Yazdegerd III π©π¦π£πͺπ₯π²π© | |
---|---|
King of Kings of Iranians and non-Iranians | |
Shahanshah of the Sasanian Empire | |
Reign | 16 June 632 β 651 |
Coronation | Istakhr |
Predecessor | Boran |
Successor | Office abolished |
Born | 624 Istakhr |
Died | 651 (aged 27) Marw |
Issue | Peroz III Bahram VII Shahrbanu (alleged) Izdundad |
House | House of Sasan |
Father | Shahriyar |
Religion | Zoroastrianism |
Yazdegerd III (also spelled Yazdgerd III and Yazdgird III; Middle Persian: π©π¦π£πͺπ₯π²π©) was the last Sasanian King of Kings of Iran from 632 to 651. His father was Shahriyar and his grandfather was Khosrow II.
Ascending the throne at the age of eight, the young shah lacked authority and reigned as figurehead, whilst real power was in the hands of the army commanders, courtiers, and powerful members of the aristocracy, who engaged in internecine warfare. The Sasanian Empire was weakened severely by these internal conflicts, resulting in invasions by the GΓΆktΓΌrks from the east, and Khazars from the west.[1] It was, however, the Arabs, united under the banner of Islam, who dealt the decisive blow. Yazdegerd was unable to contain the Arab invasion of Iran, and spent most of his reign fleeing from one province to another in the vain hope of raising an army. Yazdegerd met his end at the hands of a miller near Marw in 651, bringing an end to the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire after more than 400 years of rule.[1]
Etymology
The name of Yazdegerd is a combination of the Old Iranian yazad yazata- "divine being" and -karta "made", and thus stands for "God-made", comparable to Iranian Bagkart and Greek Theoktistos.[2] The name of Yazdegerd is known in other languages as; Pahlavi Yazdekert; New Persian Yazd(e)gerd; Syriac Yazdegerd, Izdegerd, and Yazdeger; Armenian Yazkert; Talmudic Izdeger and Azger; Arabic Yazdeijerd; Greek Isdigerdes.[2]
Background
Yazdegerd was the son of prince Shahriyar and the grandson of the last prominent shah of Iran, Khosrow II (r.β590β628), who was in 628 overthrown and executed by his own son Kavad II, who proceeded to have all his brothers and half-brothers executed, including Shahriyar.[3] This dealt a heavy blow to the empire, which it would never recover from. Furthermore, the fall of Khosrow II also culminated in a civil war lasting four years, with the most powerful members of the nobility gaining full autonomy and starting to create their own government. The hostilities between the Persian (Parsig) and Parthian (Pahlav) noble-families were also resumed, which split up the wealth of the nation.[4] A few months later, a devastating plague swept through the western Sasanian provinces, killing half of its population including Kavad II.[4]
He was succeeded by his eight-year-old son Ardashir III, who was killed two years later by the distinguished Sasanian general Shahrbaraz, who was in turn murdered forty days later in a coup by the Pahlav leader Farrukh Hormizd, who installed the daughter of Khosrow II, Boran, on the throne. She was deposed a year later, and a succession of rulers followed one another, until Boran was sovereign once more in 631, only to be killed the following year, seemingly by the Parsig leader Piruz Khosrow.[5] The most powerful magnates in the empire, Rostam Farrokhzad[lower-alpha 1] and Piruz Khosrow, now threatened by their own men, eventually agreed to work together, and installed Yazdegerd III on the throne, thus putting an end to the civil war.[6] He was crowned in the Anahid fire-temple in Istakhr, where he had been hiding during the civil war. The temple was the very place where the first Sasanian shah Ardashir I (r.β224β242) had crowned himself, indicating that the reason behind Yazdegerd's coronation at the same place was due to hopes for a rejuvenation of the empire.[7] He was almost the last living member of the House of Sasan.[8] Most scholars agree that Yazdegerd was eight years old at his coronation.[4][3][9]
Reign
Conditions of the empire
Yazdegerd, however, did not have the authority required to bring stability to his extensive empire, which was swiftly falling apart due to ceaseless internal conflicts between the army commanders, courtiers, and powerful members of the aristocracy, who were fighting amongst themselves and wiping each other out. Many of the governors of the empire had proclaimed independence and carved out their own kingdom.[3] The governors of the provinces of Mazun and Yemen had already asserted their independence during the civil war of 628β632, thus resulting in the disintegration of Sasanian rule in the Arabian peninsula, which was uniting under the banner of Islam.[10] The Iranologist Khodadad Rezakhani argues that the Sasanians had most likely lost much of their possessions after Khosrow II's execution in 628.[11]
