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National History or Keyanid History?: The Nature of Sasanid Zoroastrian Historiography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
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The Omission of the Achaemenids from Indigenous Accounts of Iranian history has puzzled many and led to the assumption that the Sasanids were unaware of the Achaemenids and did not have any historical memory of them; that, if anything, the Sasanids were heirs to the Parthians. The argument put forth is that, with some exceptions, sources from the Islamic period do not really show that the Sasanids knew about the Achaemenids. Indeed, it is correct that the Islamic sources have only a vague recollection of the Achaemenids. But does the vagueness in Islamic historiography in the ninth and the tenth centuries prove that the Sasanids (A.D. 224-651) were unaware of the Achaemenids (550- 331 B.C.) during their rule? The question of why the Achaemenids, in spite of their outstanding political and military achievements, were omitted from the national tradition during the reign of the Sasanids--who originated from the same region--has remained unanswered.
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Footnotes
I wish to thank Professors H. P. Schmidt and C. Rapp for their help and comments. This paper is the result of two quarters of study on Sasanid history with Professor M. Morony, and I especially wish to thank him for reading it several times and making enlightening comments. None of the above professors are responsible for its shortcomings. The paper is dedicated to the memory of Mehrdad Bahar
References
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75. There seems to be an alteration in Sasanid historical memory. In the Sasanid inscription at Persepolis in the fourth century the name is sad-stūn, the palace of one hundred columns. Interestingly, in the Achaemenid period the same name was applied to the structure. In the Persepolis treasury tablets the Elamite name for the structure is i-ia-an or “columned hall” (Cameron, Persepolis Treasury Tablets, seals 3a, 9, 15, 18, 22, 48a, 77, 79, 83). This shows a continuous remembrance of the name of the site down to Sasanid times. The name Takht-i Jamshid was given to the site perhaps in the records written in the late-Sasanid period or in Islamic times. The impact of Qur-‘anic legends also brought new names to Sasanid sites, such as the Adur-Gushnasp site which was called Takht-i Sulayman. In the Bundahišn the Var of Yima is located by Mount Yamagan (Kuh-i Rahmat). I. Gershevitch concludes that this is the reason why Persepolis came to be called Takht-i Jamshid in the Sasanid period (“An Iranianist's View of the Soma Controversy,” in Gignoux, P. and Tafazzoli, A., eds., Mémorial Jean de Menasce [Louvain, 1974], 53, 67Google Scholar).
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