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Persian Mythology
By Persian mythology is meant the myths and sacred narratives of the
culturally and linguistically related group of ancient peoples who inhabited the
Iranian Plateau and its borderlands, as well as areas of Central Asia from the
Black Sea to Khotan (modern Ho-t'ien, China).
Persian myths are traditional tales and stories of ancient origin, some
involving extraordinary or supernatural beings. Drawn from the legendary past of
Iran, they reflect the attitudes of the society to which they first belonged -
attitudes towards the confrontation of good and evil, the actions of the gods,
yazats (lesser gods), and the exploits of heroes and fabulous creatures. Myths
play a crucial part in Iranian culture and our understanding of them is
increased when we consider them within the context of Iranian history.
For this purpose we must ignore modern political boundaries and look at
historical developments in the Greater Iran, a vast area covering parts of
Central Asia well beyond the frontiers of present-day Iran. The geography of
this region, with its high mountain ranges, plays a significant role in many of
the mythological stories. The second millennium BCE is usually regarded
Samarkand as the age of migration because the emergence in western Iran of a new
form of Iranian pottery, similar to earlier wares of north-eastern Iran,
suggests the arrival of new people, the Aryans. This pottery, light grey to
black in colour, appeared around 1400 BCE. It is called Early Grey Ware or Iron
I, the latter name indicating the beginning of the Iron Age in this area.
The central collection of Persian mythology is the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi,
written over a thousand years ago. Ferdowsi's work draws heavily, with
attribution, on the stories and characters of Mazdaism and Zoroastrianism, not
only from the Avesta, but from later texts such as the Bundahishn and the
Denkard as well.
Religious background
The characters of Persian mythology almost always fall into one of two camps.
They are either good, or they are evil. The resultant discord mirrors the
ancient conflict, which in Persian mythology is based on the Zoroastrian concept
of the dual emanation of Ahura Mazda (Avestan, or Ormuzd in later Persian).
Spenta Mainyu is the source of constructive energy, while Angra Mainyu is the
source of darkness, destruction, sterility, and death.
Found in abundance in Persian mythology are the daēva (Avestan, Persian: div),
meaning 'celestial' or 'bright'. These divinities were worshipped in
pre-Zoroastrian Mazdaism, and as in Vedic religions, the adherents of the
pre-Zoroastrian form of Mazdaism considered the daēva holy and sacred beings. It
is only after the religious reforms of Zarathustra (Zoroaster) that the term
daēva became associated with demons. Even then the people living south of the
Caspian Sea continued to worship the daeva and resisted pressure to accept
Zoroastrianism, and legends that involve daēva survive to this day. For
instance, that of the legend of the Div-e Sepid (white daēva) of Mazandaran.
Moreover, Angra Mainyu or Ahriman in Persian, once the Zoroastrian epitome of
evil, lost its original Zoroastrian/Mazdaist identity in later Persian
literature, and was ultimately depicted as a div. Religious depictions of
Ahriman made in the era following the Islamic invasion show Ahriman as a giant
of a man with spotted body and two horns.
Good and Evil
Relief in Tus depicting popular mythical stories of Iran.The most famous
legendary character in the Persian epics and mythology is Rostam. On the other
side of the fence is Zahhak, a symbol of despotism who was finally defeated by
Kaveh the Blacksmith who led a popular uprising against him. Zahhak was guarded
by two vipers which grew out of his shoulders. No matter how many times they
were beheaded, new heads grew on them to guard him. The snake like in many other
Oriental mythologies was a symbol of evil. But many other animals and birds
appear in Iranian mythology and especially the birds were signs of good omen.
Most famous of these is Simorgh, a large beautiful and powerful bird, Homa, a
royal bird of victory whose plume adorned the crowns and Samandar, the phoenix.
Peri (Avestan: Pairika), considered a beautiful though evil woman in early
mythology, gradually became less evil and more beautiful until the Islamic
period she became a symbol of beauty similar to the houris of Paradise. However
another evil woman, Patiareh, now symbolizes whores and prostitutes.
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