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IRAN vi. IRANIAN LANGUAGES AND SCRIPTS (6) Old Iranian Languages
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Proto-Iranian split into at least four distinct dialect groups, characterized, among other things, by the typical developments of the palatal affricates and the groups.
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KAYĀNIĀN vi. Siiāuuaršan, Siyāwaxš, Siāvaš
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Siiāuuaršan, “the one with black stallions,” is listed in the Avesta in Yašt 13.132 as a kauui and the third with a name containing aršan “male.”
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KHOTAN
Multiple Authors
town (lat 37°06′ N, long 79°56′ E) and major oasis of the southern Tarim Basin in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China, historically an important kingdom with an Iranian-speaking population.
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KAYĀNIĀN
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
(Kayanids), in the early Persian epic tradition a dynasty that ruled Iran before the Achaemenids, all of whom bore names prefixed by Kay from Avestan kauui.
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IRAN vi. IRANIAN LANGUAGES AND SCRIPTS (4) Origins Of The Iranian Languages
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
General historical surveys of the Iranian languages.
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KAYĀNIĀN xi. The Kayanids and the Kang-dez
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
According to the Pahlavi texts, Kay Siāwaxš built the Kang castle (Kang-diz) by miraculous power (Pahlavi Rivāyat: with his own hands, by means of the [Kavian] xwarrah and the might of Ohrmazd and the Amahrspands).
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KAYĀNIĀN xii. The Kavian XˇARƎNAH
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The nature of the Avestan xᵛarənah and its three subtypes, the Aryan (airiiana), the “unseizable” (? axᵛarəta), and the Kavian (kāuuaiia).
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BUN-XĀNAG
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
term in the inscriptions of Kirdīr at Naqš-e Rostam (KKZ and KNRm), variously interpreted.
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KAYĀNIĀN xiii. Synchronism of the Kayanids and Near Eastern History
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The desire of the medieval historians to fit all the ancient narratives into one and the same chronological description of world history from the creation led them to coordinate the Biblical, Classical, and Iranian sources.
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KARSĪVAZ
Prods Oktor Skjærvø, Mahmoud Omidsalar
in the old Iranian epic tradition the brother of the Turanian king, Afrāsiāb, and the man most responsible for the murder of the Iranian prince Siāvaš.