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HORMIZD, or HORMIZDAS

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 694 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HORMIZD, or HORMIZDAS  , the name of five kings of the Sassanid dynasty (see
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PERSIA: Ancient
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History) . The name is another form of Ahuramazda or Ormuzd (Ormazd), which under the Sassanids became a
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common
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personal name and was borne not only by many generals and officials of their time (it therefore occurs very often on Persian
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seals), but even by the pope of Rome noticed above . It is strictly an abbreviation of Hormuzd-dad, " given by Ormuzd," which form is preserved by Agathias iv . 24-25 as name of King Hormizd I. and II . ('OpµiaSarrls) . 1 . HORMIZD I . (272-273) was the son of Shapur I., under whom he was governor of Khorasan, and appears in his
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wars against Rome (Trebellius Pollio, Trig .
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Tyr . 2, where Noldeke has corrected the name Odomastes into Oromastes, i.e . Hormizd) . In the Persian tradition of the history of
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Ardashir I., preserved in a Pahlavi text (Noldeke, Geschichte
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des Artachsir I .

Papakan), he is made the son of a daughter of Mithrak, a Persian dynast, whose

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family Ardashir had extirpated because the magians had predicted that from his
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blood would come the restorer of the
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empire of
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Iran . Only this daughter is preserved by a peasant; Shapur
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sees her and makes her his wife, and her son Hormizd is afterwards recognized and acknowledged by Ardashir . In this legend, which has been partially preserved also in Tabari, the
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great conquests of . Shapur are transferred to Hormizd . In reality he reigned only one
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year and ten days . 2 . HORMIZD II., son of Narseh, reigned for seven years five months, 302-309 . Of his reign nothing is known . After his
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death his son Adarnases was killed by the grandees after a very short reign, as he showed a cruel disposition; another son, Hormizd, was kept a prisoner, and the
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throne reserved for the child with which a concubine of Hormizd II. was pregnant and which received the name Shapur II . Hormizd escaped from prison by the help of his wife in 323, and found
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refuge at the court of
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Constantine the Great (Zosim. ii . 27; John of
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Antioch, fr. r78; Zonar . 13.5) .

In 363 Hormizd served in the

army of Julian against Persia; his son, with the same name. became consul in 366 (Ammian . Marc . 26 . 8 . 12) . 3 . HORMIZD III., son of Yazdegerd I., succeeded his
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father in 457 . He had continually to fight with his brothers and with the Ephthalites in Bactria, and was killed by Peroz in 459 . 4 . HORMIZD IV., son of
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Chosroes I., reigned 578-590 . He seems to have been imperious and violent, but not without some kindness of heart . Some very characteristic stories are told of him by Tabari (Noldeke, Geschichte d .

Perser and Araber unter den Sasaniden, 264 ff.) . His father's sympathies had been with the nobles and the priests . Hormizd protected the common

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people and introduced a severe discipline in his army and court . When the priests demanded a persecution of the Christians, he declined on the ground that the throne and the government could only be safe if it gained the
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goodwill of both concurring religions . The consequence was that he raised a strong opposition in the ruling classes, which led to many executions and confiscations . When he came to the throne he killed his brothers, according to the
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oriental fashion . From his father he had inherited a war against the
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Byzantine empire and against the
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Turks in the east, and negotiations of peace had just begun with the emperor Tiberius, but Hormizd haughtily declined to cede anything of the conquests of his father . Therefore the accounts given of him by the Byzantine authors, Theophylact,
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Simocatta (iii . 16 ff.), Menander
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Protector and John of Ephesus (vi . 22), who give a full account of these negotiations, are far from favourable . In 588 his general, Bahram Chobin, defeated the Turks, but in the next year was beaten by the Romans; and when the king superseded him he rebelled with his army . This was the
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signal for a general insurrection .

The magnates deposed and blinded Hormizd and proclaimed his son Chosroes II. king . In the war which now followed between Bahram Chobin and Chosroes II . Hormizd was killed by some partisans of his son (590) . 5 . HORMIZD V. was one of the many pretenders who

rose after the
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murder of Chosroes II . (628) . He maintained himself about two years (631, 632) in the
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district of Nisibis . (ED .

End of Article: HORMIZD, or HORMIZDAS
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