Encyclopædia Iranica
Search Results
Not finding what you are looking for?-
ḠOJDOVĀNI
Cross-Reference
See ʿABD-AL-ḴĀLEQ ḠOJDOVĀNI.
-
IQĀN
cross-reference
See KETĀB-E IQĀN.
-
ABŪ MANṢŪR ʿABD-AL-RAZZĀQ
Dj. Khaleghi-Motlagh
a dehqān (landowner) of Ṭūs, official under the Samanids, and patron of a lost prose Šāh-nāma (Šāh-nāma-ye Abū Manṣūrī).
-
ARAB-SASANIAN COINS
M. Bates
Arab-Sasanian is a term applied to several different coinages of early Islamic Iran which were issued under Arab authority using the design and inscriptions of the preceding Sasanian coinage.
-
BANŪ MONAJJEM
D. Pingree
a family of intellectuals, closely connected to the caliphs of the 9th-10th centuries and claiming descent from an ancient Iranian lineage.
This Article Has Images/Tables. -
KAMĀNČA
Stephen Blum
(lit. “small bow”), the most common term throughout much of the Iranian world for a spike fiddle with a small, often spherical, resonating chamber.
This Article Has Images/Tables. -
COLOGNE MANI CODEX
Werner Sundermann
or Codex Manichaicus Coloniensis, a lump of parchment fragments the size of a matchbox, containing a portion of the life and teachings of Mani, discovered in 1969 at an indeterminate spot in the area of Asyūṭ (ancient Lycopolis) in upper Egypt, the smallest ancient codex known to date.
-
EBRĀHĪM ṬEHRĀNĪ
Priscilla P. Soucek
also known as Mīrzā ʿAmū, a 19th century calligrapher specializing in the nastaʿlīq script.
-
STEIN, (Marc) Aurel
Susan Whitfield
, Sir, Hungarian–British archeologist and explorer (b. Pest, Hungary, 26 November 1862; d. Kabul, 28 October 1943).
-
ḤASANVAND
Pierre Oberling
a Lor tribe of the Piškuh region in Lorestān. In the 1870s it numbered some 2,500 families distributed among 16 tiras.
-
JUNGE, PETER JULIUS
A. Shapur Shahbazi
German ancient historian and Iranologist (1913-1943).
-
ALBUQUERQUE, ALFONSO DE
J. Aubin
(ca. 1460-1515), admiral in the Indian Ocean (1504, 1506-08), second governor of Portuguese India (1509-15), a great conqueror, and the real founder of the Portuguese empire in the Orient.
-
AYĀDGĀR Ī WUZURGMIHR
S. Shaked
a popular-religious andarz composition in Pahlavi, attributed to one of the best-known sages of the Sasanian period, Wuzurgmihr (Bozorgmehr) ī Buxtagān, who was active at the court of Ḵosrow I Anōšīravān (531-79 A.D.).
-
ARMENIA AND IRAN iii. Armenian religion
J. R. Russell
-
BOZPAYIT
James R. Russell
Middle Persian name, attested only in Armenian, of a Zoroastrian school or body of religious teaching in the Sasanian period.
-
DEJLA
Cross-Reference
See ARVAND-RŪD; TIGRIS.
-
FALAKĪ ŠARVĀNĪ, Abu’l-Neẓām Moḥammad
François de Blois
or ŠERVĀNĪ, a Persian poet of the first half of the 12th century.
-
TAʿLIM O TARBIAT
Nassereddin Parvin
monthly periodical published by the Ministry of Culture (April 1925-March 1927, April 1934-July 1938).
-
GOLDEN HORDE
Peter Jackson
name given to the Mongol Khanate ruled by the descendants of Joči (Juji; d. 1226-27), the eldest son of Čengiz (Genghis) Khan.
-
ABU’L-QĀSEM HĀRŪN
K. A. Luther
Vizier of Atabeg Ozbek b. Moḥammad b. Eldagōz, ruler of Azerbaijan, 607-22/1210-25.
-
ARBĀB ROSTAM GĪV
Cross-Reference
See GĪV.
