词条 | Ganzak |
释义 |
EtymologyThe word means “treasury” and is of Median origin, and was adopted into Persian by the Achaemenid Empire. The name is related to the Persian word for treasury i.e. گنج Ganj. HistoryGanzak was built by the Achaemenids, and was the seat of the satrap of Media. During the 4th-century BC, the city became part of the domains of the Persian aristocrat Atropates, who had deserted to Alexander the Great, and had probably made Ganzak his capital. The kingdom of Atropates became known as the “Atropatene”. During the rule of this kingdom, the sacred fire temple Adhur Gushnasp was constructed. In ca. 148 BC, the kingdom of Atropatene became a vassal state of the Parthian Empire. In 36 BC, the Romans besieged Ganzak, but they were defeated by a combined force under the Atropatenian king Artavasdes I and the Parthian king Orodes II. In ca. 224 AD, the Sasanian king Ardashir I (r. 224-242) put an end to the Atropatenian kingdom, but the name still survived, and instead of being merged with Media was a province of its own, where Ganzak continued to be the capital. In 591, the Battle of Blarathon occurred near Ganzak between the Sasanian king Khosrau II (590-628) and the usurper Bahram Chobin (r. 590-591). The battle ended in a defeat for Bahram Chobin, who fled to Khorasan. In 622, Ganzak was destroyed by the Roman/Byzantine emperor Heraclius, who also had the sacred fire temple Adhur Gushnasp destroyed. The Byzantine sources reported that Ganzak was large town, with “about 3,000 houses”. The governor of Atropatene, Farrukh Hormizd, did not resist the Byzantines due to an alliance he had made with them along with the military rebel Shahrbaraz. In 651, during the Muslim conquest of Persia, the governor of Atropatene, Isfandyadh, became a vassal of the Rashidun Caliphate. Some years later, however, Isfandyadh disappears from mention, and Atropatene thus must have been incorporated into the Rashidun administration. Ganzak, no longer the capital of Atropatene, still continued to survive under the Muslims, but was destroyed sometime during the late medieval era. Leylan, a town close to Ganzak, became its successor. References1. ^1 M. Boyce, Ganzak, in Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 10, 2001. 2. ^{{cite book|last=Christensen|first=Peter|title=The Decline of Iranshahr|pages=323–324, note 10|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ebB_ac13v3UC&pg=PA323&dq=ganzak&sig=ACfU3U34xip7O_lXePB1arDwWOiKSQtTvQ#PPA323,M1|accessdate=23 Jul 2008 | isbn=978-87-7289-259-7 | year=1993 | publisher=Museum Tusculanum Press}} Sources{{Portal|Ancient Near East|Zoroastrianism}}
4 : Former populated places in Iran|Sasanian cities|Parthian cities|Achaemenid cities |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。