ARDRASHIR
I
Overview
:
The
Sasanians take over :
Ardashir I establishes a new dynasty, the Sasanians. From his base
in Persis (Fars), Ardashir soon routs the Parthians, and begins
to rebuild Eranshahr - the home of the Iranians (Aryans).
The
Iranian Plateau in the time of Ardashir I
Achaemenids
:
'Ardashir'
was a form of Artaxerxes, which had lingered as a name for princes
of Fars. The Achaemenids themselves had by this time "receded
into a legendary haze" (C E Bosworth), apart from Darius III
(Dara), victim of Alexander, whom Ardashir saw himself as avenging.
"Hundred
Columns" :
Persian
sad-sutun, so-called by Shapur II when HE PICKNICKED THERE MID 4TH
CENTURY. Ammianus Marcellinus, the Roman historian, writing at about
that time, did know Persepolis by name (23.6).
Anahita
:
The
worship of Anahita (Anahid) and Mithra had been added to that of
Ahura Mazda by Artaxerxes II. Perhaps her temple remained as a focus
for the survival of Persian traditions. Although originally associated
with water (along with Mithra, the sun - the two most important
things for Persians), she was also a war-goddess (like Athena in
Greece).
A
possible solution :
The
Shahnameh connects Sasan to India; he was very likely a member of
the Gondopharid dynasty - a branch of the Arsacids that ruled in
Sakastan (Sistan), supported by the Suren family, who originated
from this region. Ardashir and Shapur I perhaps call themselves
sons of Pabag, not of Sasan to avoid giving the impresssion that
they belonged to a foreign dynasty. The success of Ardashir could
be seen as a continuation of the murderous rivalries within the
complex Arsacid family. Roman writers (Ammianus Marcellinus especially)
seem unaware of the change of management - perhaps there wasn't!
Maybe the first Sasanians were just keen to differentiate themselves
from the Parthians. (See article by Olbrycht in The Parthian and
Early Sasanian Empires [Oxbow 2016])
The
Persian past :
Firdowsi's
Shahnameh has a story which would seem to connect Ardashir's origin
with that of Cyrus: he too was apparently raised by shepherds. Sasan
was a shepherd working for king Papag of Persis. Papag dreams he
sees Sasan riding a white elephant, with everyone saluting him.
The wise men tell Papag that Sasan will become king. So he marries
his daughter to Sasan, and their son is - Ardashir! According to
Firdowsi, Ardashir is also descended from Dara - Darius III, Alexander's
opponent (and half-brother accoring to the Shahnameh).
Eranshahr
:
From
KERDIR'S inscription at Naqsh-i Rustam can be deduced :
Included
in Eranshahr: Persis, Parthia, Babylonia, Mesene, Adiabene, Atropatene,
Isfahan, Ray, Kerman, Sistan, Gurgan and Peshavar.
An-eran
(not included): Syria, Cilicia, Armenia, Georgia, Albania, Balasagan
- though all currently under Sasanian control. See "Neighbours"
for more on these regions.
ARDASHIR
I
Founder of the Sasanian dynasty : ruled AD 224 - 241
Ardashir
I receives the symbol of kingship from Ahura Mazda
When
Ardashir defeated the Parthians, he saw himself reconnecting with
the past glories of Persia, although all knowledge of the actual
Persian empire of the ACHAEMENIDS had been long forgotten. But monuments,
such as Persepolis - known then as the "HUNDRED COLUMNS"
- even the original name (Parsa) name was no longer known - pointed
to past splendours. Tradition told him that a king, Dara, an ineffective
ruler, had been defeated by Iskander of Rum (Alexander of Macedonia).
Iskander had destroyed Dara's power and religion, and given the
ancestral lands over to a number of small-time chieftains (240 in
some accounts) during which time the land of Iran (Eranshahr) had
become poor and disordered. In the Sasanian vision, time was compressed
- and the 600 year hiatus involving hiatus involving Alexander,
the Seleucids, and the Parthians, was assumed to have lasted only
a few years. Ardashir had avenged Dara, and restored the empire
he had lost.
