Table of Contents
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PERSONAL NAMES, IRANIAN v. SASANIAN PERIOD
Rüdiger Schmitt
For Sasanian times, priority treatment must be given to the names attested in non-literary, that is, epigraphic sources (in the broadest sense of the word).
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PERSONAL NAMES, IRANIAN vi. ARMENIAN NAMES OF IRANIAN ORIGIN
Rüdiger Schmitt
Linguistic research has documented that the majority of Iranian lexical and other borrowings in Armenian originated in the Parthian language.
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PERSONAL NAMES, SOGDIAN i. IN CHINESE SOURCES
Y. Yoshida
Especially during some hundred years before the An Lushan’s rebellion (755-63 C.E.), when Tang controlled Central Asia, a great many Sogdians were encountered in northern China.
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PESTS, AGRICULTURAL
Cyrus Abivardi
“Pest” refers to any animal or plant causing harm or damage to people or their animals, crops, or possessions, even if it only causes annoyance.
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PESYĀN, MOḤAMMAD-TAQI KHAN
Stephanie Cronin
(1892-1920), military officer with strong nationalist sentiments who served in the Government Gendarmerie from its inception until he was killed in a skirmish by Kurdish tribal forces.
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PEUCESTAS
Ernst Badian
officer under Alexander the Great on his campaign in Asia.
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PEYK-E SAʿĀDAT-E NESWĀN
Nassereddin Parvin
women's magazine published in Rašt , 1927-30.
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PEYMĀN
Nassereddin Parvin
periodical published (1933-42) in Tehran by Aḥmad Kasravi, historian of the Constitutional Revolution.
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PHILATELY i. The Postage Stamps of Iran
Roman Siebertz
Postage stamps, which were introduced to Iran in 1868, have from the outset served as an object of utility as well as an instrument of official self-representation.
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PHILATELY vi. POSTAL HISTORY
Mano Amarloui
To stop the spread of certain information, postal matter were, at times, strictly controlled. Not all mail was opened, but special attention was paid to particular senders and addressees. To legitimize censorship, special censor marks were applied on envelopes.
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