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Vishtaspa

Vishtaspa (Avestan: 𐬬𐬌𐬱𐬙𐬁𐬯𐬞𐬀 Vištāspa; Old Persian: 𐎻𐏁𐎫𐎠𐎿𐎱 Vištāspa; Persian: گشتاسپ Guštāsp; Ancient Greek: Ὑστάσπης Hustáspēs) is the Avestan-language name of a figure appearing in Zoroastrian scripture and tradition, portrayed as an early follower of Zoroaster, and his patron, and instrumental in the diffusion of the prophet's message. Although Vishtaspa is not epigraphically attested, he is – like Zoroaster – traditionally assumed to have been a historical figure, although obscured by accretions from legend and myth.

In Zoroastrian tradition, which builds on allusions found in the Avesta, Vishtaspa is a righteous king who helped propagate and defend the faith. In the non-Zoroastrian Sistan cycle texts, Vishtaspa is a loathsome ruler of the Kayanian dynasty[1] who intentionally sends his eldest son to a certain death. In Greco-Roman literature, Zoroaster's patron was the pseudo-anonymous author of a set of prophecies written under his name.

In scripture edit

Vishtaspa is referred to in the Gathas, the oldest texts of Zoroastrianism which were considered to have been composed by Zoroaster himself. In these hymns, the poet speaks of Vishtaspa as his ally (Yasna 46. 14), follower of the path of Vohu Manah (Y. 51. 16), and committed to spreading the prophet's message (Y. 51. 16, 46. 15, 53. 2). In Yasna 28. 1–28. 7, Zoroaster appeals to Mazda for several boons, including the power to vanquish their foes for Vishtaspa and himself. Considered collectively, the Gathas celebrate Vishtaspa as the "patron of Zoroaster and the establisher of the first Zoroastrian community. "[2]

The Gathic allusions recur in the Yashts of the Younger Avesta. The appeal to Mazda for a boon reappears in Yasht 5. 98, where the boon is asked for the Haugvan[n 1] and Naotara families, and in which Vishtaspa is said to be a member of the latter.[n 2] Later in the same hymn, Zoroaster is described as appealing to Mazda to "bring Vishtaspa, son of Aurvataspa, to think according to Daena (Religion), to speak according to the Religion, to act according to the Religion." (Yt. 5. 104–105). In Yasht 9. 25–26, the last part of which is an adaptation of the Gathic Yasna 49. 7,[4] the prophet makes the same appeal with regard to Hutaosa, wife of Vishtaspa.[5]

In Yasht 9.30, Vishtaspa himself appeals for the ability to drive off the attacks of the daeva-worshipping Arejat.aspa and other members of drujvant Hyaona family. Similarly in Yasht 5. 109, Vishtaspa pleads for strength that he may "crush Tathryavant of the bad religion, the daeva-worshipper Peshana, and the wicked Arejataspa."[6] Elsewhere (Yt. 5. 112–113), Vishtaspa also pleads for strength on behalf of Zairivairi (Pahl. Zarēr), who in later tradition is said to be Vishtaspa's younger brother.[1] The allusions to conflicts (perhaps battles, see below) are again obliquely referred to in Yasht 13. 99–100, in which the fravashis of Zoroaster and Vishtaspa are described as victorious combatants for Asha, and the rescuers and furtherers of the religion. This description is repeated in Yasht 19. 84–87, where Zoroaster, Vishtaspa and Vishtaspa's ancestors are additionally said to possess khvarenah.[7] While the chief hero of the conflicts is said to be Vishtaspa's son, Spentodhata, (Yt. 13. 103)[6] in Yasht 13. 100, Vishtaspa is proclaimed to have set his adopted faith "in the place of honor" amongst peoples.[8][9]

