ARYAN
DYNASTIES
Pishdadian
Dynasty
Legend of Feridoon
Start of the Second Epic Cycle :
We concluded our page on Aryan Prehistory with the legend of Jamshid,
a legend that marked the end of part I of the Pishdadian dynasty
as well as the first epic cycle in Aryan history. That phase of
Aryan history came to an end with the overthrow of King Jamshid,
or shall we say, the overthrow of line of Jamshidi kings by the
evil foreign ruler Zahak (or Zahhak) called Azi Dahaka in the Avesta
(see the Aryan Prehistory page).
The
history of Airyana Vaeja entered a second epic cycle when the Aryans
were liberated from foreign rule by Thraetaona (also Thrita elsewhere
in the Avesta and Feridoon in modern Persian), a descendant of the
House of Jamshid and therefore a Pishdadian.
As
with Jamshid, Thraetaona is mentioned in the Atharva Veda where
he is called Trita. Elsewhere is he called Taritana. In both the
Avestan and Vedic traditions, he is closely associated with healing
and haoma.
First Aryan / Airanian Empire During the Reign of Feridoon (Av.
Thraetaona / Thrita)
Airyana Vaeja Becomes Airan :
During the Jamshidi era, Airyana Vaeja had grown considerably in
size and included the passes to Hapta Hindu - the area that contained
the seven northern Indus tributaries - and perhaps even some of
the upper reaches. The expansion could have required a ruling system
that included vassal states, making a Jamshidi king, a king of kings.
If we are correct in this conclusion, then the Jamshidi governance
structure was a forerunner of the first Aryan empire established
during King Feridoon's reign - an empire that spread to include
kingdoms from present day Turkey in the west to the northern Indus
valley in the southeast.
It
could be that home country of the foreign ruler Zahak was one of
the countries west of Airyana Vaeja, a country that became part
of the Aryan empire with Zahak's overthrow along with other states
that Zahak had conquered. (There are the ruins of a structure called
Zahak Citadel in East Azerbaijan, Iran which is said to have been
inhabited from the second millennia BCE. In some literature, Zahak
is also associated with Babylon and Assyria) We will call Feridoon's
first Aryan empire the empire of Airan (Also see Aria / Ariana in
our page on the location of Airyana Vaeja). The creation of this
empire was also accompanied by a shift of the central Aryan kingdom
westward towards Bakhdhi / Balkh.
Internecine Warfare - The Tragic Period :
Feridoon decided to divide his sprawling empire the amongst his
three sons. To his eldest son Tur, he gave the eastern lands with
its capital in Turan - a nation that got its name from Tur. To his
son Iraj, Feridoon gave Airan and Hind (the Indus lands. Previously,
King Jamshid had expanded Airyana Vaeja southward into the upper
Indus). To his son Salm, Feridoon gave the western kingdoms that
stretched from Iran to present-day Eastern Turkey. The extent of
the Airan empire during the Feridoon era was consistent with the
Vendidad's list of sixteen nations.
Since
the lands of Airan and Hind were the gems of the empire and the
seat of its power, Tur felt that as the eldest son he had been slighted.
No sooner had Feridoon divided his kingdom, that the jealous and
ambitious Tur persuaded Salm to join him in a plot to murder Iraj.
Iraj was killed but not before his wife was pregnant with their
son Manuchehr who would later avenge the murder of his father.
This
tragic period of Feridoon's rule would end with the rise of Manuchehr
who would kill the murderous brothers Salm and Tur and sever their
heads to be laid beside that of their brother Iraj.
The
last of the Pishdadian kings was Garshasp who ruled for nine years
and died just before an impending invasion of Airan by the Turanian
Afrasiab.
Feridoon - First Healer /Physician :
According to the book of Vendidad (20.2) in the Zoroastrian scriptures,
the Avesta, King Feridoon (Av. Thraetaona / Thrita) was the first
holistic physician. Or perhaps, it was under his reign that holistic
healing was established.
