Ardashir I

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Ardashir I

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Ardashir I [another form of Artaxerxes], d. 240, king of Persia (226?-240). He overthrew the last Parthian king, Artabanus IV, entered Ctesiphon, and reunited Persia out of the confusion of Seleucid decline. He established the strong Sassanid , or Sassanian, dynasty and reconquered the old eastern territories. Ardashir established Zoroastrianism as the state religion and gave much power to the priestly caste. His move against Mesopotamia, Armenia, and Cappadocia caused the Roman emperor Alexander Severus to campaign against him. A great battle in 232 cost both armies heavy losses. It was Alexander who had to retire, and though Alexander celebrated a triumph in Rome, Ardashir took Armenia, and Persian power was firmly established. He is sometimes called Ardashir Papakan, for his father, Papak. Shapur I succeeded him.

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Sassanian empire

A Dictionary of World History | 2000 | © A Dictionary of World History 2000, originally published by Oxford University Press 2000. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sassanian empire An empire that occupied much of south-west Asia from the 3rd to the 7th century. It was founded c.224 by Ardashir (ruled c.224–41), who overthrew Artabanus V, the last PARTHIAN king, in the name of vengeance for the last ACHAEMENID king. The dynasty takes its name from his grandfather Sasan. Territorially the empire stretched from the Syrian desert, where Roman pressure was checked, to north-west India where the Kushan and Hephthalite empires, having restricted valuable trade routes, were eventually destroyed. Politically the empire fluctuated between centralization under strong monarchs like KHOSRAU I (died 579), who were served by the army and bureaucracy, and local control by great nobles. The religious life of the empire was dominated by Zoroastrianism, established as the state cult in the 3rd century. Christians in Armenia and Transcaucasia survived persecution and, by breaking with the Byzantine Church in 424, threw off the suspicion of alien loyalties. The court at Ctesiphon (in modern Iraq) provided a focus for a brilliant culture, enriched by Graeco-Roman and eastern influences, in which such pastimes as chess and polo were played. The closing years of the dynasty were overshadowed for the masses, however, by lengthy wars, which may explain the empire's rapid disintegration before the ARAB CONQUEST of 636–51.

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Fiction: The pain of a paradise lost in less than 24 hours One Day By Ardashir Vakil HAMISH HAMILTON pounds 12.99 pounds 11.99 (+ pounds 1.99 P&P PER ORDER) 0870 800 1122
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 3/23/2003; ; 700+ words ; Ardashir Vakil is touted as Salman Rushdie's protege. Rushdie excerpted Vakil's award-winning Beach Boy in his anthology of Indian...
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M2 Presswire; 6/24/1998; 648 words ; ...Dawson, Mario Petrucci, Maurice Riordan, Ardashir Vakill and Sarah Waters. The Awards, of...his first published collection of poetry. Ardashir Vakil (LB Haringey) Bombay-born Ardashir Vakil teaches English at Pimlico Comprehensive...
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Newspaper article from: The Journal (Newcastle, England); 10/27/2004; 467 words ; ...Walsh at the first when cannoning into Ardashir, leaving 16-1 chance Manoram to win...into the back of Carl Llewellyn (riding Ardashir). "It's unfortunate, but we will...Manoram came home 11 lengths clear of Ardashir. Nicholls gained some consolation when...
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Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 10/27/2004; 433 words ; ...Walsh at the first when cannoning into Ardashir, leaving 16-1 chance Manoram to win...into the back of Carl Llewellyn [riding Ardashir]. We will go to Warwick on Monday for...Manoram came home 11 lengths clear of Ardashir. Nicholls gained some consolation for...
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News Wire article from: The Hindustan Times; 8/10/2007; 629 words ; ...like reading Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai, Salman Rushdie and Ardashir Vakil and they have deeply influenced the photographs that...portray in my book," she said. The book also has an excerpt of Ardashir Vakil's book, which is her favourite "Beach boy", as...
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Newspaper article from: Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales); 10/27/2004; 582 words ; ...ago, unseated Ruby Walsh at the first when cannoning into Ardashir, leaving 16-1 chance Manoram to win unchallenged. Nicholls...fence and he clattered into the back of Carl Llewellyn (riding Ardashir). 'It's unfortunate, but we will go to Warwick on Monday...
Will will try at Warwick.(News)
Newspaper article from: Evening Chronicle (Newcastle, England); 10/27/2004; 608 words ; ...Chase but unseated Ruby Walsh at the first when cannoning into Ardashir, leaving 16-1 chance Manoram to win unchallenged. Nicholls...fence and he clattered into the back of Carl Llewellyn (riding Ardashir). "It's unfortunate, but we will go to Warwick on Monday...
INDEPENDENT CHOICE; FIRST NOVELS
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 7/19/1997; ; 700+ words ; ...ambitious novel immediate and enjoyable. Hwee Hwee Tan and Ardashir Vakil are both debut novelists for whom the use of English...Bombay boyhood, in particular the food, it seems right that Ardashir Vakil's mother should be the dedicatee of his Beach Boy...
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Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 2/16/2003; ; 582 words ; One Day by Ardashir Vakil Hamish Hamilton, pounds 12.99, 293 pp pounds 11.99 ( pounds...plot of his next novel - on the theme of masturbation. One assumes Ardashir Vakil knows how ludicrous his characters are, but one is not totally...
Book reviews: One Day: Married strife in close-up
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 2/15/2003; ; 661 words ; One Day by Ardashir Vakil (Hamish Hamilton, 14 pounds 99 pence) "WHAT I can't be doing...hear, says many a weary reviewer. Too bad that the opening pages of Ardashir Vakil's second novel hint at a book not far removed from that very...

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