ROSTAM
FARROKHZAD
17th-century
Shahnameh illustration of Rostam Farrokhzad
Rostam
Farrokhzad was an Iranian dynast from the Ispahbudhan family, who
served as the spahbed ("military marshal") of the northwestern
quarter (kust) of Adurbadagan during the reign of Boran (r. 630–630,
631–632) and Yazdegerd III (r. 632–651). Rostam is remembered
as a historical figure, a character in the Persian epic poem Shahnameh
("Book of Kings"), and as a touchstone of most Iranian
nationalists.
Died
: 19 November 636 al-Qadisiyyah
Allegiance : Sasanian Empire
Commands held : Spahbed of Adurbadagan (631–636)
Battles/wars : Battle of al-Qadisiyyah
Relations : Farrukh Hormizd (father), Farrukhzad (brother)
Background
:
Rostam was a member of the House of Ispahbudhan, one of the Seven
Great Houses of Iran, which formed the elite aristocracy of the
Sasanian Empire; the family traced its descent back to military
marshals (spahbed), and occupied important offices in the realm.
According to a romanticized legend about their origin, a daughter
of the Parthian/Arsacid king Phraates IV (r. 37–2 BC), named
Koshm, married a "general of all Iranians"; their offspring
bore the title of "Aspahpet Pahlav", later forming the
Ispahbudhan clan. Through their Arsacid lineage, the Ispahbudhan
claimed to be descendants of the Kayanian kings Dara II and Esfandiyar.
Under
the Sasanians, the Ispahbudhan enjoyed such a high status that they
were acknowledged as "kin and partners of the Sasanians".
Indeed, Rostam's father Farrukh Hormizd was the first-cousin of
the Sasanian King of Kings (shahanshah) Khosrow II (r. 590–628),
while his great-grandfather Shapur was the first cousin of shahanshah
Khosrow I (r. 531–579). Although the hereditary homeland of
the Ispahbudhan seems to have been Khorasan, the family in the course
of time came to rule the northwestern quarter (kust) of Adurbadagan
(not to be confused with the namesake province of Adurbadagan).
Rostam's birthplace is hence reported to be in Armenia, Adurbadagan,
Hamadan, or Ray. Rostam had a brother named Farrukhzad, who was
active in Ctesiphon and enjoyed a great status there, reportedly
being a favourite of Khosrow II.
War
with the Byzantine Empire :
Map
of the northwestern Sasanian province of Adurbadagan
In 602, the Byzantine emperor Maurice (r. 582–602) was murdered
by his political rival Phocas. As a result, Khosrow II proceeded
to declare war, ostensibly to avenge the death of Maurice. During
the two decade war, Khosrow was initially successful, conquering
the Roman provinces in the Near East, including Egypt. During the
third phase of the war (624), however, the tables turned heavily,
with the new Byzantine emperor Heraclius conquering Transcaucasia,
thus leaving the northwestern Sasanian realm exposed. During this
period, many Iranian grandees became dissatisfied with the rule
of Khosrow II, not only due to the Byzantine victories but also
his policies.
This
included Rostam, who at the head of 10,000 soldiers, rebelled in
the Adurbadagan province. Around the same time, Heraclius invaded
Adurbadagan, sacking the city of Ganzak. The modern historian Parvaneh
Pourshariati proposes two possibilities behind the success of Heraclius'
invasion of Adurbadagan; one being that the significance of the
rebellion allowed him to attack the province; the other being that
Farrukh Hormizd stopped supporting Khosrow II, as a result allowing
Heraclius to attack Adurbadagan. By 627, the distinguished Mihranid
general Shahrbaraz had mutinied, while Farrukh Hormizd secretly
conspired with him against Khosrow II. The following year, Khosrow
II was overthrown by several powerful factions within the empire,
which included; Shahrbaraz, who represented the Mihran family; the
House of Ispahbudhan represented by Farrukh Hormizd and his two
sons Rostam and Farrukhzad; the Armenian faction represented by
Varaztirots II Bagratuni; and the Kanarang. The factions installed
Khosrow II's son Kavad II on the throne, who soon had his father
executed.
Civil
war in Iran :
Reign of Kavad II, Ardashir III and Shahrbaraz :
The fall of Khosrow II culminated in the Sasanian civil war of 628–632,
with the most powerful members of the nobility gaining full autonomy
and starting to create their own government. The hostilities between
the Persian (Parsig) and Parthian (Pahlav) noble-families were also
resumed, which broke up the wealth of the nation. A few months later,
the devastating Plague of Sheroe swept through the western Sasanian
provinces. Half the population, including Kavad II himself, perished.