The
Vendidad (7.44) and the book of the Ardibehest Yasht (3.6) tell
us that holistic healing came under the broader banner of restorative
healing. Restorative healing consisted of healing with goodness
and care, justice, surgery, herbs and the manthra. Holistic healing
consisted of the last three: surgery, herbs and the manthra. Surgery
and herbal cures and most efficacious only when accompanied by the
recitation of the manthra, for the cures sought to heal spirit,
mind and body.
In
the practice of surgery, Feridoon developed a surgical knife 'of
which the point and the base were set in gold.' Of the healing plants,
many hundreds and thousands (that grew around the mythical Gaokerena
tree) were identified. Cures were found for several ailments, diseases
and untimely death which are named but which we cannot, save two,
identify today (Vendidad 20. 7,9): sarana (headache), sarastya (fever),
azana, azahva, kurugha, azivaka, duruka, astairya, ishire, aghuire,
aghra, ughra; pain, the evil eye, rotting, and infection.
Vendidad
7.36-40 establishes a code for the competence of surgeons. An apprentice
surgeon must perform three successful surgeries before being accepted
as a practicing surgeon. If three patients die at the hands of a
surgeon, the surgeon can no longer practice surgery and should the
person so disbarred violate the prohibition, the charge and penalty
are those for wilful murder.
Tree
of Pishdadian Aryan kings
Legends of Zal, Rustam & Sohrab :
The change in dynasty, or as we have taken to saying, the change
in eras - from the Pishdadian to the Kayanian saw the introduction
of the legends of the heroes of Airan, heroes who had many an opportunity
to sit on the supreme throne of the empire of Airan, but whose code
of honour prevented usurping the throne of the Aryans. The legends
of the heroes are recounted in our pages on Ferdowsi's Shahnameh.
Kayanian Dynasty :
The founder of the Kayanian dynasty was Kavi Kavata (later, Kaikobad),
a reclusive holy man, who had to be persuaded to sit on the vacant
Aryan throne.
The
Kayanian dynasty is particularly noteworthy in Zoroastrian history
since it was during the reign of a Kayanian king, King Vishtasp
(later called Gushtasp) that Zarathushtra preached. King Vishtasp
was also Zarathushtra's first patron king.
The
list of Kayanian kings mentioned in the Avesta (Zamyad Yasht 19.71,
and Farvardin Yasht 13.132) contains some names not mentioned in
Ferdowsi's Shahnameh. The names include: Kavi Aipivohu, Kavi Usadha,
Kavi Arshan, Kavi Pisina, Kavi Byarshan, and Kavi Syavarshan.
Legend of Esfandiar :
Decades before Vishtasp's ascension to the throne of Airan (as we
shall call the Iran of those days), Airan had lost its sovereignty
and had become a vassal state of the kingdom of Turan. As a consequence,
Airan continued to send an annual tribute to the Khyonian King Arjasp
whose kingdom included Turan, Chin and Ma-Chin (the Turkmenistan
and China of those days). In the early years of his reign, Vishtasp
decided to assert Airan's autonomy and he sent a dispatch to King
Arjasp saying that Airan would no longer pay a tribute. In response,
King Arjasp sent a delegation to convince King Vishtasp about the
error of his ways. Arjasp threatened Vishtasp that if he did not
pay tribute, Arjasp would enter Airan with fire and sword to destroy
Vishtasp's authority and put Vishtasp to death. King Vishtasp refused
to be coerced and the delegation returned with his defiant reply.
Arjasp
lost no time in gathering a large army to invade Airan. Once he
had gathered an immense horde, they marched towards Airan. Devastation
marked their route and villages they passed were plundered and put
to the torch. The dust they raised in their march obscured the sun
and the moon until at last they entered the battlefield where the
army of Airan awaited them.
The
army of Airan commanded by Zarir, King Vishtasp's valiant brother,
arrayed itself against the invaders. The two kings gave their generals
their battle standards and a furious battle ensued and raged on
for two weeks. Zarir had a superior battle plan and fought so courageously
at the head of his troops that slowly the tide of battle began to
turn against the armies of Arjasp. Arjasp's soldiers became so fearful
of Zarir when he came into their midst, that Arjasp put a handsome
bounty on Zarir's head. Arjasp promised a treasury of gold, command
of the army and marriage into the royal family to the soldier who
would slay Zarir. The enticement produced the intended result. Bidirafsh,
one of Arjasp's soldiers, motivated by the promise of instant wealth,
power and royalty, with remorseless fury, killed the now exhausted
Zarir with a double-headed spear. The Airanian soldiers were demoralized
at the death of their general and the Arjasp's army began to push
back the Airanians.
