Jump to content

Adur Gushnasp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The ruins ofTakht-e Soleymān,where the fire of Adur Gushnasp was stored.

Adur Gushnasp(Middle Persian:𐭠𐭲𐭥𐭫𐭩 𐭦𐭩 𐭢𐭱𐭭𐭮𐭯ʾtwly ZY gšnsp[1]Ādur ī Gušnasp;New Persian:آذرگشسبĀzargušasb)[2]was the name of aZoroastriansacred fire of the highest grade (Atash Behram), which served as one of the three most sacred fires of pre-IslamicIran;[3]the two others being the Adur Farnbag andAdur Burzen-Mihr.[4]Out of the three, Adur Gushnasp is the only fire whosetemple structurehas been discovered and "for which archaeological, sigillographical, and textual evidence are all available."[4]

History

[edit]

Location and purpose

[edit]

The temple, constructed by theSasaniankings, was located in the city ofShizinAdurbadagan,now present-dayTakht-e Soleymānin theWest Azerbaijan province.[4][5]It served as a prominent site of pilgrimage.[4]The identification of the site of Takht-e Soleyman with that of the fire temple of Adur Gushnasp became clear when a Sasanian era-bullae was discovered there, which had the following engraving "High-priest of the house of the fire of Gushnasp" (mowbed i xanag i Adur i Gushnasp).[6]

Origin

[edit]

The fire is not mentioned in early Sasanian sources, and archaeology suggests that the fire was first taken to the site in Adurbadagan in the late 4th or early 5th-century.[7]Under the Sasanians, the fire was linked with the warrior class (arteshtār), which the Sasanian dynasty itself belonged to.[8]In the same fashion as theArsacidson Adur Burzen-Mihr, the Sasanian kings bestowed gifts on the temple of Adur Gushnasp, the first recorded king beingBahram V(r. 420–438).[7]The latter is mentioned in several instances related to the fire, such as celebratingNowruzandSadehthere, and also entrusting the high priest to convert hisIndianwife.[9]Khosrow I(r. 531–579) reportedly visited the fire before launching a military expedition.[9]

He also bestowed on the fire temple an extensive amount that was part of the tribute which theByzantinespaid the Sasanians.[9]Kings were not the only ones who made offerings to the fire; according to the Saddar Bundahesh, it is recommended that when praying to reclaim eyesight to swear, "I shall make an eye of gold and send it to Adur Gushnasp" or, in order to make a child become astute and sensible, send a present to the fire.[9]The fire temple of Adur Gushnasp was renowned for its immense amount of wealth in Byzantine and Islamic sources.[6]

Sack by the Byzantines

[edit]

The fire temple was sacked in 623/4 byHeracliusduring theByzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628.[10]The Iranians succeeded in saving the fire, which they later restored to the temple, which was quickly rebuilt.[11]The apocalypticalMiddle PersiantextZand-i Wahman yasnmay report some form of contemporary memory of the destruction of the temple; "They will remove Adur Gushnasp from its place... on account of (the devastation of) these armies, Adur Gushnasp will be carried toPadishkhwargar."[9]

Decline and fall

[edit]

The fire continued to burn for a long period in the Islamic era, but persecution eventually increased, and by the late 10th-century, or early 11th-century, the fire had most likely been quenched.[9]Not long after, a local Muslim ruler used the remains of the temple to erect a palace on the hilltop.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Middleton, Sheila Hoey; Corkill, Norman Lace; Montague, Leopold Agar Denys (1998).Seals, Finger Rings, Engraved Gems and Amulets in the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter: From the Collections of Lt. Colonel L.A.D. Montague and Dr. N.L. Corkill; Photographs by Robert Wilkins.Exeter City Museums and the author. p. 90.ISBN978-1-85522-587-9.
  2. ^New Persian variants:آذرگشنسبĀzargušnasb,آذرشسپĀzaršaspc; seeDehkhoda Dictionary
  3. ^Kia 2016,p. 71.
  4. ^abcdPotts & Canepa 2018.
  5. ^Ghodrat-Dizaji 2010,p. 75.
  6. ^abYamamoto 1981,p. 75.
  7. ^abBoyce 1984,p. 124.
  8. ^Yamamoto 1981,p. 84;Boyce 1983,pp. 475–476
  9. ^abcdefgBoyce 1983,pp. 475–476.
  10. ^Boyce 1983,pp. 475–476;Boyce 1984,p. 142;Yamamoto 1981,p. 75
  11. ^Boyce 1983,pp. 475–476;Boyce 1984,p. 142

Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Boyce, Mary;Grenet, Frantz (1991). Beck, Roger (ed.).A History of Zoroastrianism, Zoroastrianism under Macedonian and Roman Rule.Leiden: Brill.ISBN978-9004293915.
  • Ghodrat-Dizaji, Mehrdad (2011). "Disintegration of Sasanian Hegemony over Northern Iran".Iranica Antiqua.46:153–302.doi:10.2143/IA.46.0.2084424.