The empire was starting to look more like the Parthian feudal system before the fall of the Arsacid Empire.[12] Yazdegerd, although being acknowledged as the rightful monarch by both the Parsig and Pahlav factions, does not seem to have held sway over all of his empire. Indeed, during the first years of his rule coins were only minted in Pars, Sakastan, and Khuzestan, approximately corresponding to the regions of the southwest (XwarwarΔn) and southeast (NΔmrΕz), where the Parsig was based.[13] The Pahlav, who were mainly based in the northern portion of the empire, refused to mint coins of him.[13] Even in the south Yazdegerd's rule was not seemingly secure; a Sasanian claimant to the throne, Khosrow IV, minted coins at Susa in Khuzestan around this time, which he would do till 636.[14] According to Rezakhani, Yazdegerd seemingly did not control Mesopotamia, including the capital of Ctesiphon. He argues that the conspiring aristocrats and the population of Ctesiphon, "do not appear to have been too successful or eager in bringing Yazdgerd to the capital."[11]
The empire was also at the same time invaded on all fronts; by the GΓΆktΓΌrks in the east, and by Khazars in the west, who raided Armenia and Adurbadagan.[1] The Sasanian army had been heavily weakened due to the war with the Byzantines and internal conflict.[15] The circumstances were so chaotic, and the condition of the nation so alarming, that "the Persians openly spoke of the imminent downfall of their empire, and saw its portents in natural calamities."[4]
Early clash with the Muslim Arabs
In May 633, the Muslims defeated a Sasanian force under Azadbeh near the important strategic Sasanian city of Hira, which was shortly afterwards occupied. After the fall of Hira, Yazdegerd began to pay greater attention to the Muslims; Rostam Farrokhzad sent an army under the Persian military officer Bahman Jadhuyih and the Armenian military officer Jalinus against the Muslims. Rostam is known to have told Bahman secretly that: "if Jalinus returns to the like of his defeat, then cut off his head."[16] The Sasanian army managed to defeat the Muslims at the Battle of the Bridge.
In 636, Yazdegerd III ordered Rostam Farrokhzad to subdue the invading Arabs and then told him: "Today you are the [most prominent] man among the Iranians. You see that the people of Iran have not faced a situation like this since the family of Ardashir I assumed power."[16] Envoys then came to Yazdegerd III asking him to consider the dismissal of Rostam in order to replace him with someone around whom the people would rally.[17]
Yazdegerd III asked Rostam for an assessment of the Arab forces since they had camped at Qadisiyyah.[18] Rostam Farrokhzad stated that the Arabs were "a pack of wolves, falling upon unsuspecting shepherds and annihilating them."[18] Yazdegerd III responds to Rostam by saying,
It is not like that. The Arabs and the Persians are comparable to an eagle who looked upon a mountain where birds take shelter at night and stay in their nests at the foot of it. When morning came, the birds looked around and saw that he was watching them. Whenever a bird became separated from the rest, the eagle snatched him. The worst thing that could happen to them would be that all would escape save one.[19]
Last stand
However, the Sasanian army suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of al-Qadisiyyah, with Rostam, Bahman, Jalinus and two Armenian princes named Grigor II Novirak and Mushegh III Mamikonian being killed during the battle. The Arabs then marched towards the Sasanian capital of Ctesiphon without meeting any resistance. Yazdegerd took his treasury, and along with 1,000 of his servants fled to Hulwan in Media, leaving Rostam Farrokhzad's brother Farrukhzad in charge of Ctesiphon. Farrukhzad, however, did not attempt any resistance and also went to Hulwan. The Arabs subsequently reached Ctesiphon, besieged the western parts of the city, and soon occupied all of it.[20][21] The Iranian defeat at the Battle of al-Qadisiyyah has often been described as a turning point in the Arab invasion of Iran. However, in reality, it was far from it. The battle served as a wake-up call for the Iranian armies, who became conscious that persistent factionalism could result in their inevitable destruction.[22] Al-Tabari emphasizes this, stating that after the fall of Ctesiphon "the people... were about to go their separate ways, they started to incite one another: 'If you disperse now, you will never get together again; this is a spot that sends us in different directions'."[23]
