Table of Contents
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MAMIKONEAN FAMILY
Nina Garsoian
the most distinguished family in Early Christian Armenia after the ruling Arsacid house. Their power survived the fall of the dynasty in 428 and began to wane only from the end of the 6th century.
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MAMMALS
Multiple Authors
"warm-blooded" vertebrate animals that have hair and produce milk to nourish their young.
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MAMMALS i. Mammals of Iran, Afghanistan, and Central Asia
Steven C. Anderson
an account of mammals in history, literature, biodiversity, and biogeography.
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MAMMALS ii. Species List: Mammals of Iran, Afghanistan, and Central Asia
Steven C. Anderson
taxonomy of the mammals of the area, with their common names and range.
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MAMMALS iii. The Classification of Mammals and the Other Animal Classes according to Zoroastrian Tradition
Mahnaz Moazami
The first written information about certain animals in Iran comes from the Zoroastrian literature, according to which the entire animal kingdom is divided into two classes: “beneficent animals” and “evil animals.”
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MAMSIRATI, DÄBE
F. Thordarson
(Russian: Dabe Mamsurov), Ossetic author (1909-1966).
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MAʾMUN
C. Edmund Bosworth
(786-833), Abu’l-ʿAbbās ʿAbd-Allāh, the seventh Abbasid caliph (r. 813-833), son of Hārun-al-Rašid (d. 809) by a Persian concubine.
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MANDAEANS i. HISTORY
Edmondo F. Lupieri
an ethnic group (also called Nasoreans or Ar. Ṣābeʾin) belonging to one of the less represented religions of the Near East.
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MANDAEANS ii. THE MANDAEAN RELIGION
Kurt Rudolph
A major characteristic of the Mandaeans is the frequent ritual use of (running) water (for baptisms and ritual purifications); another is the possession of a rich literature in their own eastern Aramaic language and script, “Mandaic”.
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MANDAEANS iii. INTERACTION WITH IRANIAN RELIGION
Kurt Rudolph
assimilation and corresponding processing of Iranian (Persian) components within the Mandaean religion can be demonstrated on different levels: in the vocabulary, in the mythology or theology, in the cultic-ritual realm, and in the calendar.
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MANDAEANS iv. COMMUNITY IN IRAN
Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley
According to the 15 September 2004 United States Department of State International Religious Freedom Report for Iran, Section 1, the current Mandaean population in Persia comprises between 5,000 and 10,000 persons.
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MANDAEANS v. MANDAIC LANGUAGE
Christa Müller-Kessler
Mandaic is the term for the Aramaic dialect of the last remaining non-Christian Gnostics from Late Antiquity, the Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran (Ḵuzestān). It belongs to the Southeastern Aramaic dialect group with Babylonian Talmudic Aramaic and Koiné Babylonian Aramaic.
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MANDAEANS vi. NEO-MANDAIC LANGUAGE
Charles Häberl
or modern Mandaic, the contemporary form of Mandaic, the language of the Mandaean religious community of Iraq and Iran. As such, it is the only known form of any of the classical literary dialects of Aramaic to survive to the present date, but it is severely endangered today.
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MANDANE
Rüdiger Schmitt
name of a daughter of the Median king Astyages.
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MANGHITS
ANKE VON KÜGELGEN
self-denomination of Mongol and Turkic tribes which played an eminent role in the Golden Horde.
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MANI
Werner Sundermann
the founder of the religion of Manicheism in the 3rd century CE. His life, being the central human subject of Manichean salvation history, necessarily underwent hagiographical stylization.
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MANICHEAN ART
Zsuzsanna Gulacsi
term referring to objects with aesthetic appeal made for, and/or used in association with, the Manichean religion. Apart from a rock-crystal seal in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France in Paris, no other item of Manichean art is known from Sasanian Mesopotamia, where the religion originated.
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MANICHEAN SCRIPT
Desmond Durkin-Meisterernst
a right-to-left Semitic script, used by adherents of Manicheism to write texts in Middle Persian, Parthian, Sogdian, Early New Persian, Bactrian, and Uighur (Old Turkish). It is closely related to the Palmyrene script of Aramaic and the Estrangelo script of Syriac.
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MANICHEISM
Multiple Authors
the religion founded by Mani, who regarded his doctrine not as the religion of a region, a state, or a chosen people, but as the completion of the preceding great religions of Christianity, Zoroastrianism, and Buddhism.
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MANICHEISM i. GENERAL SURVEY
Werner Sundermann
Manicheism is the only world religion that has become completely extinct. Its founder, Mani, lived in the third century CE. His religion spread over the continents from the Atlantic to the Chinese Sea.
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MANICHEISM ii. THE MANICHEAN PANTHEON
Werner Sundermann
In this article, the gods of the Manicheans are considered collectively with regards to their names and functions.
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MANICHEISM iii. THE MANICHEAN PANDAEMONIUM
Werner Sundermann
demons and demonology in Manicheism.
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MANICHEISM iv. BUDDHIST ELEMENTS IN
P. Bryder
Mani, who came to be considered himself to be the seal of the prophets, named Buddha, Zarathustra, and Jesus as his forerunners.
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MANICHEISM v. MISSIONARY ACTIVITY AND TECHNIQUE
Werner Sundermann
The main primary sources on the beginning of Manichean missionary work are the Cologne Mani Codex and the Kephalaia.
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MANICHEISM vi. IN CHINA
Sammuel L.C. Lieu
Manicheism arrived in China in the sixth century, but its history in there was little known until the first decade of the 20th century, when a genuine Manichean text in Chinese was discovered in the Cave of Thousand Buddhas in Tun-huang.
