The early Sasanian period witnessed a variety of religious beliefs in compe- tition. The clash between Kirdīr and Mani represents just an episode of the triumph the Mazdean church over Manichaeism, as well as over the other religious formations listed in Kirdīr’s inscriptions. Persian Zoroastrianism constituted a stronghold of power and reli- gious hegemony at the heart of the Sasanian Empire. Yet, the peripheral Zoroastrianism of Eastern Iran and Central Asia featured aspects of regional Mazdeism, such as a wide vari- ety of interactions between the Iranian and Indian cultures, and overt religious exchanges with Manichaeism, Buddhism and Islam. This article first examines the connotations of the word indicating ‘wonder’ and ‘miracl...
The sacred landscape of Central Asia consisted of various religions and ritual practices that grew o...
The article highlights the attention to the care and beauty of human bodies that characterizes Zoroa...
Religion’s role was prominent in the foreign relations of Byzantium and Iran. The religious element ...
The early Sasanian period witnessed a variety of religious beliefs in compe- tition. The clash betw...
14 pagesTrade and travel played a tremendous role in connecting Sasanian and Roman empires in late a...
The assumption that an already established Zoroastrian religion served as the source for terms, conc...
This article evaluates the development of a generic term for ‘religion’ in late antique Manichaeism ...
The article is devoted to the study of Manichaeism in Uyghur written monuments. Manichaeism is a rel...
On the basis of the Avesta and the Rigveda, the article provides an outline the Indo-Iranian ritual ...
The religion of Mani arose from a Judaeo-Christian milieu in southern Mesopotamia in the third centu...
A Persian treatise ‘Ulamā-ye Islām, whose origin is supposed to be the Pahlavi Edict by the Sasanian...
Mani at the Court of the Persian Kings explores new evidence from the Chester Beatty Kephalaia, whic...
The Zoroastrian religion, taking its name from the prophet Zoroaster, Greek version of the Avestan n...
This contribution offers a conspectus of the parallel treatment of some eschatological subjects in ...
A Persian treatise ‘Ulamā-ye Islām, whose origin is supposed to be the Pahlavi Edict by the Sasanian...
The sacred landscape of Central Asia consisted of various religions and ritual practices that grew o...
The article highlights the attention to the care and beauty of human bodies that characterizes Zoroa...
Religion’s role was prominent in the foreign relations of Byzantium and Iran. The religious element ...
The early Sasanian period witnessed a variety of religious beliefs in compe- tition. The clash betw...
14 pagesTrade and travel played a tremendous role in connecting Sasanian and Roman empires in late a...
The assumption that an already established Zoroastrian religion served as the source for terms, conc...
This article evaluates the development of a generic term for ‘religion’ in late antique Manichaeism ...
The article is devoted to the study of Manichaeism in Uyghur written monuments. Manichaeism is a rel...
On the basis of the Avesta and the Rigveda, the article provides an outline the Indo-Iranian ritual ...
The religion of Mani arose from a Judaeo-Christian milieu in southern Mesopotamia in the third centu...
A Persian treatise ‘Ulamā-ye Islām, whose origin is supposed to be the Pahlavi Edict by the Sasanian...
Mani at the Court of the Persian Kings explores new evidence from the Chester Beatty Kephalaia, whic...
The Zoroastrian religion, taking its name from the prophet Zoroaster, Greek version of the Avestan n...
This contribution offers a conspectus of the parallel treatment of some eschatological subjects in ...
A Persian treatise ‘Ulamā-ye Islām, whose origin is supposed to be the Pahlavi Edict by the Sasanian...
The sacred landscape of Central Asia consisted of various religions and ritual practices that grew o...
The article highlights the attention to the care and beauty of human bodies that characterizes Zoroa...
Religion’s role was prominent in the foreign relations of Byzantium and Iran. The religious element ...