Passages in the Frawardin Yasht (Yt. 13. 99–103) and elsewhere have enabled commentators to infer family connections between Vishtaspa and several other figures named in the Avesta.[10] The summaries of several lost Avestan texts (Wishtasp sast nask, Spand nask, Chihrdad nask, and Varshtmansar nask), as reported in the Denkard (respectively 8. 11, 8. 13, 8. 14, and 9. 33. 5), suggest that there once existed a detailed "history" of Vishtaspa and his ancestors in scripture.[11] The Yasht 13 mentions Zairiuuairi, Piší šiiaoθna (Vishtaspa's eschatological son Pišišōtan), Spəṇtōδāta (Spandyād), Bastauuairi (Bastwar), Kauuarazman, Frašaoštra and Jāmāspa (the Huuōguua brothers in the Gathas), all of whom are featured in the Pahlavi narrative about the war between Vishtaspa and Arzāsp (Arjāsp, king of the Xiiaonas). In Yasht 9.31, Vishtaspa prays to Druuāspā that he may successfully fight and kill various opponents and, apparently, turn Humaiiā and Varəδakanā away from the lands of the Xiiaonas.[1]

In Yasna 12, the Zarathustra, Vishtaspa, Frašaoštra and Jāmāspa, and the three Saošiiaṇts, Zarathustra's eschatological sons, and in Yasna 23.2 and 26.5, the fravashi of Gaiia Marətān, Zarathustra, Vishtaspa, and Isaṯ.vāstra (another of Zarathustra's eschatological sons) are listed as the principal fighters for Asha.[1]

The meaning of Vishtaspa's name is uncertain. Interpretations include "'he whose horses have (or horse has) come in ready (for riding, etc.)'";[12] "'he who has trained horses'";[13] and "'whose horses are released (for the race)'".[14][n 3] It agrees with the description from Yasht 5.132 in which was a prototypical winner of the chariot race.[1]

In tradition and folklore edit

In Zoroastrian tradition edit

In the Gathas, Vishtaspa is repeatedly (Y. 46. 14, 51. 16, 53. 2) referred to as a kavi, which is etymologically a term for a mantic seer, or poet-priest, and in Yasna 28. 11 is also used of Zoroaster's enemies.[15] In the Younger Avesta the term is also applied to wise men generally, to include Vishtaspa and his ancestors. In tradition however, the kavis are kings, "evidently because Vīštāspa and his forebears, the 'kavis' par excellence, were princely rulers. Presumably the gift of prophecy, of mantic poetry, was hereditary in their family. "[15] Both scripture and tradition refer to Vishtaspa's ancestors but do not mention Vishtaspa's successors; Vishtaspa was apparently the last of his line, and the last of the kavis.[9] In Zoroastrian apocalyptic chronology, the dynasties of the world are divided into seven ages, each named after a metal. According to this chronology (Zand-i Wahman yasn 2. 16, Dabistan 140), Vishtaspa (in Zoroastrian Middle Persian Wishtasp) ascent to the throne ended the reign of silver, and his reign was over the age of gold.[16] In tradition, the works of Zoroaster were said to have been kept in a royal library that was then destroyed by Alexander the Great. In Denkard 3. 420, it is Vishtaspa who is said to have been the king who had those texts made and placed in the royal library.

The Yasht's allusions to conflicts are amplified in the 9th–11th century books of Zoroastrian tradition, where the conflicts are portrayed as outright battles of the faith. So for example the surviving fragments of a fragmentary text that celebrates the deeds of Zairivairi, Vishtaspa's brother and captain of his forces against Arejat.aspa, chief of the Hyonas. According to that text (Ayadgar i Zareran, 10–11), upon hearing of Vishtaspa's conversion, Arejat.aspa sent messengers to demand that Vishtaspa "abandon 'the pure Mazda-worshipping religion which he had received from Ohrmazd', and should become once more 'of the same religion'" as himself. The battle that following Vishtaspa's refusal left Vishtaspa victorious.[9]

