KHUSRAU
I, GREATEST OF ALL SASANIAN KINGS
Overview
:
Khusrau
I ruthlessly restores order and stability to Eranshahr.
Khusrau aka Khosrow, Chosroes, Kesra, Kisra etc. He's also called
Anushirvan (Anushirwan) meaning "immortal soul" in recognition
of his successful and prosperous reign, and interest in philosophy,
art and science.
"Utmost
severity" :
The
Shahnameh of Firdowsi preserves a horror story: "In Kesra's
(Khusrau's) palace there was a garden with a high wall round it.
It was dug up from end to end, and Mazdak's followers were planted
there head down, with their feet in the air, like trees. Kesra said
to Mazdak 'Go to my garden and see trees of a kind no one has seen
before.' When Mazdak saw what was there he gave a cry of despair
and fainted. Kesra had a tall gallows built and the impious Mazdak
was strung up alive, head down. He was killed with a shower of arrows.
If you have sense, you will not follow Mazdak's way." (A lesson
for all communists!)
Dailamites
:
A
fiercely independent Iranian tribe, who kept their identity even
under Arab rule. From them came the BUYID DYNASTY which ruled Iran
from the 930s until the coming of the Seljuk Turks.
KHUSRAU
I (531 - 579)
Restoring order
First things first :
1.
Make peace with Byzantium: he could deal with them properly later.
2.
Crush the rivals for the crown: he executed his brothers and the
nobles who'd supported them.
3. Make
peace with the Mazdakites: again they would be dealt with later.
4.
Complete the survey and tax reform begun by Kavad.
Once
he was secure: crushing the Mazdakites :
It was time to deal with the followers of Mazdak, who were taking
advantage of Khusrau's fight with his brothers to begin a major
rebellion against the new tax system - at any rate in Mesopotamia.
Up until now, tax had been payable in kind on a proportion of a
farmer's harvest. Now a tax had to be paid three times a year up
front in cash on an average of several years' harvest. In addition
there was a poll tax, payable by each individual - but not by nobles
or priests. Much more efficient for the government, but disastrous
for the peasants, for whom a cash economy was a novelty. To raise
cash they'd have to sell their produce, and, because everyone was
trying to sell theirs at the same time, prices would be very low.
The peasants couldn't then afford the tax and would have to borrow
at high rates of interest.
Suppression
of demonstrators protesting against the "poll tax" in
London, 1990
This
more efficient new system is widely praised in the sources (and
by many modern historians) - but it's hardly surprising that the
peasants found a leader in the communist heretic Mazdak and rebelled
against the new tax. There was a large-scale revolt, causing chaos
in the Sasanian empire.
They
would break into a man's home and take his house, his wives and
his property without them being able to stop him. [al-Tabari]
Typical
farmland in southern Mesopotamia
Many
sources agree that the rebellion was suppressed by Khusrau with
the UTMOST SEVERITY. Various accounts allege that 80,000 (or 100,000
or 150,000) were killed in a single day in just one area. But at
least some of the peasants got what they wanted: Khusrau (according
to al-Tabari) distributed the property of the Mazdakite leaders
among the poor. But the Mazdakite movement wasn't destroyed - it
simply went underground, and resurfaced during the early Islamic
period - their doctrines were often linked by contemporary writers
with those of the Shi'a. The power of the nobles, which had been
affected by Mazdak was not fully restored. From the time of Khusrau
I a new middle class of dehgans, small landowners, and, vitally,
tax-collectors, became more important - and they were now allowed
to be part of the élite Savaran cavalry.
Strengthening
defences :
Khusrau had defensive walls built to keep out undesirable visitors
to Eranshahr: in the northeast against the Hephthalites, in the
Caucasus, and in the southwest, where Arab pressure was beginning
to be felt.
At
the same time, separate military commands were created for the "four
quarters" of the country: Mesopotamia, the Caucasus, Central
Asia and the Persian Gulf, each with a general (spahbad) in charge.
There
were also important reforms to the army: no longer was the defence
of Eranshahr to rely on contributions from individual nobles (as
it had from Parthian times) - there was now to be a national army,
loyal to the king directly. Weaponry and equipment was also updated.
Out went the well-protected but comparatively immobile heavy cavalry.
In came a lighter more versatile force, able to fight with lances
and bows: and of course they all now used stirrups. Units were also
recruited from elsewhere - the DAILAMITE INFANTRY from the Alborz
area south of the Caspian Sea was particularly praised, even by
the Byzantines.
The
road system of the Achaemenids was upgraded and expanded - to make
it easier to move troops from north to south as well as east to
west.
Source
:
https://www.the-persians.co.uk/
khusrauI.htm