He was succeeded by his eight-year-old son, who became Ardashir
III. Ardashir's ascension was supported by both the Pahlav, Parsig,
and a third major faction named the Nimruzi. However, sometime in
629, the Nimruzi withdrew their support for the king, and started
to conspire with Shahrbaraz to overthrow him. The Pahlav, under
their leader Farrukh Hormizd, began supporting Khosrow II's daughter
Boran as the new ruler of Iran, who subsequently started minting
coins in the Pahlav areas of Amol, Nishapur, Gurgan and Ray. On
27 April 630, Ardashir III was killed by Shahrbaraz, who in turn
was murdered, after a reign of forty days, in a coup by Farrukh
Hormizd. Farrukh Hormizd then helped Boran ascend the throne, sometime
in late June 630.
Reign
of Boran, Shapur-i Shahvaraz and Azarmidokht :
Drachma
of Azarmidokht with the bust of her father Khosrow II to the left
Boran's accession was most likely due to her being the only remaining
legitimate heir of the empire able to rule, along with her sister
Azarmidokht. However, she was deposed in 630, and Shapur-i Shahrvaraz,
the son of Shahrbaraz and a sister of Khosrow II, was made ruler
of Iran. When he was not recognized by the Parsig faction of the
powerful general Piruz Khosrow, he was deposed in favor of Azarmidokht.
Farrukh Hormizd, in order to strengthen his authority and create
a harmonious modus vivendi between the Pahlav and Parsig families,
asked Azarmidokht (who was a Parsig nominee) to marry him. Not daring
to refuse, she had him killed with the aid of the Mihranid aristocrat
Siyavakhsh, who was the grandson of Bahram Chobin, the famous military
commander and briefly monarch of Iran. Rostam, who was at that time
stationed in Khorasan, succeeded him as the leader of the Pahlav.
In order to avenge his father, he left for Ctesiphon, in the words
of the 9th century historian Sayf ibn Umar, "defeating every
army of Azarmidokht that he met". He then defeated Siyavakhsh's
forces at Ctesiphon and captured the city. Azarmidokht was shortly
afterwards blinded and killed by Rostam, who restored Boran to the
throne in June 631. Boran complained to him about the state of the
empire, which was at that time in a state of frailty and decline.
She reportedly invited him to administer its affairs, and so allowed
him to assume overall power.
Drachma
of Boran
A settlement was reportedly made between the family of Boran and
Rostam: according to Sayf, it stated that the queen should "entrust
him [i.e., Rostam] with the rule for ten years,” at which
point sovereignty would return "to the family of Sasan if they
found any of their male offspring, and if not, then to their women".
Boran deemed the agreement appropriate, and had the factions of
the country summoned (including the Parsig), where she declared
Rostam as both the leader of the country and its military commander.
The Parsig faction agreed, with Piruz Khosrow being entrusted to
administer the country alongside Rostam.
The
Parsig agreed to work with the Pahlav because of the fragility and
decline of Iran, and also because their Mihranid collaborators had
been temporarily defeated by Rostam. However, the cooperation between
the Parsig and Pahlav would prove short-lived, due to the unequal
conditions between the two factions, with Rostam's faction having
a much more significant portion of power under the approval of Boran.
In the following year a revolt broke out in Ctesiphon. While the
imperial army was occupied with other matters, the Parsig, dissatisfied
with the regency of Rostam, called for the overthrow of Boran and
the return of the prominent Parsig figure Bahman Jaduya, who had
been dismissed by her. Boran was killed shortly after; she was presumably
strangled by Piruz Khosrow. Hostilities were thus resumed between
the two factions. Not long afterwards, both Rostam and Piruz Khosrow
were threatened by their own men, who had become alarmed by the
declining state of the country. Rostam and Piruz Khosrow thus agreed
to work together once more, installing Boran's nephew Yazdegerd
III (r. 632–651) on the throne, and so putting an end to the
civil war.
Drachma
of a young Yazdegerd III, the last Sasanian monarch of Iran
Accession of Yazdegerd III and end of the civil war :
Yazdegerd was crowned in the Anahid fire-temple in Istakhr, where
he had been hiding during the civil war. The temple was the very
place where the first Sasanian shahanshah Ardashir I (r. 224–242)
had crowned himself, indicating that the reason behind Yazdegerd's
coronation at the same place was due to hopes for a rejuvenation
of the empire. He was almost the last living member of the House
of Sasan. Most scholars agree that Yazdegerd was eight years old
at his coronation. At his accession, he assigned Rostam with the
defense of the empire, telling him "Today you are the [most
prominent] man among the Persians." Although being acknowledged
as the rightful monarch by both the Parsig and Pahlav factions,
Yazdegerd did not seem to have held sway over all of his empire.