The conversion of Vishtaspa is likewise a theme of the 9th–11th century books, and these legends remain the "best known and most current" among Zoroastrians today.[17][18] According to this tradition, when Zoroaster arrived at Vishtaspa's court, the prophet was "met with hostility from the kayags and karabs (kavis and karapans), with whom he disputed at a great assembly–a tradition which may well be based on reality, for [Vishtaspa] must have had his own priests and seers, who would hardly have welcomed a new prophet claiming divine authority. "[19] The tradition goes on to relate that Zoroaster triumphed after three days of debate, only to be maligned by his enemies to Vishtaspa, who then had the prophet imprisoned. But, from prison, Zoroaster cured one of Vishtaspa's favourite horses (which had suddenly become paralyzed), for which the prophet then gained Vishtaspa's support and admiration. The tale is obliquely referred to in the Anthology of Zadspram (24. 6), which seems to presume that the reader already knows it,[20] and it is summarized in the Denkard (7. 4. 64–86), and – as "workings of popular fancy"[19] – described in detail in the later Book of Zoroaster (942–1094).[n 4] In the myth, Zoroaster cures each of the horse's four legs in exchange for four concessions: first, that Vishtaspa himself accept Zoroaster's message; secondly, that Vishtaspa's son Spentodata (MP: Esfandiar) do the same; third, that Vishtaspa's wife Hutaosa (MP: Hutos) also convert;[n 5] and finally that the men who maligned Zoroaster be put to death. When these four wishes are granted, the horse stands up rejuvenated.Vishtaspa, having accepted the faith from Zoroaster, then asks for four favours in return:[22] first, that he, Vishtaspa, should know his place in the next world; secondly, that he should become invulnerable; third, that he should know the future; and fourth that his body should not leave his soul until the resurrection. Zoroaster replies that these are too great to all be given to one man, and that he should choose one. Vishtaspa agrees, and chooses the first. Zoroaster then gives him consecrated wine to drink, which puts Vishtaspa in a trance in which he has an epiphany; he sees his spirit ascend to heaven where it beholds the glories of God.[n 6] Vishtaspa's conversion is traditionally said to have taken place during Zoroaster's forty-second year, "a figure undoubtedly reached by later calculation".[8]

In medieval Zoroastrian chronology, Vishtaspa is identified as a grandfather of "Ardashir", i.e. the 5th century BCE Artaxerxes I (or II).[24] This myth is tied to the Sassanid (early 3rd–early 7th century) claim of descent from Artaxerxes, and the claim of relationship to the Kayanids, that is, with Vishtaspa and his ancestors. The full adoption of Kayanid names, titles and myths from the Avesta by the Sassanids was a "main component of [Sassanid] ideology. "[25] The association of Artaxerxes with the Kayanids occurred through the identification of Artaxerxes II's title ('Mnemon' in Greek) with the name of Vishtaspa's legendary grandson and successor, Wahman: both are theophorics of Avestan Vohu Manah "Good Mind(ed)"; Middle Persian 'Wahman' is a contraction of the Avestan name, while Greek 'Mnemon' is a calque of it. The Sassanid association of their dynasty with Vishtaspa's is a development dated to the end of the 4th century, and which "arose to some extent because this was when the Sasanians conquered Balkh, the birthplace of Vishtasp and the 'holy land' of Zoroastrianism. "[26][n 7]

As was also the case for the fourth century Roman identification of Zoroaster's patron with the late-6th century BCE father of Darius I (see below) – the identification of Vishtaspa as a grandfather of "Ardashir" (Artaxerxes I/II) was once perceived to substantiate the "traditional date" of Zoroaster, which places the prophet in the 6th century BCE. The traditional descriptions of Vishtaspa's ancestors as having chariots (a description that puts them fully in the Bronze Age) also contribute to the academic debate on the dating of Zoroaster; for a summary of the role of Vishtaspa's ancestors in this issue, see Boyce 1984, p. 62, n. 38.[n 8]

In the Sistan heroic cycle edit

 
Gushtasp Slays the Dragon of Mount Saqila. Miniature by Mirza Ali from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp. Tabriz, c. 1530-35 Aga Khan Museum

Non-Zoroastrian literature in New Persian and Arabic uniformly reflects the regular development of Middle Persian wi- into gu-, with Middle Persian Wishtasp thus becoming Goshtasb in Sistan national history (Tarikh-e Sistan), Goshtasp in Firdausi's Book of Kings (Shahnameh), Goshtasf in the Mojmal al-tawarikh,[2] Beshtashb by Al-Tabari.