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MANJIL
Marcel Bazin
town in the Rudbār district, Gilān province. Located at lat 36°44′ N, long 49°24′ E, where the Qezel-owzan (Kızıl-uzun) and Šāhrud rivers unite into the Safidrud.
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MANNEA
Ran Zadok
(Neo-Assyrian Mannāyu), name refering to a region southeast of Lake Urmia centered around modern Saqqez.
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MANṢUR B. NUḤ
C. Edmund Bosworth
the name of two of the later Amirs of the Samanids (q.v.), the first ruling in both Transoxiana and Khorasan, and the second in Transoxiana only.
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MANSURI, ZABIH-ALLAH
Ḥassan Mirābedini
(d. 1986), a prolific Iranian journalist, writer, and translator who wrote under the pseudonyms “Nāṣer” and “Pištāz”.
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MAPLE
Cross-Reference
See AFRĀ.
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MĀR ABĀ
Manfred Hutter
Zoroastrian convert to Christianity, catholicos for the Church of the East, 540-52 CE.
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MĀR MĀRI
Florence Jullien
the Christian apostle, considered as the first missionary in the Arsacid Empire.
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MARĀ BEBUS
Morteza Hosayni Dehkordi and EIr.
(Kiss me), the title of one of the most popular songs (taṣnif) of mid-twentieth century Iran.
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MARATHI LANGUAGE, PERSIAN ELEMENTS IN
S. H. Qasemi and EIr
the southernmost Indo-Aryan language, is spoken by more than 40 million speakers, including inhabitants of Bombay and the state of Maharashtra (Mahāraštrā) in west-central India.
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MARD-E ĀZĀD
Nassereddin Parvin
a daily newspaper published in Tehran to support Reżā Khan (the future Reza Shah) in his bid for power, 1923.
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MARD-e EMRUZ
Ḥasan Mirʿābedini
a controversial and highly popular newspaper published weekly in Tehran, with frequent interruptions, from 19 August 1942 to 14 February 1947, by Mohammad Mas’ud.
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MARDONIUS
Rüdiger Schmitt
Name of several Persians in Achaemenid times, as OPers. M-r-du-u-n-i-y- /Mr̥duniya-/ (DB 4.84) is rendered in Greek (Mardónios) and Latin (Mardonius).
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MARICQ, André
Philippe Gignoux
From 1953 to the summer of 1954, Maricq conducted extensive field research in the Near East. His aimed to collect casts of all seal collections in the Near East, to obtain impressions of the ŠKZ, and to survey a site in Commagene that Ernest Honigmann identified as the convent of the Nestorian bishop Barṣauma.
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MARIE ALEXANDRA VICTORIA
Della L. Marcus
(1875-1938), queen consort of Ferdinand I, king of Romania; she developed an understanding and sympathy for the Bahai faith.
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MARITIME TRADE i. PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD
Daniel T. Potts
In comparison with Mesopotamia, Persia has far less proof that maritime trade was an important factor in her ancient economy.
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MARKAZ-E TAḤQIQĀT-E FĀRSI-E IRĀN WA PĀKESTĀN
Arif Naushahi
(Iran-Pakistan Institute of Persian Studies), an institute established as per an agreement signed between the Ministry of Culture and Art (Wezārat-e farhang wa honar) of Iran and Ministry of Education and Scientific Research of Pakistan.
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MARKWART, JOSEF
Rüdiger Schmitt
(1864-1930), German historian and orientalist, specialist in historical geography. His monumental Ērānšahr (1901) is still an authoritative work and probably his most important. His books are full of profound and nearly inexhaustible erudition, revealing that their author was a learned historian, philologist, geographer, and ethnologist.
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MĀRLIK
Kamyar Abdi
an elite burial ground of the late 2nd-early 1st millennium BCE in the western Caspian basin. In total, fifty-three tombs were discovered. The grave goods, numbering over 25,000 individual items, constitute the largest collection discovered from any cemetery of the Early Iron Age anywhere in the Near East.
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MARR, NIKOLAĭ YAKOVLEVICH
I. Yakubovich
The most significant part of Marr’s scholarly legacy is his editions of Georgian, Armenian, and Arab manuscripts, some of which he discovered during expeditions to the monastery of Aphon (Mt. Athos) in 1898, and to Sinai and Jerusalem in 1902.
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MARRIAGE i. THE MARRIAGE CONTRACT IN THE PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD
Ilya Yakubovich
a formal, written agreement as part of the process of establishing a marriage bond between two families is documented in both eastern and western Iranian practice.
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MARRIAGE ii. NEXT OF KIN MARRIAGE IN ZOROASTRIANISM
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
xwēdōdah, said to refer to marital unions of father and daughter, mother and son, or brother and sister (next-of-kin or close-kin marriage, nuclear family incest).
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MARTYRS, BABI
Peter Smith and Moojan Momen
adherents of the Babi religion who were killed for their faith during the period up to about 1866, when the Bahai faith emerged.
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MARTYRS, CHRISTIAN
Christelle Jullien
in the Iranian lands. The passion accounts are known from two sets of literary corpus: one in Syriac, and the other in Greek. Some of the Syriac Acts of the Persian Martyrs were first published with a Latin translation in 1748 by Stefano Evodio Assemani (1711-1782), on the basis of the ancient Vatican manuscript 160.
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MAʿRUFI, Jawād
Morteżā Ḥoseyni Dehkordi and EIr
Persian composer and pianist (1915-1993).
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MARYAM KHANOM
Dominic Parviz Brookshaw
thirty-ninth wife of Fatḥ-ʿAli Shah Qajar (r. 1797-1834), mother of Żiāʾ-al-Salṭana and Maḥmud Mirzā.