Search Results for “Sistan”
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SISTĀN ii. In the Islamic period
C. E. Bosworth
It was during the governorship in Khorasan of ʿAbdallāh b. ʿĀmer for the caliph ʿOṯmān that the Arabs first appeared in Sistān, when in 31/652 Zarang surrendered peacefully, although Bost resisted fiercely.
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SISTĀNI, MIRZĀ ŠĀH-ḤOSAYN
Kioumars Ghereghlou
(1571-after 1627), Persian historian, poet, and bureaucrat whose works include a local history of Sistān, a biographical dictionary of poets, and two maṯnawis.
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HĀMUN, DARYĀČA-YE
Eckart Ehlers, Gherardo Gnoli
(or simply Hāmun), lit. “lake of the plain, lowland,” a lake covering the deepest part of the Sistān depression and the Sistān watershed.
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EBN MORSAL, LAYṮ
C. Edmund Bosworth
b. Fażl, a client (mawlā) and governor of Sīstān 815-19.
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DERHAM B. NAŻ
C. Edmund Bosworth
or Naṣr or Ḥosayn; commander of ʿayyārs or moṭawweʿa, orthodox Sunni vigilantes against the Kharijites in Sīstān during the period immediately preceding the rise of the Saffarid brothers to supreme power there.
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ʿAMR B. YAʿQŪB
C. E. Bosworth
great-grandson of the co-founder of the Saffarid dynasty and ephemeral boy amir in Sīstān, 299-301/912-13.
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BASSĀM-E KORD
Z. Safa
the Kharijite (fl. mid-9th century), one of the first poets in the New Persian language, active at the court of the Saffarids.
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ABU’L-FARAJ SEJZĪ
M. Dabīrsīāqī
4th/10th century poet of Sīstān, author of several lost works on the art of poetry.
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ZARANGIANA
Cross-Reference
territory around Lake Hāmun and the Helmand river in modern Sistān. See DRANGIANA.
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ʿABD-AL-RAḤMĀN B. SAMORA
M. G. Morony
Arab general who campaigned in Sīstān (d. 50/670).
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ZRANKA
Cross-Reference
territory around Lake Hāmun and the Helmand river in modern Sistan. See DRANGIANA.
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AZHAR-E ḴAR
L. P. Smirnova
“Azhar the ass,” nickname of AZHAR B. YAḤYĀ B. ZOHAYR B. FARQAD, third cousin and military commander of the Saffarid amirs Yaʿqūb and ʿAmr b. Layṯ.
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ḤAMZA B. ĀḎARAK
C. Edmund Bosworth
or Atrak or ʿAbd-Allāh Abu Ḵozayma (d. 828), Kharijite rebel in Sistān and Khorasan during early ʿAbbasid times.
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ABDĪH UD SAHĪGĪH Ī SAGASTĀN
A. Tafażżolī
(“The wonder and remarkability of Sagastān”), short Pahlavi treatise.
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AḤMAD B. QODĀM
C. E. Bosworth
a military adventurer who temporarily held power in Sīstān during the confused years following the collapse of the first Saffarid amirate and the military empire of ʿAmr b. Layṯ in 287/900.
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HELMAND RIVER
Multiple Authors
the border river of Afghanistan and Persia. It originates in the mountains in the Hazārajāt (q.v) and flows into the Sistān in southeastern Persia and finally drains into the Hāmun Lake.
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KERMAN
Multiple Authors
province of Iran located between Fars and Sistan va Balučestān; also the name of its principal city and capital.
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AḤMAD B. MOḤAMMAD
C. E. Bosworth
(r. 311-52/923-63), amir in Sīstān of the Saffarid dynasty (that part of it sometimes called “the second Saffarid dynasty”).
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ḴALAF B. AḤMAD
C. E. Bosworth
b. Moḥammad, Abu Aḥmad (d. 1009), Amir in Sistān of the “second line” of Saffarids, who ruled between 963 and 1003.
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ABU’L-FAŻL TĀJ-AL-DĪN
C. E. Bosworth
amir of the line of later Saffarids, sometimes called the third dynasty of Saffarids and, by a historian like Jūzǰānī, the “Maleks of Nīmrūz and Seǰestān.”
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ʿALĪ B. ḤARB
C. E. Bosworth
(or ʿAlī b. ʿOṯmān b. Ḥarb), ephemeral Saffarid amir of the so-called “third Saffarid dynasty”.
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HELMAND RIVER i. GEOGRAPHY
M. Jamil Hanifi and EIr
At approximately 1,300 km, the Helmand River is the longest river in Afghanistan. Originating from the Koh-e Bābā heights of the Hindu Kush mountain range (about 40 km west of Kabul), the Helmand receives five tributaries—Kajrud (Kudrud), Arḡandāb, Terin, Arḡastān, and Tarnak.
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ĀZĀDSARV
Dj. Khaleghi-Motlagh
Two bearers of this name are known.
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BAYTUZ
C. E. Bosworth
a Turkish commander who controlled the town of Bost in southern Afghanistan during the middle years of the 10th century.
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AMĪRAK ṬŪSĪ
Dj. Khaleghi-Motlagh
4th/10th century notable of the ʿAbd-al-Razzāqī family of Ṭūs.
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ASFEZĀR
C. E. Bosworth
(or ASFŌZAR), designation of a district (kūra) and later its chief town in the Herat quarter of Khorasan.