In several respects, for instance in Goshtasb's/Goshtasf's (etc.) mythological genealogy, the Sistan cycle texts continue the Zoroastrian tradition. So, for example, Goshtasp is identified as a member of the Kayanian dynasty, is the son of Lohrasp/Lohrasb (etc.), is the brother of Zareh/Zarer (etc.), is the father of Esfandiar/Isfandiar (etc.) and Bashutan/Beshotan (etc.), and so on. However, in the Sistan legends, Goshtasb/Goshtasf (etc.) is an abominable figure, altogether unlike the hero of Zoroastrian tradition. The reason for this discrepancy is unknown. According to the Sistan tradition, Goshtasb demands the throne from his father Lohrasp, but storms off to India ("Hind") when the king declines. Goshtasb's brother Zareh (Zareh/Zarer etc., Avestan Zairivairi) is sent to fetch him, but Goshtasb flees to "Rome" where he marries Katayoun (Katayun/Katayoun etc.), the daughter of the 'qaysar'. Goshtasb subsequently becomes a military commander for the Roman emperor, and encourages the emperor to demand tribute from Iran. Again Zareh is sent to fetch Goshtasb, who is then promised the throne, and is thus persuaded to return.

Back in Sistan, Goshtasb imprisons his own son Esfandiar (Esfandiar/Isfandiar etc., Avestan Spentodata), but then has to seek Esfandiar's help in defeating Arjasp (Avestan Aurvataspa) who is threatening Balkh. Goshtasb promises Esfandiar the throne in return for his help, but when Esfandiar is successful, his father stalls and instead sends him off on another mission to suppress a rebellion in Turan. Esfandiar is again successful, and upon his return Goshtasb hedges once again and – aware of a prediction that foretells the death of Esfandiar at the hand of Rostam – sends him off on a mission in which Esfandiar is destined to die. In the Shahnameh, the nobles upbraid Goshtasb as a disgrace to the throne; his daughters denounce him as a heinous criminal; and his younger son Bashutan (Avestan Peshotanu) condemns him as a wanton destroyer of Iran.[11][1]

As in Zoroastrian tradition, in the Sistan cycle texts Goshtasp is succeeded by Esfandiar's son, Bahman (< MP Wahman).[1] The identification of Bahman with 'Ardashir' (see above) reappears in the Sistan cycle texts as well.

In Greek and Roman thought edit

The name "Visthaspa" is "Hystaspes" in the Greek and Latin texts of the Hellenistic era. Besides referring to historically attested persons named Vishtaspa, it was also applied to Zoroaster's patron, who the Greeks and Romans imagined to be a sage of great antiquity, and the putative author of a set of prophecies written under his name.[n 9] Although the works attributed to Pseudo-Hystaspes draw on real Zoroastrian sources, the Greek and Roman portraits of his person are just as fanciful as those of the other two les Mages hellénisés, Pseudo-Zoroaster and Pseudo-Ostanes.[29] While Pseudo-Zoroaster was identified as the "inventor" of astrology, and Pseudo-Ostanes was imagined to be a master sorcerer, Pseudo-Hystaspes seems to have been stereotyped as an apocalyptic prophet.

None of the works attributed to him are still extant, but quotations and references have survived in the works of others, especially in those of two early Christian writers – Justin Martyr (ca. 100-165 CE) in Samaria and the mid-3rd century Lactantius in North Africa – who drew on them by way of confirmation that what themselves held to be revealed truth had already been uttered.[30] Only one of these pseudepigraphic works – referred to as the Book of Hystaspes or the Oracles of Hystaspes or just Hystaspes – is known by name. This work (or set of works) of the first century BCE is referred to by Lactantius, Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria, Lydus, and Aristokritos, all of whom describe it as foretelling the downfall of the Roman empire, the return of rule to the east, and of the coming of the saviour.[31]

Lactantius provides a detailed summary of the Oracles of Hystaspes in his Divinae Institutiones (Book VII, from the end of chapter 15 through chapter 19). It begins with Hystaspes awaking from a dream, and needing to have it interpreted for him. This is duly accomplished by a young boy, "here representing, according to convention, the openness of youth and innocent to divine visitations. "[32] As interpreted by the boy, the dream "predicts" the iniquity of the last age, and the impending destruction of the wicked by fire. The divine fire will burn both the righteous and the wicked, but only the wicked will be hurt and neither will be destroyed. During the eschatological inferno, the "followers of truth" will separate themselves from the wicked and ascend a mountain. The evil king who dominates the world will be angered on hearing this, and he will resolve to encircle the mountain with his army. The righteous implore to "Jupiter", who sends them a saviour, who will descend from heaven accompanied by angels and before him a flaming sword. Hystaspes "prophesies" that the wicked king (i.e. the Roman emperor) will survive the destruction of his armies, but will lose power. It was "presumably"[33] the prophecy of the destruction of a victorious power (i.e. the Roman empire) that caused the work to be proscribed by Rome; according to Justin Martyr (Apologia, I. 44. 12), reading the work was punishable by death.[34][35]