In April 637, the Arabs defeated another Sasanian army at the Battle of Jalula. After this defeat, Yazdegerd fled deeper into Media.[24] He subsequently raised a new army and send it to Nahavand to retake Ctesiphon and prevent any further Muslim advances.[10] The army that Yazdegerd sent seemed such a serious threat that it led Umar to combine the Arab forces of Kufa and Basra under Al-Nu'man ibn Muqrin and send them against the Sasanians with reinforcements from Syria and Oman. The battle is said to have lasted several days. It resulted in major losses on both sides, including the death of al-Nu'man ibn Muqrin and the Iranian generals Mardanshah and Piruz Khosrow. The Battle of Nahavand in 642 was the second military disaster for the Sasanians after the Battle of al-Qadisiyyah.[10]
Flight
After the Sasanian disaster, Yazdegerd fled to Isfahan, and raised a small army under a certain military officer named Siyah, who had lost his property to the Arabs. However, Siyah and the rest of the army mutinied against Yazdegerd, and agreed to help the Arabs in return for places to live.[26] Meanwhile, Yazdegerd had arrived in Estakhr, where he tried organizing a base for resistance in the province of Pars. However, in 650, Abdullah ibn Aamir, the governor of Basra, invaded Pars and put an end to the Persian resistance. Estakhr was made into ruins after the battle and a force of 40,000 defenders including many Persian nobles were killed. After the Arab conquest of Pars, Yazdegerd fled to Kirman while being pursued by an Arab force.[10] Yazdegerd managed to flee from the Arab force in a snowstorm at Bimand.
After arriving at Kirman, Yazdegerd became unfriendly with the marzban (general of a frontier province, "margrave") of Kirman, and then left Kirman for Sakastan. Another Basran army later arrived which defeated and killed the marzban of Kirman in a bloody fight. When Yazdegerd arrived at Sakastan he lost the support of the governor of Sakastan by demanding tax from him.[10] Yazdegerd then headed for Merv to join the leader of the Turks. However, when he arrived in Khorasan the inhabitants did not agree with Yazdegerd's decision to continue waging war and told him that it was better if he made peace with the Arabs; Yazdegerd, however, refused. Sakastan was later taken by the Arab forces after a bloody fight around 650β652.[10] Yazdegerd was also supported by the Principality of Chaghaniyan, which sent him troops to aid him against the Arabs. When Yazdegerd arrived in Marw (in what is today's Turkmenistan) he demanded tax from the marzban of Marw, losing also his support and making him ally with Nezak Tarkan, the Hephthalite ruler of Badghis, who helped him defeat Yazdegerd and his followers.
Chinese assistance
After Yazdegerd III started to suffer from the onslaught of the Muslim Arabs, he soon sent an envoy to the Chinese court in 639 "for offering tributeβ.[27] As he continued to suffer defeats from the Arabs, he again sent envoys to China, in 647 and 648, in order to βseek assistance from the Chinese court with the hope to form a new army".[27] Some form of help would only arrive in 661, after Peroz III, the son of Yazdegerd, again sent envoys in 654 and 661. The Chinese established a "Persian military commandery" (ζ³’ζ―ι½η£εΊ) in the city of ZΔbol (ηΎι΅ε Jilingcheng) in Tokharistan, and Peroz was appointed as Military Commander (ι½η£ Dudu).[27] Only in 679 would a Chinese army accompany Narsieh, the exiled son of Peroz, in order to restore him to the Sasanian throne, but the army stopped in Tokharistan and instead repelled the invasion of Western Turkic Khan Ashina Duzhi, leaving Narsieh to fight against the Muslim Arabs for the next twenty years.[27]
Death, legacy and personality
