Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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ĀŠRAFĪ
A. Hairi
religious leader, born sometime before 1235/1819 and died 1315/1897-98.
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ASRĀR AL-ḤEKAM
M. Moḥaqqeq
the title of a book written for Nāṣer-al-dīn Shah Qāǰār, by the philosopher Ḥāǰǰ Mollā Hādī Sabzavāri (1212-89/1797-1872).
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ASRĀR AL-TAWḤĪD
H. Algar
principal source for the life and teachings of the well-known mystic of Khorasan, Abū Saʿid b. Abi’l-Ḵayr (b. 357/967, d. 440/1049).
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ĀSRĒŠTĀR
P. O. Skjærvø
in Middle Persian Manichean texts a kind of demons, often associated with the mazans.
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ĀSRŌN
EIr
Middle Persian form of Avestan āθravan.
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ʿAṢṢĀR TABRĪZĪ
Z. Safa
poet, scholar, and mystic of the 8th/14th century.
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ʿAṢṢĀR, Sayyed MOḤAMMAD-KĀẒEM
Ahmad Kazemi Mousavi and EIr
(b. 1302/1884-85; d. Tehran, 19 Dey 1353 Š./9 January 1975), outstanding Shiʿite scholar and professor of philosophy at the University of Tehran.
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ASSARHADDON
J. A. Delaunay
king of Assyria 680-69 B.C., son of Sennacherib and the Arameo-Babylonian princess Zakūtu.
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ASSASSINS
Cross-Reference
(Ar. Ḥaššāšin), pejorative name given to Neẓāri Ismaʿilis by their adversaries during the Middle Ages. See ISMAʿILISM iii. History.
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AŠŠURBANIPAL
J. A. Delaunay
king of Assyria 666-25 BCE.
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