern...
...resentment, humiliation and insecurity. Miss Mackey takes her readers from the ancient glories of Darius and Cyrus, through the Sassanid and Safavid dynasties, to the bungled, megalomaniacal glories of Muhammad Reza Shah and his dark, towering nemesis, Ayatollah...
...often more entertaining than the author. The lists in the history portion of her book quickly become tedious. During the Sassanid dynasty, for example, she writes, certain foods were popular. "Many types of sweets were concocted, including dates and pastries...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Sassanid  - 26 results

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SASSANID Sasanid both: sas nid, or Sassanian sasa ny n...the country fell under the power of the Arabs. The last Sassanid king died a fugitive in 651, but he had been forced to yield Ctesiphon to the Arabs in 636. Under the Sassanids, who revived Achaemenid tradition, Zoroastrianism...
...far west as Spain, and as far east as Sassanid Persia. Because of their rapid expansion...Byzantines, the Copts, the Romans, and the Sassanids. The great strength of Islamic art as...before the 10th cent. are still standing. Sassanid building techniques, such as the squinch...
SHAPUR III or Sapor III, d. 388, king of Persia (383 88), of the Sassanid, or Sassanian, dynasty; son of Shapur II; successor of his uncle, Ardashir II. He made a new attempt to settle the long-lasting...
...ista k r, old town, S Iran. Built largely from the ruins of ancient Persepolis, 3 mi (4.8 km) away, it was a capital of the Sassanid dynasty. Istakhr stubbornly resisted (640 49) the Arabs but soon afterward lost its importance to Shiraz. The name also appears...
SASANID see Sassanid . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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