Like
Darius the Great, he feels he owes his power to Ahura Mazda - and
he shows himself, like Darius on the BISITUN INSCRIPTION, trampling
his defeated enemy underfoot: for Darius this was the "false
Smerdis", Gaumata, for Ardashir it was the Parthian Ardavan
IV. Notice how similar the king and the god are. The relief was
carved into the rock below the Achaemenid tombs at NAQSH-I RUSTAM,
in Fars near Persepolis. Ardashir did not know the true identity
of his Achaemenid predecessors, but he still wanted to be connected
with these former kings, whoever they were.
What
was his background? :
His origin is not clear. There are numerous unconvincing stories,
from which this information derives. He was born around AD 180,
in Persis (Fars). His father was called Papag (or Babak or Papak).
Sasan was a hereditary Zoroastrian priest in the fire-temple of
ANAHITA in Istakhr, allegedly descended from the Achaemenids, who
may (or may not) have been Papag's father, and hence Ardashir's
grandfather. Or was Sasan, as others claim, the actual father of
Ardashir, who was later adopted by Papag? WE'LL NEVER KNOW - but
the connection with Sasan, Zoroastrianism and the early kings of
Fars was obviously very important to Ardashir, in helping to make
out that his rule was genuinely CONNECTED WITH THE PERSIAN PAST.
Papag
(father or not) seized the kingship of Persis in around AD 205/6,
when he ousted the ruler of Istakhr, capital of Persis (Fars). But
when Papag died, his elder son Shapur, not Ardashir, was made king.
Ardashir challenged Shapur to fight for his throne - but he died
(in suspicious circumstances) before the battle. In AD 208 Ardashir
became king of Persis. He duly murdered his other brothers, and
crushed any local rulers who might be reluctant to accept him. He
refused to recognise the Parthian Ardavan IV as his overlord.
The
Parthians were right to be worried. Ardashir soon attacked Ctesiphon,
with willing support from others who no longer trusted the Parthians
- especially the Medes and other peoples from the north-west of
the empire.
Ardashir
overcomes the Parthians and unites Iran :
Ardashir defeated the Parthians in battle three times, finally and
decisively at Hormozgan (location unknown) in April AD 224, where
he personally killed Ardavan and "trampled his head",
and was crowned king of kings . Two years later, by the time he
took Ctesiphon, (AD 226). Ardashir controlled most of Iraq and the
Iranian plateau. The Parthian nobles rapidly transferred their allegiance
to Ardashir. Despite their role in undermining the authority of
the Parthian kings, they wanted someone who could stand up to the
Romans.
Having
imposed his authority on western Iran, in AD 227 Ardashir moved
east, where a coalition led by the Arsacid king of Armenia (which
included the formidable KUSHANS of Bactria) was determined to restore
Parthian rule. Ardashir defeated them or bought them off, and recovered
for Persia the territories of Makran (which now included the western
coast of the Persian Gulf - the beginnining of Sasanian interest
in Arabia), Sistan, Hyrcania, Margiana and Chorasmia. The Kushans
in Bactria and India recognised his authority. Only Armenia remained
- it took a ten year war to bring Armenia under his control.
The
unity of Iran was an important idea for the Sasanians. The land
where they lived had been given to the Aryans/Iranians by Ahura
Mazda - as demonstrated in the Naqsh-i Rustam relief (above).
Eranshahr
:
The concept of "where the Aryan/Iranians belong" became
known as ERANSHAHR (or Iranshahr) - the home of the Iranians. Other
territories ruled by the Sasanians would be called an-Eran (or Aniran:
non-Iran). Coins issued by Ardashir were inscribed :
Mazdaean
majesty, Ardashir, king of kings of Eran, who is descended from
the gods.
Coin
of Ardashir I, with a Zoroastrian fire-altar on the reverse
Ardashir
built an entirely new capital for himself in Persis, at Gur (Firuzabad),
on the site of his victory over the Parthian Artabanus. It's remarkable
in being completely circular (although several Parthian cities were
laid out this way), with the remains of a Zoroastrian fire-temple
in the centre :
Ardashir's
new circular capital at Firuzabad
He
also built himself a magnificent new fortified palace nearby
:
Ardashir's
palace near Firuzabad, Fars
Source
:
https://www.the-persians.co.uk/
sasanians1.htm