On
hearing the news about the death of his brother, the disconsolate
King Vishtasp delegated command of the army to his son Esfandiar
(also spelt Isfandiar), a man of strong character. Esfandiar rallied
the distraught and dispirited Airanian army, rode into the thick
of battle, and sought out Bidirafsh who had adorned Zarir's armour.
Locked in mortal combat, Esfandiar drove a spear through Bidirafsh's
heart. Esfandiar then led his army to a hard fought victory over
the much larger enemy force and made Arjasp his next target. Facing
imminent capture, Arjasp fled for his life and escaped from the
battlefield.
Amongst
the many dead lying on the battlefield, Vishtasp found the body
of his brother. The King embraced his brother's corpse and spoke
to him in grief. He wiped the fallen hero's bloody and soiled face
with hand and placed the body on a golden bier. On the spot where
he found the slain Zarir, Vishtasp had a lofty memorial constructed,
and within this monument, an flame burned day and night as a testament
to Zarir's undying spirit.
With
his victory over Arjasp, Vishtasp had succeeded in taking a first,
though risky and costly step, in removing Airan from the yoke of
feudal domination. Leaving the battlefield, the victorious Airanian
army returned to the jubilant capital of Balkh, and the people of
Airan celebrated their victory for many days. In recognition of
Esfandiar's fearless leadership, Vishtasp designated Esfandiar as
prince regent. Even as he did so, King Vishtasp was leery of Esfandiar's
sudden rise to fame. In an effort to keep Esfandiar away from the
capital and court, the King dispatched Esfandiar to lead additional
campaigns against neighbouring states that had traditionally competed
with Airan for power and commerce. Esfandiar accepted this commission
and in a relatively short space of time expanded the control and
boundaries of Airan to the extent it had been under the rule of
Feridoon, that is from Asia Minor in the west, to Sind and Hind
(Pakistan and India of old) in the east.
Esfandiar's
fame grew and was he widely admired as a hero and icon. The popularity
and respect afforded Esfandiar by the people soon eclipsed that
given to his father. It was a setting ripe for rumours, and rumours
about the ambitions of the gallant and upright prince regent began
to grow and spread. Gurzam, a wily courtier who secretly harboured
a bitter enmity towards Esfandiar, took advantage of this situation.
As a general and advisor, Gurzam had Vishtasp's confidence and ear.
Gurzam informed the King that he had received disturbing intelligence
from his sources in the regions and needed to speak to him alone
and in confidence. He told the King that even at the risk of incurring
the King's wrath; he felt duty bound to share some disturbing information
with him. Esfandiar, his sources had reported, was preparing to
march on the capital Balkh at the head of his immense army in order
to depose and imprison the King.
The
King, motivated perhaps by jealousy and insecurity, believed Gurzam.
He was filled with rage. He directed his anger not towards the malicious
Gurzam but towards his son – a son who had served King and
nation loyally and faithfully. With the motivation provided by these
intensely negative and dark feelings, he sent his Prime Minister
Jamasp to summon his son to appear before him. When the Prime Minister
conveyed the King's summons to Esfandiar, a sense of foreboding
came over the prince regent. Nevertheless, Esfandiar dutifully went
to the capital and appeared before his father. There before the
assembled court, despite the caution counselled by his Prime Minister,
the King accused Esfandiar of treason. In quick order, Vishtasp
had Esfandiar indicted, found guilty, chained and imprisoned in
a tower prison.