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HELMAND RIVER iii. IN THE MEDIEVAL PERIOD
C. Edmund Bosworth
The early Islamic geographers refer variously to the Helmand River as Hendmand, Hilmand, Hirmid, Hidmand, Hermand, or Hirmand, the usual name in Persian down to the present time.
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IRĀNŠAHR (2)
EIr
city, formerly Fahraj, and sub-province (šahrestān) in the province of Sistān and Baluchistan.
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DĪVĀL-E ḴODĀYDĀD
Klaus Fischer
an extensive area of historic remains in the center of an ancient canal system fed by the rivers Helmand and Ḵāšrūd and located between the eastern border of the Hāmūn-e Aškīnʿām and the lower Ḵāšrūd, about 45 km to the northeast of Zaranj in southwest Afghanistan.
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ḴOJESTĀNI, Aḥmad b. ʿAbd-Allāh
C. Edmund Bosworth
(d. 882), commander of the Taherids in Khorasan, and after the Ṣaffarid occupation of Nishapur in 873, a contender for power.
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TĀRIḴ-E SISTĀN
C. E. Bosworth
an anonymous local history in Persian of the eastern Iranian region of Sistān, the region that straddles the modern Iran-Afghanistan border. It forms a notable example of the flourishing genre of local histories in the pre-modern Iranian lands.
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GANJ-ʿALĪ KHAN
Mohammad-Ebrahim Bastani Parizi
a military leader and governor of Kermān, Sīstān, and Qandahār under Shah ʿAbbās I (996-1038/1588-1629).
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FARĀMARZ
Djalal Khaleghi-Motlagh
son of Iran’s national hero Rostam, and himself a renowned hero of the Iranian national epic whose adventures were very popular, especially during the 10th and 11th centuries.
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ABŪ NAṢR AḤMAD
C. E. Bosworth
Samanid amir in Transoxania and Khorasan (295-301/907-14).
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ABU’L-MOʾAYYAD BALḴĪ
G. Lazard
An early Persian poet and writer of the Samanid period, whose works have almost entirely disappeared.
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KHARIJITES IN PERSIA
C. Edmund Bosworth
sect of early Islam which arose out of the conflict between ʿAli b. Abi Ṭāleb (r. 656-61) and Moʿāwiya b. Abi Sufyān (r. 661-80).
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AḤMAD B. SAHL B. HĀŠEM
C. E. Bosworth
governor in Khorasan during the confused struggles for supremacy there between the Saffarids, Samanids, and various military adventures in the late 3rd/9th and early 4th/10th century, d. 307/920.
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ČAḴĀNSŪR
Daniel Balland
principal town of the large Ḵāšrūd delta oasis in northeastern Sīstān.
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ʿAMR B. LAYṮ
C. E. Bosworth
ṢAFFĀRĪ, military commander and second ruler of the Saffarid dynasty of Sīstān (r. 879-900).
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MUSĀ YABḠU
Osman G. Özgüdenli
the eponymous strongman of a Ḡozz clan, whose nephew Toḡrel founded the Saljuq dynasty.
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ARDAŠĪR SAKĀNŠĀH
A. Sh. Shahbazi
a vassal king of the first Sasanian king of kings, Ardašīr I.
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HĀMUN, DARYĀČA-YE ii. IN LITERATURE AND MYTHOLOGY
Gherardo Gnoli
In the literature and mythology of ancient Persia, Lake Hāmun occupied, along with the Helmand Riiver, a position of particular importance, especially in Zoroastrian eschatology.
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ABŪ ṢĀLEḤ MANṢŪR
C. E. Bosworth
Samanid prince, the cousin of the amir Aḥmad b. Esmāʿīl (295-301/907-14) and uncle of his successor Naṣr b. Aḥmad (301-31/914-43).
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BAHMAN-NĀMA
W. L. Hanaway, Jr.
epic poem in Persian of about 9,500 lines recounting the adventures of Bahman son of Esfandīār.
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MAWDUD B. MASʿUD
C. Edmund Bosworth
sultan of the Ghaznavid dynasty, recorded on his coins with the honorifics Šehāb-al-Din wa’l-Dawla and Qoṭb-al-Mella.
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DEŽ-E BAHMAN
Aḥmad Tafażżolī
lit. "fortress of Bahman"; according to legend a fortress in Azerbaijan conquered by the Kayānian king Kay Ḵosrow, son of Sīāvaš and grandson of Kāvūs, king of Iran.
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JOVAYN
C. Edmund Bosworth
name of three historical localities: a village in Fārs, a fortress o the northeast of Lake Zereh in Sistān, and especially the district of that name in Khorasan.
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HĀMUN, DARYĀČA-YE i. GEOGRAPHY
Eckart Ehlers
The Sistān basin is the easternmost endorheic basin in Persia, draining a watershed 350,000 km2.
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KAYĀNSĪH
A. Panaino
Pahlavi form of the name of a mythical sea, Av. Kąsaoiia-, connected in tradition with the Hāmun lake. According to Later Av. sources it is from the Kąsaoiia that the Saošiiaṇt Astuuat̰.ərəta- will rise.
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GARŠĀSP-NĀMA
François de Blois
or Karšāsp-nāma; a long heroic epic by Asadī Ṭūsī (d. 1072/73) completed, as the author says in the epilogue, in 1066, and dedicated to a ruler of Naḵjavān by the name of Abū Dolaf.