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See also: history of the old Iranian See also: kingdom as Kai Kobadh (Kaikobad)
.
It was See also: borne by two See also: kings of the Sassanid dynasty
.
(I) See also: KAVADH I., son of Peroz, crowned by the nobles in 488 in place of his See also: uncle Balash, who was deposed and blinded
.
At this See also: time the See also: empire was utterly disorganized by the invasion of the See also: Ephthalites or See also: White
See also: Huns from the See also: east
.
After one of their victories against Peroz, Kavadh had been a hostage among them during two years, pending the payment ,of a heavy ransom
.
In 484 Peroz had been defeated and slain with his whole army
.
Balash was not able to restore the royal authority
.
The hopes of the magnates and high priests that Kavadh would suit their purpose were soon disappointed
.
Kavadh gave his support to the communistic See also: sect founded by Mazdak, son of Bamdad, who demanded that the See also: rich should See also: divide their wives and their See also: wealth with the poor
.
His intention evidently was, by adopting the See also: doctrine of the Mazdakites, to break the influence of the magnates
.
But in 496 he was deposed and incarcerated in the " See also: Castle of Oblivion (Lethe) " in Susiana, and his See also: brother Jamasp (Zamaspes) was raised to the See also: throne
..
Kavadh, however, escaped and found See also: refuge with the Ephthalites, -whose See also: king gave him his daughter in
See also: marriage and aided him to return to See also: Persia
.
In 499 he became king again and punished his opponents . He had to pay a tribute to the Ephthalites and applied, for subsidies toSee also: Rome, which had before supported the Persians
.
But now the emperor See also: Anastasius refused subsidies, expecting that the two See also: rival See also: powers of the East would exhaust one another in war
.
At the same time he intervened in the affairs of the Persian See also: part of Armenia
.
So Kavadh joined the Ephthalites and began war against the See also: Romans
.
In 502 he took Theodosiopolis in Armenia, in 503 Amida (Diarbekr) on the Tigris
.
In 505 an invasion of Armenia by the western Huns from the See also: Caucasus led to an armistice, during which the Romans paid subsidies to the Persians for the maintenance of the fortifications on the Caucasus
.
When See also: Justin I
.
(518–527) came to the throne the conflict began. anew
.
The Persian vassal, Mondhir of See also: Hira, laid waste See also: Mesopotamia and slaughtered the monks and nuns
.
In S31 See also: Belisarius was beaten at Callinicum
.
Shortly afterwards Kavadh died, at the age of eighty-two, in See also: September 531
.
During his last years his favourite son See also: Chosroes had had See also: great influence over him and had been proclaimed successor
.
He also induced Kavadh to break with the Mazdakites, whose doctrine had spread widely and caused great social confusion throughout Persia
.
In 529 they were refuted in a theological discussion held before the throne of the king by the orthodox Magians, and were slaughtered and persecuted everywhere; Mazdak himself was hanged
.
Kavadh evidently was, as See also: Procopius (Pers. i
.
6) calls him, an unusually clear-sighted and energetic ruler
.
Although he could not See also: free himself from the yoke of the Ephthalites, he succeeded in restoring See also: order in the interior and fought with success against the Romans, He built some
towns which were named after him, and began to regulate the See also: taxation
.
(2) KAVADH II
.
SHEROE (Siroes), son of Chosroes II., was raised to the throne in opposition to his See also: father in See also: February 628, after the great victories of the emperor See also: Heraclius
.
He put his father and eighteen See also: brothers to See also: death, began negotiations with Heratlius, but died after a reign of a few months
.
(ED
.
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