Table of Contents
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ARSACIDS iv. Arsacid religion
M. Boyce
It may reasonably be assumed that, at least from the time they seized power, the Arsacids were professed Zoroastrians.
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ARSACIDS v. The “Arsacid” era
EIr
As an indication of their imperial aspirations, the Parthians established their own dynastic era, beginning with the vernal equinox. The historicity of this era was proved by a Babylonian tablet equating the Seleucid year 208 with 144 of the Arsacid era.
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ARSACIDS vi. Arsacid chronology in traditional history
A. Sh. Shahbazi
The Parthian rule lasted 474 years, longer than any dynastic period in Iranian history, but post-Sasanian sources give various figures for the duration of the Arsacid rule.
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ARSACIDS vii. The Arsacid dynasty of Armenia
C. Toumanoff
Third dynasty of Armenia, from the first to the mid-fifth century. Arsacid rule brought about an intensification of the political and cultural influence of Iran in Armenia.
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ARSACIDS viii. Military Architecture Of Parthia
Krzysztof Jakubiak
In the western parts of the Parthian empire, i.e., in the Mesopotamian plain, military and defensive systems and fortifications developed under a clearly strong influence of earlier civilizations that had existed in the region.
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ARŠAK
Cross-Reference
See ARSACIDS.
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ARŠĀMA
E. Bresciani
name of several Achaemenid notables.
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ARSAMES
Cross-Reference
See ARŠĀMA.
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ARSANES
Cross-Reference
See NARSE.
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ARSANJĀN
C. E. Bosworth
a small town in Fārs on the northeastern fringes of the Zagros mountain massif.