Sasan

Sāssān (Middle Iranian > Persian ساسان, also known as Sasan), considered the eponymous ancestor of the Sasanians of the Sasanian Empire, was "a great warrior and hunter" and a Zoroastrian high priest in Pars who lived sometime near the fall of the Arsacid Empire.

Identity of Sasan

Medieval sources

There are many slightly different stories concerning Sasan and his relation to Ardashir I, the founder of Sasanian Empire. The northern Iranian historian Tabari mentions further that Sasan married a princess of the Bāzarangid family, the vassal dynasty of Pārs, and that Sasan was a grandfather of Ardashir I, while Papak is named as Ardashir I's father.[1]

According to the Pahlavi book of Karnamak-i Artaxshir-i Papakan, Sasan's wife was a daughter of a noble man called Papak. The marriage was arranged by Papak after hearing that Sasan has "Achamenian blood in him". Their son was Ardashir I. Sasan vanishes shortly after Ardashir appears in the story and Papak is "considered the father of Ardashir".[1]

These stories on different relations between "Ardashir, Pāpak, and Sāsān" have, according to Frye, a Zoroastrian explanation.Template:SfnFrye Sasan was indeed the father of Ardashir and "disappears" from the story after the birth of Ardashir. Similar to the current Zoroastrian practices, Papak had then taken the responsibility of his daughter and her son Ardashir after Sasan "disappears" and is named afterwards as the father of Ardashir.[1]

In the Kabe Zartosht inscription of Shapur I the Great, the four named persons "Sasan, Papak, Ardashir, Shapur" have different titles: Sasan is named as hwataw[2] or xwadāy[3] ("the lord," usually given to sovereigns of small local principalities[2]), Papak as shah, Ardashir as shāhanshāh ("King of Kings of the Sasanian Empire" and Shapur as "King of Kings of Iran and Aniran".[1] These titles were of differing importance.

Modern sources

However, according to Touraj Daryaee, Sasanian sources cannot be trusted because they were from the royal Sasanian archives, which were made by the court, in the words of Daryaee, "to fit the world-view of the late Sasanian world".[4] Daryaee and several other scholars state that Sasan had his name from a deity who was known in many parts of Asia but not in Fars, the homeland of the Sasanians, which thus means that Sasan was an Iranian foreigner from the west or the east who had settled in Fars, whose inhabitants did not know about this deity he believed in.[4] Sasan later managed to become the priest of the important Anahid temple in Estakhr,[5] the capital of Fars. According to the Bundahishn, which according to Daryaee was made independently and not by the Sasanian court, Sasan's daughter later married Papak and bore him Ardashir.[4] Furthermore, the Bundahishn states that Sasan was the son of a certain Weh-afrid.[4]

Politics of the Sasanian family

The political ambition of Sasan was evoked by the troubles and weakness caused in the last years of the Parthian empire. According to Tabari, Papak managed to consolidate his power with the help of his own sons Shapur and Ardashir.[5] This is considered the beginning of the Sasanian dynasty.

Sasan's family managed to become the rulers of the second Persian Empire in antiquity and rule over a great portion of Western Asia; the first such empire was ruled by the dynasty founded by Cyrus the Great. The three "founders" of this new empire – that is, Papak and his two sons – are depicted and mentioned on the wall of the Harem of Xerxes at Persepolis, a remnant site of Achaemenids – a representation suggested to be the evidence of a claim to Achaemenid heritage likely later added.[5][6]

Sasan is known for his efforts to try to bring Zoroastrianism back into the Empire. He even encouraged Papak to take over the Parthian satrapy of Pars.[7]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Frye 1983, p. 116-117.
  2. 1 2 Kohl et al 2008, p. 114.
  3. Daryaee 2010, p. 240.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Daryaee 2010.
  5. 1 2 3 Shahbazi 2005.
  6. Calmeyer, Peter (1976), "Zur Genese altiranischer Motive IV", Archäologische Mitteilungen aus Iran: 65–67, ISSN 0066-6033
  7. "The Sassanian Dynasty (CE 224-641): The Zarathushti Renaissance" (PDF). avesta.org.

Bibliography

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