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BAHRAIN (Varahrdn, in Gr. Ovapapavrls...

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 211 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BAHRAIN (Varahrdn, in Gr. Ovapapavrls or Ofipapavns, the younger form of the old Verethragna, the name of a Persian
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god, "the killer of the dragon Verethra")
  , the name of five Sashanid kings . I . BAHRAM I . (A.D . 274-277) . From a Pahlavi inscription welearn that he was the son (not, as the Greek authors and Tabari say, the grandson) of Shapur I., and succeeded his
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brother Hormizd (Ormizdas) I., who had only reigned a
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year . Bahram I. is the king who, by the instigation of the magians, put to a cruel
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death the prophet Mani, the founder of
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Manichaeism . Nothing else is known of his reign . 2 . BAHRAM II . (277-294), son of Bahram I . During his reign the emperor Carus attacked the Persians and conquered
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Ctesiphon (283), but died by the plague .

Of Bahram II.'s reign some theological

inscriptions exist (F . Stolze and J . C . Andreas,
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Persepolis (Berlin, 1882), and E . W . West, "Pahlavi Literature" in Grundriss d. iranischen Philologie, ii. pp . 75-129) . 3 . BAHRAM III., son of Bahram II., under whose
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rule he had been governing Sejistan (therefore called Saganshah, Agathias iv . 24, Tabari) . He reigned only four months (in 294), and was succeeded by the pretender Narseh . 4 .

BAHRAM IV . (389-399), son and successor of Shapur III., under whom he had been

governor of Kirman; therefore he was called Kirmanshah (Agathias iv . 26; Tabari) . Under him or his predecessor Armenia was divided between the
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Roman and the Persian
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empire . Bahram IV. was killed by some malcontents . 5 . BAHRAM V . (420-439), son of Yazdegerd I., after whose sudden death (or assassination) he gained the
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crown against the opposition of the grandees by the help of al-Mondhir, the Arabic dynast of
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Hira . He promised to rule otherwise than his
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father, who had been very energetic and at the same time tolerant in religion . So Bahrain V. began a systematic persecution of the Christians, which led to a war with the Roman empire . But he had little success, and soon concluded a treaty by which both empires promised toleration to the worshippers of the two
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rival religions,
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Christianity and Zoroastrianism . Bahram de-posed the vassal king of the Persian
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part of Armenia and made it a province .

He is a

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great favourite in Persian tradition, which relates many stories of his valour and beauty, of his victories over the Romans,
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Turks, Indians and Negroes, and of his ad-ventures in hunting and in love; he is called Bahram Gor, " the wild ass," on account of his strength and courage . In reality he seems to have been rather a weak monarch, after the heart of the grandees and the priests . He is said to have built many great fire-temples, with large gardens and villages (Tabari) . (En .

End of Article: BAHRAIN (Varahrdn, in Gr. Ovapapavrls or Ofipapavns, the younger form of the old Verethragna, the name of a Persian god, "the killer of the dragon Verethra")
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KARL FRIEDRICH BAHRDT (1741-1792)

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