• Bahari lecture series

    Sasanian Iran in the Context of Late Antiquity

    Tuesdays of Weeks 2–9 of Trinity Term 2014 at 5pm
    Ioannou Centre for Classical & Byzantine Studies, 66 St Giles’

    The lectures are convened by Professor Touraj Daryaee and Professor Edmund Herzig and organised by the Oxford Centre for Late Antiquity (OCLA). The full programme is here.

  • Identity, independence & interdependence

    A Workshop in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
    Monday 26 May 2014, 10 am to 5 pm
    Sydney Smith Lecture Theatre, Doorway 1, Old Medical School

    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones will talk about The rhetoric of empire in ancient Iran: ‘Better together’.

  • Public lecture III

    03_J2_YH353. The return of the Avesta

    It has been argued that the adoption of the Zoroastrian religious world view by the Sasanians was instrumental in maintaining the nobility’s loyalty to the goals of the empire. Most arguments in favour of this view, however, derive from examinations of source material dating from the early Islamic era. This lecture will revisit the pertinent arguments and further discuss previously unexplored textual material.

    Speaker: Arash Zeini
    Where: University of St Andrews, School of Classics, Swallowgate, S11.
    When: 14 May 2014, 17:30

  • The Sasanian Empire as a garden

    The Sasanian Empire as a garden: The limits of Iranshahr

    Speaker: Touraj Daryaee (University of California, Irvine)
    Where: The British Institute of Persian Studies, London
    When: 22 May 2014

    Poster at the BIPS.

  • Public lecture II

    02_Ardashir_investiture2. The Sasanian Empire and religious authority: The case of Zoroastrianism

    As one of the major political and economic powers in the region, the Sasanian Empire (224–651 CE) elevated Zoroastrianism to the dominant religious and cultural force within its polity, bringing to the foreground the question of the interaction between religion and sovereignty in the Sasanian era. By providing an historical overview this lecture highlights the dynamics between political and religious authority during the Sasanian era.

    Speaker: Arash Zeini
    Where: University of St Andrews, School of Classics, Swallowgate, S11.
    When: 07 May 2014, 17:30

  • Xerxes’ cabinet of curiosities

    Xerxes’ cabinet of curiosities: Exotic animals and royal authority in Achaemenid Iran

    Speaker: Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (University of Edinburgh)
    Where: The British Institute of Persian Studies, London
    When: 18 June 2014

    Poster at the BIPS.

  • Zoroastrian exegetical parables

    A thorough examination of the structure of one of the parables in the ŠGW. Sam’s comparison with examples from the Rabbinic literature is illuminating.

    Thrope, Samuel. 2013. Zoroastrian exegetical parables in the Škand Gumānīg Wizār. Iran and the Caucasus 17. 253-274.

    Read the article here. Abstract:

    The parable has received little attention as a form in Zoroastrian Pahlavi literature. Taking a first step to correct this deficit, this article examines an extended parable that appears in the Škand Gumānīg Wizār, the ninth century theological and political treatise. The parable likens Ohramzd’s conflict with Ahriman and his creation of the world to a gardener’s attempt to keep hungry vermin from his garden by means of a trap. Borrowing tools developed in the study of rabbinic exegetical parables and poetics, the article argues that the garden parable not only aims to make a theological point as part of its immediate context in the Škand Gumānīg Wizār, but also it itself is an interpretation of the Zoroastrian account of creation. The article shows how the parable reinterprets inconsistencies and contradictions in that cosmogony, relating to the account of creation just as rabbinic parables relate to the gaps in canonical, biblical narratives.

  • Monotheism the Zoroastrian way

    Hintze, Almut. 2014. Monotheism the Zoroastrian Way. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 24(2). 225–249.

    Read the article here. Abstract:

    This article examines seemingly monotheistic, polytheistic and dualistic features of Zoroastrianism from the point of view of the Zoroastrian creation myth. Exploring the personality of the principal deity, Ahura Mazdā, the origin of the spiritual and material worlds and the worship of the Yazatas, it is argued that Zoroastrianism has its own particular form of monotheism.

  • Communication in the Achaemenid Empire

    The second international Summer School on Communication in the Achaemenid Empire: Achaemenid Elamite, Bisotun and the Persepolis Archive will be taking place at the Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia on 12–21 May 2014.

    1. 4 days on Bisotun (1 day repetition of grammar, 3 days reading)
    2. 4 days Persepolis Fortification Archive and Achaemenid culture
    Every day 15–18 by Wouter Henkelman

    3. 3 days Old Persian Inscription of Bisotun
    13–15 by M. Jaafari-Dehaghi

    Application deadline is May 5, 2014. For more Information please contact: Dr Jaafari-Dehaghi.

  • Digitised copy of Shahnameh

    A digitised copy of a Shahnameh dated 614 H./1217 and held at the Italian National Library in Florence is now available online.

    Access the digitised version here, or read more about the manuscript here.