Indeed, during the first years of his rule coins were only minted
in Pars, Sakastan, and Khuzestan, approximately corresponding to
the regions of the southwest (Xwarwaran) and southeast (Nemroz),
where the Parsig was based. The Pahlav, who were mainly based in
the northern portion of the empire, refused to mint coins of him.
The
Arab invasion of the Sasanian Empire :
Throughout this period the great expansion of Arab-Muslim armies
had slowly been penetrating the south-western frontiers under Caliph
Umar ibn al-Khattab. The Persians had repeatedly blocked this advance
and in 634 the Caliph's army suffered a seemingly decisive defeat
at the Battle of the Bridge. The Sasanian general Bahman Jaduya,
though, was ordered back to Ctesiphon by Rostam in order to put
down a revolt in his own capital city. Caliph Umar's forces retreated,
only to launch a successful assault three years later.
Map
of Sasanian Mesopotamia and its surroundings
In 636, Yazdegerd III ordered Rostam Farrokhzad to subdue the Muslim
Arabs invading Iran and then told him: "Today you are the [most
prominent] man among the Iranians. You see that the people of Iran
have not faced a situation like this since the family of Ardashir
I assumed power." Yazdegerd then said: "the Arabs and
their exploits since they have camped at Qadisiyyah and ... what
the Iranians have suffered at their hands."
Rostam
then replied by saying that the Arabs were "a pack of wolves,
falling upon unsuspecting shepherds and annihilating them."
However,
Yazdegerd then argued with him and said: "It is not like that.
I put the question to you in the expectation that you would describe
them clearly and that then I would be able to reinforce you so that
you might act according to the [real situation]. But you did not
say the right thing." Yazdegerd "then compared the Arabs
to an eagle who looked upon a mountain where birds take shelter
at night and stay in their nests at the foot of it. In the morning
the birds recognized that the eagle is preying upon them. Whenever
a bird became separated from the rest, the eagle snatched him. When
the birds saw him [doing this], they did not take off out of fear
... If they had taken off all at once, they would have repelled
him. The worst thing that could happen to them would be that all
would escape save one. But if each group acted in turn and took
off separately, they all perished. This was the similarity between
them and the Iranians."
Rostam,
however, did not agree with Yazdegerd and then told him: "O
king, let me [act in my own way]. The Arabs still dread the Iranians
as long as you do not arouse them against me. It is to be hoped
that my good fortune will last and that God will save us the trouble."
Rostam then said: "We should employ the right ruse," he
insisted. "In war, patience is superior to haste, and the order
of the day is now patience. To fight one army after another is better
than a single [and total] defeat and is also harder on our enemy."
Yazdegerd, however, was too young and stubborn to listen to Rostam.
Before
the Muslim Arabs and the Sasanians engaged in battle, Rostam tried
to negotiate with the Arabs. He therefore sent them a letter saying
:
"In
the presence of the pure Lord of the world we may not stand without
fear and reverence, for it is through him that the revolving heavens
endure and all his governance is justice and charity. May there
be blessings from him on the monarch who is the adornment of his
crown, throne and seal, who by his Farr holds Ahriman [the spirit
of evil] enthralled, the lord of the sword and the sublime crown.
This deplorable vent has occurred and to no purpose has this grievous
thing, this struggle, come to pass. Tell me this, who is your king?
What man are you and what is your religion and way of life? Over
whom do you seek to triumph, you, naked commander of a naked army?
With a loaf of bread you are satisfied yet remain hungry. You have
neither elephants nor platforms nor baggage nor gear. Mere existence
in Iran would be enough for you, since crown and ring belong to
another, one who possesses elephants and treasures, Farr and sublime
rank.
His
forebears from ancestor to ancestor have all been renowned kings.
When he is visible, there is no moon in the sky. There is no monarch
of his stature on earth. When he laughs at a feast with his lips
open and teeth shining like silver, he gives away what is the ransom
of an Arab chief without any loss to his treasury. His hounds, panthers
and falcons number twelve thousand, all dight with golden bells
and earrings. From a diet of camel's milk and lizards the Arabs
have come so far as to aspire to the Kayanian throne. Is there no
shame in your eyes? Do feeling and honour not lie on the path of
your wisdom? With a countenance such as yours, such birth, such
sentiments and spirit, do you aspire to such a crown and such a
throne? If you seek to possess some portion of the world you will
not make over-boastful claims. Send us some man to speak for you,
someone of experience, a warrior of understanding, of the kind who
may tell us what your religion is and who your guide is upon the
royal throne. I shall send a cavalier to the Shah requesting him
to grant you what you desire. And now do not attempt to make war
on so great a monarch, for it is in his hands that the outcome of
it will lie. Observe well the contents of his letter filled with
good counsel; do not bind up the eyes and ears of wisdom."
