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Zoroastrian Communism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Patricia Crone
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge

Extract

According to Xanthus of Lydia, who wrote in the fifth century B.C., the Magi considered it right to have intercourse with their mothers, daughters, and sisters and also to hold women in common. The first half of this claim is perfectly correct: Xanthus is here referring to the Zoroastrian institution of close-kin marriage (khwēdōdāh), the existence of which is not (or no longer) in doubt. But his belief that the Magi held women in common undoubtedly rests on a misunderstanding, possibly of easy divorce laws and more probably of the institution of wife lending. In the fifth century A.D., however, we once more hear of Persians who deemed it right to have women in common; and this time the claim is less easy to brush aside. The Persians in question were heretics, not orthodox Zoroastrians or their priests; their heresy was to the effect that both land and women should be held in common, not just women (though the first attempt to implement it did apparently concern itself with women alone); and the heretics are described, not just by Greeks, let alone a single observer, but also by Syriac authors and the Persians themselves as preserved in Zoroastrian sources and the Islamic tradition.

Type
Religion and Politics
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1994

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References

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34 Cf. Nöldeke, Christensen, Klíma (above note 1), Molé, Shaki (above, note 20) and myself. Only Yarshater is sceptical, but not consistently, for though he begins by toning down the Mazdakite doctrine concerning women (above, note 32), he later accepts that the Carpocratians and Mazdakites “offered the same argument for the community of property and women” (‘Mazdakism’, 1020).

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39 Cf. Magdisī, Bad, note 28.

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52 As he sees it, it has contributed most to the confusion (Durkheim, , Socialism, 35).Google Scholar

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54 Cf. above, note 2. Modem Zoroastrians explain away the institution of close-kin marriage by blaming it on Mazdak! (Christensen, L'Iran, 325).

55 Magdisī, Bad', vol. III: 168 [171]Google Scholar Tabarī, Ta'rikh, ser. i, 893, in Nöldeke, , Geschichte, 154.Google Scholar

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70 Herodotus, Histories, I: 216 (the translation is Godley's).Google Scholar

71 As seen already, Herodotus also imputes it to the Agathyrsoi, presumably an offshoot of the Scythians (above, note 65); and Herodotus knew that others attributed it to the Scythians themselves, though he himself did not believe it: “The Greeks say that this is a Scythian custom; it is not so, but a custom of the Massagetae” (Histories, I: 21.6). His correction notwithstanding, later authors continued to present the Scythians as communists, usually in respect of women and property alike (Lovejoy and Boas, Primitivism, 288f, 315n, 327, cf. 328), but it seems unlikely that there was more to it than an initial mistake and continued romanticism.

72 Crone, “Kavād's Heresy,” 25 and notes 112–17 thereto.

73 Cf. Perikhanian, A.. “Iranian Society and Law,” in Cambridge History of Iran, vol. III: 2, 649f, 653ff.Google Scholar

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76 Thus already Christensen, L'Iran, 329f, 344f.

77 The Zarādushtīs have also been presented as female liberators (Pigulevskaja, Villes, 200; Klima, Mazdak, 186), but this is certainly mistaken (cf. Shaki, “Social Doctrine,” 301ff).

78 Klíma, Mazdak, 209ff (but he later changed his mind, cf. Klíma, Beiträige, 129, n. 20); Carratelli, “Doctrines sociales de Bundos et Mazdak,” 288ff Yarshater, “Mazdakism,” 1020. Klíma helpfully translates Clement of Alexandria's extract from the Carpocratian treatise “On Justice,” of which there is also an English summary in Cohn, N., The Pursuit of the Millennium (London, 1984Google Scholar; first published 1957), 189f. Cohn asserts that the treatise is probably not of Gnostic origin, with reference to Kraft, H., “Gab es einen Gnostiker Karpokrates?,” Theologische Zeischrift, 8 (1952); but Kraft does not deny the Gnostic origins of the treatise, only the existence of a Gnostic sect by the name of Carpocratians.Google Scholar

74 Cf. Crone, , “Kavād's Heresy,” 28.Google Scholar

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81 That Zarādushtism was an offshoot of Zoroastrianism rather than Manichaeism should no longer need to be stressed, though Christensen's mistaken ideas to the contrary still have not been flushed out of the secondary literature (cf. Crone, “Kavād's Heresy,” 26ff).

82 Cf. above, note 40. That it is the presence of Gnostic ideas in Khurramism which causes some to present them as ascetics is particularly clear in Duchesne-Guillemin.