Unlike the works attributed to the other two les Mages hellénisés, the Oracles of Hystaspes was apparently based on the genuine Zoroastrian myths, and "the argument for ultimate magian composition is a strong one. [...] As prophecies they have a political context, a function, and a focus which radically distinguish them from the philosophical and encyclopedic wisdom of the other pseudepigrapha. "[36] Although "[p]rophecies of woes and iniquities in the last age are alien to orthodox Zoroastrianism", there was probably a growth of Zoroastrian literature in the late fourth-early third centuries denouncing the evils of the Hellenistic age, and offering hope of the coming kingdom of Ahura Mazda.[37]

The Greco-Roman obsession with Zoroaster as the "inventor" of astrology also influenced the image of Hystaspes. So for example in Lydus' On the months (de Mensibus II. 4), which credits "the Chaldeans in the circle of Zoroaster and Hystaspes and the Egyptians" for the creation of the seven-day week after the number of planets.[38]

The fourth century Ammianus Marcellinus (xxiii. 6. 32) identifies Zoroaster's patron with another Vishtaspa, better known as Hystaspes in English, the (late-6th century BCE) father of Darius I. The sixth century Agathias was more ambivalent, observing that it wasn't clear to him whether the name of Zoroaster's patron referred to the father of Darius or to another Hystaspes (ii. 24). As with the medieval Zoroastrian chronology that identifies Vishtaspa with "Ardashir" (see above), Ammianus' identification was once considered to substantiate the "traditional date" of Zoroaster. [39]