The
ensuing days were filled with turmoil and anxiety. To escape the
many demands on him, Vishtasp left his court and went to visit his
neighbour King Rustam of Sistan. There he spent two years indulging
in hunting and feasting while neglecting his responsibilities as
king. With its king absent and its army leaderless, demoralized
and in disarray, the kingdom of Airan was vulnerable to attack,
and King Arjasp seized the opportunity. Arjasp sent his son Kahram
at the head of a large army to attack Airan once again, seek retribution
for their earlier defeat, and make Airan a vassal state of Turan
once more. Kahram routed the much smaller, hastily assembled and
ill-equipped army of Airan and succeeded in capturing its capital
Balkh.
Vishtasp's
wife who was in the capital when Kahram captured the city, disguised
as a Turanian and escaped on horseback. She rode as hard as the
horse could gallop, covered a distance that would take two days
in one, changed horses along the way, and did not sleep until she
reached Sistan and informed her husband of the fall of Balkh. After
giving him this devastating news, she severely admonished Vishtasp
for his abdication of responsibilities and negligence. Vishtasp
was overcome with anguish and shame. He gathered his wits about
him, put together a reserve force and rushed back to expel the invaders
but was defeated in a battle with the enemy.
Jamasp
advised the King that only Esfandiar had the ability to defend and
liberate the kingdom, and that it was time to free Esfandiar from
his unjust imprisonment. King Vishtasp, who had earlier ignored
Jamasp's advice regarding the indictment of Esfandiar, agreed and
dispatched Jamasp to Esfandiar's mountain prison. This time the
Prime Minister's task was to ask Esfandiar to forgive his father,
resume command of the army and liberate the territory captured by
Kahram. Esfandiar was not so easily moved. It was only after listening
to the imploring entreaties of Jamasp – who Esfandiar trusted
completely – that Esfandiar finally agreed to accompany Jamasp
and be reconciled with his father.
From
the far reaches of the fractured empire, soldiers answered Esfandiar's
call to reassemble the army. After they were equipped and retrained,
he led them to a hard fought and resounding victory over the occupying
army of Turan, Chin and their confederates. Esfandiar fought so
fearlessly and tirelessly at the head of his troops that at the
end of the battle, the multitude of arrows sticking in Esfandiar's
armour made it look like a field of reeds. Esfandiar had routed
the invaders once more and his army chased the remnants of the invading
army until they were far beyond the borders of Airan. Airan was
once again free from Turanian domination.
Close of the Kayanian Dynasty
End of the First Phase of Zoroastrian-Aryan History :
The Kayanian dynasty ends in the Avesta with Zarathushtra's patron
king, King Vishtasp. In the Shahnameh, the dynasty fades out with
Vishtasp's grandson Bahram.
Tree of Kayanian Aryan kings
The
Missing Years
Gap in Aryan History Until the Start of Median / Persian
History :
The end of the Kayanian dynasty appears to coincide with the closing
of the Avestan canon. Some disruption appears to have put an end
to ancient Aryan history, especially Zoroastrian history in Central
Asia. After a significant gap in time the missing years of Zoroastrian
history - the next we hear of the Zoroastrian Aryans is not through
legend or scripture, but with the emergence of the Medes and Persians
a thousand kilometres to the west. In our pages on Aryan Religions
we examine the possible reasons for the gap in Zoroastrian Aryan
history - the war of religions - where the Zoroastrians (and perhaps
even the Aryans) may have lost their claim to power in Central Asia.
They could very well have continued to live and be part of the Central
Asian kingdoms, but without a Zoroastrian king on the throne, until
that is, the rise of the Medes and the Persians.
After
the hiatus, the Medes and the Persians reasserted the tradition
of Zoroastrian-Aryan kingship, and once they had consolidated their
power, they brought back into their domain, the traditional Zoroastrian-Aryan
eastern (Central Asian) lands as well. The one change was that the
seat of power of the federation of Aryan kingdoms had now shifted
westward.
This
section brings our examination of Aryan prehistory - the first,
Eastern, phase of Aryan history - to a close. The reader can continue
to follow the sequence of pages under our History menu listings,
or proceed to the page on Ranghaya which introduces the reader to
the second, Western, phase of Zoroastrian-Aryan history.
Source
:
http://www.heritageinstitute.com/
zoroastrianism/legendary/index.htm