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ARDASHIR , the See also: modern See also: form of the Persian royal name See also: ARTAXERXES (q.v.), "he whose See also: empire is excellent." After the three Achaemenian See also: kings of this name, it occurs in Armenia, in the shortened form Artaxias (Armenian, Artashes or Artaxes), and among the dynasts of See also: Persia who maintained their independence during the See also: Parthian See also: period (see See also: PERSIS)
.
One of these, (1) Artaxerxes or ARDASHIR I
.
(in his See also: Greek inscriptions he calls himself Artaxares, and the same form occurs in See also: Agathias ii
.
25, iv
.
24), became the founder of the New-Persian or See also: Sassanian empire
.
Of his reign we have only very scanty information, as the Greek and See also: Roman authors mention only his victory over the Parthians and his See also: wars with See also: Rome
.
A trustworthy tradition about the origin of his power, from Persian See also: sources, has been preserved by the Arabic historian Tabari (Th
.
See also: Noldeke, Geschichle der Perser and Araber zur Zell der Sasaniden, aus der arabischen Chronik See also: des Tabari, 1879)
.
He was the second son of Papak (Babek), the offspring of Sassan (Sasan), after whom the dynasty is named
.
Papak had made himself See also: king of the
See also: district of Istakhr (in the neighbourhood of See also: Persepolis, which had fallen to ruins)
.
After the See also: death of Papak and his See also: oldest son Shapur (Shahpuhr, Sapores), Ardashir made himself king (probably A.D
.
212), put his other See also: brothers to death and began war against the neighbouring dynasts of Persis
.
When he had conquered a See also: great See also: part of Persis and Carmania, the Parthian king See also: Artabanus
ARDASHIR
IV. interfered
.
But he was defeated in three battles and at last killed (A.D
.
226)
.
Ardashir now considered himself See also: sovereign of the whole empire of the Parthians and called himself " King of Kings of the Iranians." But his aspirations went farther
.
In Persis the traditions of the Achaemenian empire had always been alive, as the name of Ardashir himself shows, and with them the See also: national See also: religion of Zoroaster
.
Ardashir, who was a zealous worshipper of Ahuramazda and in intimate connexion with the magian priests, established the orthodox Zoroastrian creed as the official religion of his new See also: kingdom, persecuted the infidels, and tried to restore the old Persian empire, which under the Achaemenids had extended over the whole of See also: Asia from the See also: Aegean See also: Sea to the See also: Indus
.
At the same See also: time he put down the See also: local dynasts and tried to create a strong concentrated power
.
His empire is thus quite different in character from the Parthian kingdom of the Arsacids, which had no national and religious basis but leant towards See also: Hellenism, and whose organization had always been very loose
.
Ardashir extirpated the whole See also: race of the Arsacids, with the exception of those princes who had found See also: refuge in Armenia, and in many wars, in which, however, as the Persian tradition shows, he occasionally suffered heavy defeats, he succeeded in subjugating the greater part of See also: Iran, Susiana and Babylonia
.
The Parthian capital See also: Ctesiphon (q.v.) remained the See also: principal residence of the Sassanian kingdom, by the See also: side of the national metropolis Istakhr, which was too far out of the way to become the centre of administration
.
Opposite to Ctesiphon, on the right See also: bank of the Tigris, Ardashir restored See also: Seleucia under the name of Weh-Ardashir
.
The attempt to conquer See also: Mesopotamia, Armenia and See also: Cappadocia led to a war with Rome, in which he was repelled by See also: Alexander Severus (A.D
.
233) . Before his death (A.D . 241) Ardashir associated with himself on the See also: throne his son Shapur, who successfully continued his See also: work
.
Under the tombs of Darius I. at Persepolis, on the See also: surface of the See also: rock, Ardashir has sculptured his image and that of the See also: god Ahuramazda (Ormuzd or Ormazd)
.
Both are on horseback; the god is giving the diadem to the king
.
Under the See also: horse of the king lies a defeated enemy, the Parthian king Artaban; under the horse of Ormuzd, the devil Ahriman, with two See also: snakes rising from his See also: head
.
In the bilingual inscription (Greek and See also: Pahlavi), Ardashir I. calls himself "the Mazdayasnian [i.e
.
"worshipper of Ahuramazda "] god Artaxares, king of the kings of the Arianes (Iranians), of godly origin, son of the god Papak the king
.
(See See also: Sir R
.
See also: Ker See also: Porter, Travels (1821-1822), i
.
548 See also: foil.; Flandin et Coate, Voyage en Perse, iv
.
182; F
.
Stolze and J . C . Andreas, Persepolis, pl . 116; See also: Marcel Dieulafoy, L'See also: Art See also: antique de la Perse, 1884-1889, V. pl
.
14)
.
A similar inscription and sculpture is on a rock near Gur (See also: Firuzabad) in Persia
.
On his coins he has the same titles (in Pahlavi)
.
We see that he, like his See also: father and his successors, were worshipped as gods, probably as incarnations of a secondary deity of the Persian creed
.
Like the See also: history of the founder of the Achaemenian empire, that of Ardashir has from the beginning been overgrown with legends; like Cyrus he is the son of a shepherd, his future greatness is predicted by dreams and visions, and by the calculations of astronomers he becomes a servant at the See also: court of King Artabanus and then flies to Persia and begins the See also: rebellion; he fights with the great dragon, the enemy of god, &c
.
A Pahlavi text, which contains this See also: legend, has been translated by Noldeke (Geschichte des Artachshir i Papakan, 1879)
.
On the same tradition the account of Firdousi in the Shahnama is based; it occurs also, with some variations, in Agathias ii
.
26 f
.
Another work, which contained religious and moral admonitions which were put into the mouth of the king; has not come down to us . On the other See also: hand the genealogy of Ardashir has of course been connected with the Achaemenids, on whose behalf he exacts vengeance from the Parthians, and with the legendary kings of old Iran
.
(2) ARDASHIR II
.
(379-383)
.
Under the reign of his See also: brother Shapur II. he had been governor {king) of Adiabene, where he persecuted the Christians
.
After Shapur's death, he was raised to the throne by the magnates, although more than seventy years old
.
Having tried to make himself See also: independent from the court,
and having executed some of the grandees, he was deposed after a reign of four years
.
(3) ARDASIIR III
.
(628-630), son of See also: Kavadh II., was raised to the throne as a boy of seven years, but was killed two years afterwards by his general, Shahrbaraz
.
(ED
.
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