Notes edit

  1. ^ YAv. Haugvan is Gathic Hvogva. Named members of this clan are Jamaspa and Frashaoshtra (Y 51. 17-18, Gatha 3), two members of Vishtaspa's court. In Yasna 53 (Gatha 5), Zoroaster is the celebrant priest at the marriage of his daughter, Pouruchista, to Jamaspa Hvogva. In Zoroastrian tradition (e.g. Denkard 21. 17), one of Zoroaster's wives, Hvovi, is the daughter of the other named Hvogva, Frashaoshtra.
  2. ^ In Yasht 15. 95–96, Vishtaspa's wife Hutaosa is also said to be a member of the Naotara clan. In Yasht 17, Ashi (Fortune) is said to have fled from the "swift-horsed" Naotaras. The meaning of this myth is obscure.[3]
  3. ^ For a review of older (early 20th century) interpretations, see Kent 1945, pp. 55–57.
  4. ^ "On theological issues, the Book of Zoroaster does not demonstrate significant differences to the older Middle Persian tractates. However, the untypical focus on the figure of Zoroaster on the one hand, and the assimilation of the figure of Zoroaster with the prophetic "type" intrinsic to Mohammed on the other hand, are unmistakable. Without losing its Zoroastrian character, the text portrays Zoroaster as the bearer of the perfect book, as the figure of a prophet in the Islamic sense. The perhaps most obvious example of the Islamization of Zoroaster's functions is in the scene in which, according to the Book of Zoroaster, Zoroaster presents himself to Vishtaspa with 'I am the prophet that God has sent to you' [ZN 281], in which the originally Arabic word rasul – in Islam used for the 'Prophet of God' – is used. "[21]
  5. ^ In an alternate tradition based on Yasht 9. 25–26, Hutaosa is said to have been the first to listen to Zoroaster's teachings.[4]
  6. ^ In the Book of Zoroaster, Zoroaster performs the dron yasht, a lesser service at which he consecrates wine, milk, incense and a pomegranate. The wine he gives to Vistaspa, who then falls into a dream in which he learns of his soul's ascent to heaven. The remaining three favors are distributed among Vishtaspa's son Peshotanu (MP: Peshotan), who becomes undying by drinking the milk: Vishtaspa's minister Jamasp, who gains all knowledge by inhaling the incense; and Spentodata, who attains invincibility by eating the pomegranate.[23]
  7. ^ In "a legend [that] persisted down to Sasanian times and beyond, [...] both Zoroaster and his patron Vishtaspa [were associated] with the Bactrian capital of Balkh",[27] Bactria was not the only region that claimed Vishtaspa for its own; as recorded in post-Sassanid sources (but apparently older), at least four other Iranian provinces – Parthia, Drangiana (Sistan), Atropatene and Persia – also attributed events in their local history to Vishtaspa.[28]
  8. ^ Additionally, and within the framework of the arguments that Cyrus the Great was a Zoroastrian, Boyce 1982, pp. 68–69 speculates that the reason why "[Cyrus'] name is never mentioned in the Pahlavi books or in the later royal genealogies" was because tradition identified Cyrus with Vishtaspa, with the use of Vishtaspa's name instead of Cyrus', thus leading to "complete oblivion for Cyrus in Zoroastrian tradition".
  9. ^ For the primary sources, see Bidez & Cumont 1938, vol. I: pp. 215–223; vol. II: pp. 359–377.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Skjaervo 2013.
  2. ^ a b Shabazi 2003, p. 171.
  3. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 65.
  4. ^ a b Boyce 1975, p. 187, n. 35.
  5. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 187.
  6. ^ a b Boyce 1975, p. 188.
  7. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 67.
  8. ^ a b Boyce 1975, p. 187.
  9. ^ a b c Boyce 1975, p. 249.
  10. ^ cf. Christensen 1931, pp. 24–25.
  11. ^ a b Shabazi 2003, p. 175.
  12. ^ Kent 1945, p. 57.
  13. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 187, n. 36.
  14. ^ Mayrhofer 1977, p. 97.
  15. ^ a b Boyce 1975, p. 11.
  16. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 288.
  17. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 279.
  18. ^ cf. Stausberg 2002, p. 46.
  19. ^ a b Boyce 1975, p. 280.
  20. ^ Stausberg 2002, p. 46.
  21. ^ Stausberg 2002, p. 48.
  22. ^ Boyce 1975, p. 281.
  23. ^ Boyce 1984, p. 60.
  24. ^ cf. Williams Jackson 1899, pp. 158–160.
  25. ^ Daryaee 1995, p. 136.
  26. ^ Lukonin 1983, pp. 697–698.
  27. ^ Boyce 1975, pp. 275–276.
  28. ^ Shabazi 2003, p. 174.
  29. ^ Beck 1991, pp. 491ff.
  30. ^ Boyce & Grenet 1991, pp. 376–377.
  31. ^ Hinnels 1973, pp. 126.
  32. ^ Boyce & Grenet 1991, p. 378.
  33. ^ Boyce & Grenet 1991, pp. 378–379.
  34. ^ Boyce & Grenet 1991, p. 379, n. 68.
  35. ^ cf. Hinnels 1973, pp. 127–128.
  36. ^ Beck 1991, p. 493, n. 4.
  37. ^ Boyce & Grenet 1991, p. 382.
  38. ^ cf. Beck 1991, p. 524, n. 83.
  39. ^ Williams Jackson 1899, pp. 158–160.

Sources edit

  • Christensen, Arthur (1931), Les Kayanides, Copenhagen: AF Høst & Søn.
  • Beck, Roger (1991), "Thus Spake Not Zarathushtra: Zoroastrian Pseudepigrapha of the Greco-Roman World", in Boyce, Mary; Grenet, Frantz (eds.), A History of Zoroastrianism, vol. 3, Leiden: Brill, pp. 491–565.
  • Bidez, Joseph; Cumont, Franz (1938), Les Mages Hellénisés, Le Muséon 512, Paris: Société d'Éditions Les Belles Lettres.
  • Boyce, Mary (1975), History of Zoroastrianism, vol. 1, Leiden: Brill.
  • Boyce, Mary (1982), History of Zoroastrianism, vol. 2, Leiden: Brill.
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Preceded by Legendary Kings of the Shāhnāma
120 years (2871–2991 after Keyumars)
Succeeded by

