Archive for the 'Ancient Iran (Persia)' Category

The Ancient Persian Empire

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

The early history of man in Iran goes back well beyond the Neolithic period, it begins to get more interesting around 6000 BC, when people began to domesticate animals

Persecutions during Sassanid Rule

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

The high-priest of Zoroastrianism, Kartir Hangirpe, believed that he represented the one true religion. He was an absolutist, believing that there was good and evil, with nothing in between. Into the later half of the 200s CE, he continued with his persecution of competing religions: the Manichaeans, Christians, Jews and Buddhists. Then, sometime during the [...]

More Persecutions during Sassanid Rule

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

The high-priest of Zoroastrianism, Kartir Hangirpe, believed that he represented the one true religion. He was an absolutist, believing that there was good and evil, with nothing in between. Into the later half of the 200s CE, he continued with his persecution of competing religions: the Manichaeans, Christians, Jews and Buddhists. Then, sometime during the [...]

The Zoroastrian Priesthood Elevated by Sassanid State

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

The Zoroastrian priesthood had endured rule by Parthians, and they had suffered from a prevalence of religions that were not Persian in origin. The founder of the Sassanid dynasty, Ardashir, took power in 224 CE, and his rule pleased the Zoroastrian priesthood. Ardashir allied himself with Zorastrianism. He announced that religion and kingship were brothers and [...]

Ancient Zoroastrians

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

Under Persia’s Achaemenid dynasty, before Darius, temples had appeared for the first time. Related to the Aryans who had invaded India, or a least having a language closely related to the Aryans, the Persians had gods similar to those found in the sacred Hindu Vedas. Among the Persians were a people called Medes, and a [...]

Zarathustra Or Zoroaster Quote

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Be good, be kind, be humane, and charitable; love your fellows; console the afflicted; pardon those who have done you wrong. Doing good to others is not a duty, it is a joy, for it increases our own health and happiness.