Religion, Conflict and Continuity in the Early Sasanian Period

Autor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2021.10.02

Słowa kluczowe:

Sasanians, Ardashir I, Shapur I, Kerdir, Mani, religion, pre-islamic Iran

Abstrakt

This article investigates the relationship between historical/religious memory and the perception of power in the early Sasanian period, and analyses how dynastic reflexes are formulated by religion/tradition in the new system within the context of Ardashir, Kerdir and Mani. It asserts that we can discover the relationship between the Sasanian elites and religion if we understand the factors that mobilised and remodelled their historical memories. Based on these factors, it proposes that the natural relationship established by the Sasanian dynasty during the state-building phase was fuelled by historical/traditional factors rather than by conscious political factors. Thus, the inherent links between
the representatives of power and the religious tradition in the reign of Ardashir, founder of the Sasanian state, have been consciously politicised since the reign of Shapur I.

Pobrania

Statystyki pobrań niedostępne.

Opublikowane

11.07.2021 — zaktualizowane 11.07.2021

Numer

Dział

ACTA MILITARIA IRANICA

Jak cytować

YÜCEL, M. (2021). Religion, Conflict and Continuity in the Early Sasanian Period. Historia I Świat, 10, 43-69. https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2021.10.02