After
having read the letter, the Arabs did as Rostam asked and sent a
man named Zuhrah. However, the negotiations with him did not go
well, which made Rostam ask for another messenger, and thus a man
named Mughirah ibn Shubah was sent. Rostam then told Mughirah: "We
are firmly established in the land, victorious over our enemies,
and noble among nations. None of the kings has our power, honor,
dominion." While Rostam was talking, Mughirah interrupted him
and said: "If you need our protection, then be under our protection,
and pay the poll tax out of hand in humility; otherwise it is the
sword." Feeling greatly insulted and angered, Rostam threatened
Mughirah and said: "Dawn will not break upon you tomorrow before
I kill you all".
Rostam,
while preparing to face the Arab army, wrote a letter to his brother
Farrukhzad, telling him to gather an army and then go to Azerbaijan
where he should pray for him. Rostam also reminded Farrukhzad that
Yazdegerd III was the only legacy left from the Sasanians. Rostam
then set out from Ctesiphon in command of a large Sasanian force
to confront the Arab-Muslim army of Caliph Umar on the western bank
of the Euphrates River at the plains of al-Qadisiyyah, a now abandoned
city in southern Mesopotamia, southwest of al-Hillah and al-Kufah
in Iraq.
Death
:
There are multiple accounts detailing the death of Rostam, but all
of them state that he perished during the battle.
One
account states that Rostam was found dead in the sandstorm with
over 600 wounds on his body. However, the Persians were not aware
of his death and continued to fight. The Sassanid right wing counter-attacked
and gained its lost position, as the Muslims' left wing retreated
back to their original position. The Muslims' left center, now under
Qa’qa's command, when denied the support of their left wing,
also retreated back to its original position. A version from Ya'qubi
further elaborates that Dhiraar bin Al-Azwar, Tulayha, Amru bin
Ma'adi Yakrib and Kurt bin Jammah al-Abdi were the men that discovered
the corpse of Rostam.
Two
additional narratives also exist, but both have been suggested to
likely be the untrustworthy inventions of later story-tellers intending
to mock and romanticize the incident respectively. They are as follows
:
During
the final day of the battle, there was a heavy sandstorm facing
the Sasanian army. Rostam used a camel loaded with weapons as shelter
to avoid the sandstorm. Not knowing that Rostam was behind, Hilal
ibn `Ullafah accidentally cut the girdle of the load on the camel.
The weapons fell on Rostam and broke his back leaving him half dead
and paralyzed. Hilal beheaded Rostam and shouted "I swear by
the God of Kaaba that I have killed Rostam." Shocked by the
head of their legendary leader dangling before their eyes, the Sassanid
soldiers were demoralized, and the commanders lost control of the
army. Many Sassanid soldiers were slain in the chaos, with some
escaping through the river, and finally the rest of the army surrendered.
However, due to the presence of inconsistencies, literary devices,
and comedic elements, it has been suggested that this account is
unreliable and highly improbable, with even the identity the Arab
soldier that delivered the death blow being disputed.
A second account, likely developed in response to the first, instead
has Rostam face the Arab commander, Sa'd, in personal combat. During
the fight, Rostam is temporarily blinded by the sandstorm which
gives his opponent an opportunity to strike and kill him.
Aftermath :
The defeat of Rostam's army heavily demoralized the people of the
Sasanian Empire. Soon, after Rostam's death, many more Sasanian
veterans were killed, which included: Piruz Khosrow, Shahrvaraz
Jadhuyih, Mardanshah in 642, and Siyavakhsh and Muta of Dailam in
643. In 651, Yazdegerd III was murdered by Mahuy Suri, and the Arabs
conquered Khorasan soon after.
Personality
and skills :
The Shahnameh describes him as: "A sagacious, warlike and one
who had been a conqueror. He was a calculator of the stars, of great
perception; and he listened deeply to what his counsellors advised."
Christensen
describes him as: "A man endowed with extraordinary energy,
a good administrator and a fine general."
Family
tree :
King
of Kings : Orange Color
King
: Yellow Color
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Rostam_Farrokhzad