After his defeat, Yazdegerd sought refuge at a miller near Marw, who, however, murdered him in 651. According to Kia, the miller had reportedly killed Yazdegerd in order to obtain his jewelry,[28] whilst the Cambridge History of Iran states that the miller was sent by Mahoe Suri.[29] Regardless, the death of Yazdegerd marked the end of the Sasanian Empire, and made it less difficult for the Arabs to conquer the rest of Iran. All of Khorasan was soon conquered by the Arabs, who would use it as a base to attack Transoxiana.[28] The death of Yazdegerd thus marked the end of the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire after more than 400 years of rule. An empireβwhich had a generation earlier briefly conquered Egypt and Asia Minor, even reaching as a far as Constantinople, fell to a force of lightly equipped Arabs that were used to skirmishes and desert warfare. The heavy Sasanian cavalry was too sluggish and systematized to contain them; employing light-armed Arab or East Iranian mercenaries from Khorasan and Transoxiana would have been much more successful.[30]
Yazdegerd was according to tradition buried by Christian monks in a tall tomb that was situated in a garden decorated with silk and musk. His funeral and the construction of a mausoleum for his body near Merv was organized by the Nestorian bishop Elijah - in memory of the fact that the Shahanshah's grandmother Shirin was a Christian. Mahoe, for his part in the murder of the Sassanian king, had his arms, legs, ears and nose cut off by the Turks, who eventually left him die under the scorching summer sun. The corpse of Mahoe was then burned at the stake, along with the bodies of his three sons.[31]
The monks cursed Mahoe and made a hymn to Yazdegerd, mourning the fall of a "combative" king and the "house of Ardashir I."[32] Whether this event was factual or not, it emphasizes that the Christians of the empire remained loyal to the Zoroastrian Sasanians, even possibly more than the Iranian nobles who had deserted Yazdegerd.[32] Indeed, there were close links between the late Sasanian rulers and Christians, whose conditions had greatly improved compared to that of the early Sasanian era. Yazdegerd's wife was according to folklore a Christian, whilst his son and heir, Peroz III was seemingly an adherent of Christianity, and even had a church built in Tang China, where he had taken refuge.[33] Yazdegerd became remembered in history as a martyred prince; many rulers and officers would later claim being a descendant of him in Islamic Iran.[4]
"Mahoe sends the miller to cut off his head on pain of losing his own, and having none of his race left alive. His chiefs hear this and cry out against him, and a mowbed of the name of Radui tells him that to kill a king or prophet will bring evil upon him and his son, and is supported in what he says by a holy man of the name of Hormuzd Kharad Shehran, and Mehronush. The miller most unwillingly goes in and stabs him with a dagger in the middle. Mahoe's horsemen all go and see him and take off his clothing and ornaments, leaving him on the ground. All the nobles curse Mahoe and wish him the same fate."
Ferdowsi narrating the fate of the Yazdegerd in his Shahnameh ("The Book of Kings")[34]
Yazdegerd was well educated and cultured, but his arrogance, pride and inability to compare his demands with the real situation led to him constantly falling out with his governors and his influence diminishing as he, pursued by Arabs, moved from one city to another. At each new place, he behaved as if he was still the all-powerful monarch of the kingdom, and not an outcast running away from enemies, which, combined with his military failures, turned many of his most loyal subjects away from him.[35]
Zoroastrian calendar
The Zoroastrian religious calendar, which is still in use today, uses the regnal year of Yazdegerd III as its base year,[36] and its calendar era (year numbering system) is accompanied by a Y.Z. suffix.[10]
Magians took Yazdegerd III's death as the end of the millennium of Zoroaster and the beginning of the millennium of Oshedar.[10]
See also
Notes
- β Rostam Farrokhzad was a son of Farrukh Hormizd, and had succeeded him as the leader of the Pahlav in 631, when the latter was killed after attempting to usurp the Sasanian throne.
References
- 1 2 3 Kia 2016, pp. 284β285.
- 1 2 Shahbazi 2003.
- 1 2 3 Kia 2016, p. 284.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Shahbazi 2005.
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 218.
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 219.
- β Daryaee 2010, p. 51.
- β Frye 1983, p. 171.
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 257.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Morony 1986, pp. 203β210.
- 1 2 Rezakhani 2019, p. 242.
- β Daryaee 2014, p. 36.
- 1 2 Pourshariati 2008, pp. 221β222.
- β Daryaee 2010, pp. 48β49.
- β Daryaee 2014, p. 37.
- 1 2 Pourshariati 2008, p. 217.
- β al-Tabari 1992, p. 44.
- 1 2 Pourshariati 2008, p. 224.
