HISTORYAT A GLANCE |
The Sassanids (224-642 A.D.)
The Sassanids established an empire roughly within the frontiers achieved by
the Achaemenids, with the capital at Ctesiphon. The Sassanids consciously sought
to resuscitate Iranian traditions and to obliterate Greek cultural influence.
Their rule was characterized by considerable centralization, ambitious urban
planning, agricultural development, and technological improvements. Sassanid
rulers adopted the title of shahanshah (king of kings), as sovereigns over
numerous petty rulers, known as shahrdars. Historians believe that society was
divided into four classes: the priests, warriors, secretaries, and commoners.
The royal princes, petty rulers, great landlords, and priests together
constituted a privileged stratum, and the social system appears to have been
fairly rigid. Sassanid rule and the system of social stratification were
reinforced by Zoroastrianism, which became the state religion. The Zoroastrian
priesthood became immensely powerful. The head of the priestly class, the
mobadan mobad, along with the military commander, the eran spahbod, and the head
of the bureaucracy, were among the great men of the state. Rome, with its
capital at Constantinople, had replaced Greece as Iran's principal Western
enemy, and hostilities between the two empires were frequent. Shahpur I
(241-72), son and successor of Ardeshir, waged successful campaigns against the
Romans and in 260 even took the emperor Valerian prisoner.
Chosroes I (531-79), also known as Anushirvan the Just, is the most
celebrated of the Sassanid rulers. He reformed the tax system and reorganized
the army and the bureaucracy, tying the army more closely to the central
government than to local lords. His reign witnessed the rise of the dihqans
(literally, village lords), the petty landholding nobility who were the backbone
of later Sassanid provincial administration and the tax collection system.
Chosroes was a great builder, embellishing his capital, founding new towns, and
constructing new buildings. Under his auspices, too, many books were brought
from India and translated into Pahlavi. Some of these later found their way into
the literature of the Islamic world. The reign of Chosroes II (591-628) was
characterized by the wasteful splendor and lavishness of the court.
Toward the end of his reign Chosroes II's power declined. In renewed fighting
with the Byzantines, he enjoyed initial successes, captured Damascus, and seized
the Holy Cross in Jerusalem. But counterattacks by the Byzantine emperor
Heraclius brought enemy forces deep into Sassanid territory.
Years of warfare exhausted both the Byzantines and the Iranians. The later
Sassanids were further weakened by economic decline, heavy taxation, religious
unrest, rigid social stratification, the increasing power of the provincial
landholders, and a rapid turnover of rulers. These factors facilitated the Arab
invasion in the seventh century.
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