vishtaspa, other, people, named, hystaspes, avestan, 𐬬𐬌𐬱𐬙𐬁𐬯𐬞𐬀, vištāspa, persian, 𐎻𐏁𐎫𐎠𐎿𐎱, vištāspa, persian, گشتاسپ, guštāsp, ancient, greek, Ὑστάσπης, hustáspēs, avestan, language, name, figure, appearing, zoroastrian, scripture, tradition, portrayed, early, . For other people named Vishtaspa see Hystaspes Vishtaspa Avestan 𐬬𐬌𐬱𐬙𐬁𐬯𐬞𐬀 Vistaspa Old Persian 𐎻𐏁𐎫𐎠𐎿𐎱 Vistaspa Persian گشتاسپ Gustasp Ancient Greek Ὑstasphs Hustaspes is the Avestan language name of a figure appearing in Zoroastrian scripture and tradition portrayed as an early follower of Zoroaster and his patron and instrumental in the diffusion of the prophet s message Although Vishtaspa is not epigraphically attested he is like Zoroaster traditionally assumed to have been a historical figure although obscured by accretions from legend and myth In Zoroastrian tradition which builds on allusions found in the Avesta Vishtaspa is a righteous king who helped propagate and defend the faith In the non Zoroastrian Sistan cycle texts Vishtaspa is a loathsome ruler of the Kayanian dynasty 1 who intentionally sends his eldest son to a certain death In Greco Roman literature Zoroaster s patron was the pseudo anonymous author of a set of prophecies written under his name Contents 1 In scripture 2 In tradition and folklore 2 1 In Zoroastrian tradition 2 2 In the Sistan heroic cycle 3 In Greek and Roman thought 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesIn scripture editVishtaspa is referred to in the Gathas the oldest texts of Zoroastrianism which were considered to have been composed by Zoroaster himself In these hymns the poet speaks of Vishtaspa as his ally Yasna 46 14 follower of the path of Vohu Manah Y 51 16 and committed to spreading the prophet s message Y 51 16 46 15 53 2 In Yasna 28 1 28 7 Zoroaster appeals to Mazda for several boons including the power to vanquish their foes for Vishtaspa and himself Considered collectively the Gathas celebrate Vishtaspa as the patron of Zoroaster and the establisher of the first Zoroastrian community 2 The Gathic allusions recur in the Yashts of the Younger Avesta The appeal to Mazda for a boon reappears in Yasht 5 98 where the boon is asked for the Haugvan n 1 and Naotara families and in which Vishtaspa is said to be a member of the latter n 2 Later in the same hymn Zoroaster is described as appealing to Mazda to bring Vishtaspa son of Aurvataspa to think according to Daena Religion to speak according to the Religion to act according to the Religion Yt 5 104 105 In Yasht 9 25 26 the last part of which is an adaptation of the Gathic Yasna 49 7 4 the prophet makes the same appeal with regard to Hutaosa wife of Vishtaspa 5 In Yasht 9 30 Vishtaspa himself appeals for the ability to drive off the attacks of the daeva worshipping Arejat aspa and other members of drujvant Hyaona family Similarly in Yasht 5 109 Vishtaspa pleads for strength that he may crush Tathryavant of the bad religion the daeva worshipper Peshana and the wicked Arejataspa 6 Elsewhere Yt 5 112 113 Vishtaspa also pleads for strength on behalf of Zairivairi Pahl Zarer who in later tradition is said to be Vishtaspa s younger brother 1 The allusions to conflicts perhaps battles see below are again obliquely referred to in Yasht 13 99 100 in which the fravashis of Zoroaster and Vishtaspa are described as victorious combatants for Asha and the rescuers and furtherers of the religion This description is repeated in Yasht 19 84 87 where Zoroaster Vishtaspa and Vishtaspa s ancestors are additionally said to possess khvarenah 7 While the chief hero of the conflicts is said to be Vishtaspa s son Spentodhata Yt 13 103 6 in Yasht 13 100 Vishtaspa is proclaimed to have set his adopted faith in the place of honor amongst peoples 8 9 Passages in the Frawardin Yasht Yt 13 99 103 and elsewhere have enabled commentators to infer family connections between Vishtaspa and several other figures named in the Avesta 10 The summaries of several lost Avestan texts Wishtasp sast nask Spand nask Chihrdad nask and Varshtmansar nask as reported in the Denkard respectively 8 11 