IrÄnshahr and the Downfall of the Sassanid Dynasty
Persia at the Eve of the Arab Invasions
- 273 stránek
- 10 hodin čtení
Sassanid Persia (224–651 CE) has garnered increased attention in both Western and Iranian scholarship over the past three decades. Key events such as the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the failure of ideologues to create an Irano-Islamic identity, and the Iran-Iraq war (1980–1988) have stimulated interest in reviving a non-Islamic historical narrative. This work illuminates significant sociopolitical and cultural factors that contributed to the collapse of the Sasanian Empire, a major power whose decline reshaped the histories of Asia, Europe, and Africa. The authors provide a detailed analysis of crucial historical events leading up to the Arabo-Islamic invasions, emphasizing the Sasanian nobility's misjudgment and internal rivalries that ultimately led to the end of the last Iranian pre-Islamic monarchy. By engaging with this book, readers may reevaluate the Sasanian downfall and the rise of the Islamic Caliphate, challenging the prevailing notion that these events were mere unexpected occurrences—an oversimplification often held by scholars and those interested in Middle Eastern and Iranian studies.
