KAYANIAN
DYNASTY
The
Kayanians (also Kays, Kayanids or Kaianids, or Kiani) are a semi-mythological
dynasty of Persian tradition and folklore which supposedly ruled
after the Pishdadids. Considered collectively, the Kayanian kings
are the heroes of the Avesta, the sacred texts of Zoroastrianism,
and of the Shahnameh, Iran's national epic.
As
an epithet of kings and the reason the dynasty is so called, Middle
and New Persian kay(an) originates from Avestan kavi (or kauui)
"king" and also "poet-sacrificer" or "poet-priest".
The word is also etymologically related to the Avestan notion of
kavaem khareno, the "divine royal glory" that the Kayanian
kings were said to hold. The Kiani Crown is a physical manifestation
of that belief.
In
scripture :
The earliest known foreshadowing of the major legends of the Kayanian
kings appears in the Yashts of the Avesta, where the dynasts offer
sacrifices to the gods in order to earn their support and to gain
strength in the perpetual struggle against their enemies, the Anaryas
(non-Aryans, sometimes identified as the Turanians).
In
Yasht 5, 9.25, 17.45-46, Haosravah, a Kayanian king later known
as Kay Khosrow, together with Zoroaster and Jamasp (a premier of
Zoroaster's patron Vishtasp, another Kayanian king) worship in Airyanem
Vaejah. The account tells that King Haosravah united the various
Aryan (Iranian) tribes into one nation (Yasht 5.49, 9.21, 15.32,
17.41).
In
tradition and folklore :
Towards the end of the Sassanid period, Khosrow II (590-628, named
after the Kay Khosrow of legend) ordered a compilation of the legends
surrounding the Kayanians. The result was the Khwaday-Namag or "Book
of Lords," a long historiography of the Iranian nation from
the primordial Gayomart to the reign of Khosrow II, with events
arranged according to the perceived sequence of kings and queens,
fifty in number.
The
compilation may have been prompted by concern over deteriorating
national spirit. There were disastrous global climate changes of
535-536 and the Plague of Justinian to contend with and the Iranians
would have found much-needed solace in the collected legends of
their past.
Following
the collapse of the Sassanid Empire and the subsequent rise of Islam
in the region, the Kayanian legends fell out of favour until the
first revival of Iranian culture under the Samanids. Together
with the folklore preserved in the Avesta, the Khwaday-Namag served
as the foundation of other epic collections in prose, such as those
commissioned by Abu Mansur Abd al-Razzaq, the texts of which have
since been lost. The Samanid-sponsored revival also led to the resurgence
of Zoroastrian literature, such as the Denkard, book 7.1 of which
is also a historiography of Kayanians. The best known work of the
genre is however Firdowsi's Shahnameh "Book of Kings",
which - though drawing on earlier works - is entirely in verse.
Kayanian
dynasts :
• Kay Kawad
• Kay Kavus
• Kay Khosrow
• Kay Lohrasp
• Vishtasp
• Kay Bahman
• Humay Chehrzad
• Kay Darab
• Darius III
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Kayanian_dynasty