-
BARAŠNOM
M. Boyce
the chief Zoroastrian purification rite, consisting of a triple cleansing, with gōmēz (cow’s urine), dust, and water, followed by nine nights’ seclusion.
-
KALĀT-E NĀDERI
Xavier de Planhol
an elevated, isolated plateau in the mountains of Khorasan, some 150 km north of Mašhad, edged with steep cliffs that transform it into an almost inaccessible natural fortress.
This Article Has Images/Tables. -
CONVERSION
Multiple Authors
the act of adopting another religion.
-
FOQQĀʿ
Sayyed Mohammad Dabirsiaghi
an effervescent drink preserved in heavy and usually rounded clay vessels.
This Article Has Images/Tables. -
ḤAYYA ʿALĀ ḴAYR AL-ʿAMAL
Meir M. Bar-Asher
a religious formula, meaning “Come to the best of actions,” included in the call to prayer (aḏān) by all three major branches of Shiʿism, Twelvers, Zaydis and Ismaʿilis.
-
AB-ANBĀR
R. Holod, M. Sotūda
"Water reservoir,” a term commonly used throughout Iran as a designation for roofed underground water cisterns.
-
ʿALĪ B. ʿĪSĀ B. MĀHĀN
Ch. Pellat
(d. 812), officer in the service of the ʿAbbasids.
-
ĀZĀD BELGRĀMĪ
M. Siddiqi
Major Indo-Muslim poet, biographer, and composer of chronograms, also known as Ḥassān-al-Hend (fl. 1116-1200/1704-86).
-
BABYLONIA ii. Babylonian Influences on Iran
G. Gnoli
In the Achaemenid period, the influence of Babylonia was strong in the fields of the arts, science, religion, and religious policies, even affecting the concept of kingship.
-
BŪDANA
cross-reference
See BELDERČĪN.
-
DENŠAPUH
James Russell
short form of Vehdenšapuh; Sasanian hambārakapet (quartermaster) involved in the campaign of Yazdagerd II (438-57) to force Christian Armenians to abjure their faith and return to Zoroastrianism; a gem bearing his name is preserved in the British Museum in London.
-
DUMÉZIL, Georges
Bruce Lincoln
(1898-1986), French comparatist philologist and religious studies scholar. Among the most significant later modifications in Dumézil's views was his decision to abandon the claim that Indo-European society was originally divided into three functional groupings, whose defining characteristics were then inscribed in myth, ritual, and the structure of the pantheon. Rather, he came to regard the tripartite system as an “ideology,” a collective ideal.
This Article Has Images/Tables. -
GOLŠANI, MOḤYI MOḤAMMAD
Tahsin Yazici
b. Fatḥ-Allāh b. Abi Ṭāleb (1528/29-1606/7), scholar and author in Persian and Turkish and inventor of an artificial language.
-
IRANIAN IDENTITY i. PERSPECTIVES
Ahmad Ashraf
Perspectives on Iranian identity have been influenced by competing views on the origins of nations.
-
ABŪ ṢĀLEḤ MANṢŪR (I) NŪḤ
C. E. Bosworth
(350-66/961-76), Samanid ruler in Transoxania and Khorasan and successor of his brother ʿAbd-al-Malek after the latter’s death in Šawwāl, 350/November, 961.
-
ARDAŠĪR-ḴORRA
C. E. Bosworth
one of the five administrative divisions (kūra) of Fārs, in Sasanian and early Islamic times.
-
BARLAAM AND IOSAPH
J. P. Asmussen
Persian Belawhar o Būdāsaf, a Greek Christian or Christianized novel of Buddhist origins. All the manuscripts are later than 1500. Being extremely popular it received various accretions and was often translated.
-
KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
an institute with a wide range of cultural, artistic, and educational activities for children and adolescents, founded in December 1965.
-
COUP D’ETAT OF 1299/1921
Niloofar Shambayati
the military coup that eventually led to the founding of the Pahlavi dynasty.
-
EḤSĀN-AL-ʿOLŪM
Cross-Reference
See FARĀBĪ.