- β al-Tabari 1992, p. 43.
- β Zarrinkub 1975, p. 12.
- β Bearman, P.; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van. Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (2013). "Yazdajird III". Encyclopaedia of Islam (Second ed.).
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 234.
- β Pourshariati 2008, pp. 234β235.
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 235.
- β Baumer, Christoph (18 April 2018). History of Central Asia, The: 4-volume set. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 243. ISBN 978-1-83860-868-2.
- β Pourshariati 2008, p. 239.
- 1 2 3 4 Zhou, Xiuqin (University of Pennsylvania) (2009). "Zhaoling: The Mausoleum of Emperor Tang Taizong" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers (187): 155β156.
- 1 2 Kia 2016, p. 285.
- β Zarrinkub 1975, p. 25.
- β Shahbazi 1986, pp. 489β499.
- β Nafisi, Azar (2016). "Yazdegerd is killed by the miller". Shahnameh, the Persian Book of Kings. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 1010β1028.
- 1 2 Payne 2015, pp. 199β200.
- β Compareti 2009.
- β The Shah-Namah of Fardusi, trans. Alexander Rogers (LPP Publication), p. 547.
- β Dashkov, Sergei Borisovich (2008). Kings of Kings - Sassanids. III-VII-centuries-Iran in legends, historical chronicles and modern studies (in Russian). SMI-Asia. pp. 201β206.
- β "The Lalis". Zoroastrian Calendar. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
Sources
- al-Tabari (1993). The Challenge to the Empires. Translated by Khalid Yahya Blankinship. State University of New York Press. p. 222. ISBN 0-7914-0852-3.
- al-Tabari (1992). The Battle of al-Qadisiyyah and the Conquest of Syria and Palestine. Translated by Yohanan Friedmann. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-0734-9.
- Compareti, Matteo (2009). "Chinese-Iranian relations xv. The last Sasanians in China". Encyclopaedia Iranica.
- Daryaee, Touraj (2010). "When the End is Near: Barbarized Armies and Barracks Kings of Late Antique Iran". Ancient and Middle Iranian studies: proceedings of the 6th European Conference of Iranian Studies, held in Vienna, 18β22 September 2007. Vol. Iranica. Harrassowitz. pp. 43β52. ISBN 9783447064224.
- Daryaee, Touraj (2014). Sasanian Persia: The Rise and Fall of an Empire. I.B. Tauris. pp. 1β240. ISBN 978-0857716668.
- Frye, R. N. (1983), "Chapter 4", The political history of Iran under the Sasanians, The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 3, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-20092-9
- Karaka, Dosabhai Framji (1884), History of the Parsis: including their manners, customs, religion, and present position, vol. I, Macmillan and co., ISBN 0-404-12812-2
- Kennedy, Hugh N. (2004). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century (Second ed.). Harlow, UK: Pearson Education Ltd. ISBN 0-582-40525-4.
- Morony, M. (1986). "ΚΏARAB ii. Arab conquest of Iran". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. II, Fasc. 2. pp. 203β210.
- Kia, Mehrdad (2016). The Persian Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia [2 volumes]: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1610693912.
- Payne, Richard E. (2015). A State of Mixture: Christians, Zoroastrians, and Iranian Political Culture in Late Antiquity. Univ of California Press. pp. 1β320. ISBN 978-0520961531.
- Pourshariati, Parvaneh (2008). Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire: The Sasanian-Parthian Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran. London and New York: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-645-3.
- Rezakhani, Khodadad (2019). "The End of Sasanian Rule: The Center and Periphery of ΔrΔnΕ‘ahr in the Seventh Century". Studi Sulla Persia Sasanide e Suoi Rapporti Con la Civilta Attigue. Princeton University: 229β255.
- Shahbazi, A. Shapur (1986). "Army i. Pre-Islamic Iran". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. II, Fasc. 5. London et al. pp. 489β499.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Shahbazi, A. Shapur (2003). "YAZDEGERD I". Encyclopaedia Iranica.
- Shahbazi, A. Shapur (2005). "Sasanian dynasty". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Online Edition. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
- Zarrinkub, Abd al-Husain (1975). "The Arab conquest of Iran and its aftermath". The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 4: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1β57. ISBN 978-0-521-20093-6.