Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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NEẒĀM-AL-SALṬANA MĀFI, Ḥosaynqoli Khan
Mansoureh Ettehadieh
(1832-1908), governor, minister, and prime minister of the Nāṣeri and Moẓaffarid era.
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NEẒĀMI QUNAVI
Osman G. Özgüdenlı
(Neẓāmi of Konya; d. 1469-73?), poet in Persian, Arabic, and Turkish.
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NIETZSCHE AND PERSIA
Daryoush Ashouri
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900), the great German thinker, is best known as a philosopher of culture.
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NIGHTINGALE
Cross-Reference
See BOLBOL.
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NĪRANGDĪN CEREMONY
Firoze M. Kotwal and Philip G. Kreyenbroek
a Zoroastrian ritual to consecrate gōmēz, or bull’s urine; the consecrated liquid is known as nīrang or nīrangdīn.
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NISA
Antonio Invernizzi
an Arsacid city and ceremonial center in Parthia.
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NISĀBURI, ḤASAN
David Pingree
b. Moḥammad al-Aʿraj, Neẓām-al-Din Qommi, astronomer; d. after 1311.
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NISĀYA
Rüdiger Schmitt
the Old Iranian name of several Iranian regions and places, which cannot easily be distinguished from one another.
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NISHAPUR i. Historical Geography and History to the Beginning of the 20th Century
C. Edmund Bosworth
Nishapur (Nišāpur) was, with Balḵ, Marv and Herat, one of the four great cities of the province of Khorasan. It flourished in Sasanid and early Islamic times, but after the devastations of the Mongol invasions of the 13th century, subsided into a more modest role until it revived in the 20th century.
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NISIBIS
Samuel Lieu
city in northern Mesopotamia, a major focus of military confrontations between the Roman and Sasanian empires and a renowned center of theological studies for the Church of the East.