8 13 8 14 and 9 33 5 suggest that there once existed a detailed history of Vishtaspa and his ancestors in scripture 11 The Yasht 13 mentions Zairiuuairi Pisi siiao8na Vishtaspa s eschatological son Pisisōtan Speṇtōdata Spandyad Bastauuairi Bastwar Kauuarazman Frasaostra and Jamaspa the Huuōguua brothers in the Gathas all of whom are featured in the Pahlavi narrative about the war between Vishtaspa and Arzasp Arjasp king of the Xiiaonas In Yasht 9 31 Vishtaspa prays to Druuaspa that he may successfully fight and kill various opponents and apparently turn Humaiia and Varedakana away from the lands of the Xiiaonas 1 In Yasna 12 the Zarathustra Vishtaspa Frasaostra and Jamaspa and the three Saosiiaṇts Zarathustra s eschatological sons and in Yasna 23 2 and 26 5 the fravashi of Gaiia Maretan Zarathustra Vishtaspa and Isaṯ vastra another of Zarathustra s eschatological sons are listed as the principal fighters for Asha 1 The meaning of Vishtaspa s name is uncertain Interpretations include he whose horses have or horse has come in ready for riding etc 12 he who has trained horses 13 and whose horses are released for the race 14 n 3 It agrees with the description from Yasht 5 132 in which was a prototypical winner of the chariot race 1 In tradition and folklore editIn Zoroastrian tradition edit In the Gathas Vishtaspa is repeatedly Y 46 14 51 16 53 2 referred to as a kavi which is etymologically a term for a mantic seer or poet priest and in Yasna 28 11 is also used of Zoroaster s enemies 15 In the Younger Avesta the term is also applied to wise men generally to include Vishtaspa and his ancestors In tradition however the kavis are kings evidently because Vistaspa and his forebears the kavis par excellence were princely rulers Presumably the gift of prophecy of mantic poetry was hereditary in their family 15 Both scripture and tradition refer to Vishtaspa s ancestors but do not mention Vishtaspa s successors Vishtaspa was apparently the last of his line and the last of the kavis 9 In Zoroastrian apocalyptic chronology the dynasties of the world are divided into seven ages each named after a metal According to this chronology Zand i Wahman yasn 2 16 Dabistan 140 Vishtaspa in Zoroastrian Middle Persian Wishtasp ascent to the throne ended the reign of silver and his reign was over the age of gold 16 In tradition the works of Zoroaster were said to have been kept in a royal library that was then destroyed by Alexander the Great In Denkard 3 420 it is Vishtaspa who is said to have been the king who had those texts made and placed in the royal library The Yasht s allusions to conflicts are amplified in the 9th 11th century books of Zoroastrian tradition where the conflicts are portrayed as outright battles of the faith So for example the surviving fragments of a fragmentary text that celebrates the deeds of Zairivairi Vishtaspa s brother and captain of his forces against Arejat aspa chief of the Hyonas According to that text Ayadgar i Zareran 10 11 upon hearing of Vishtaspa s conversion Arejat aspa sent messengers to demand that Vishtaspa abandon the pure Mazda worshipping religion which he had received from Ohrmazd and should become once more of the same religion as himself The battle that following Vishtaspa s refusal left Vishtaspa victorious 9 The conversion of Vishtaspa is likewise a theme of the 9th 11th century books and these legends remain the best known and most current among Zoroastrians today 17 18 According to this tradition when Zoroaster arrived at Vishtaspa s court the prophet was met with hostility from the kayags and karabs kavis and karapans with whom he disputed at a great assembly a tradition which may well be based on reality for Vishtaspa must have had his own priests and seers who would hardly have welcomed a new prophet claiming divine authority 19 The tradition goes on to relate that Zoroaster triumphed after three days of debate only to be maligned by his enemies to Vishtaspa who then had the prophet imprisoned But from prison Zoroaster cured one of Vishtaspa s favourite horses which had suddenly become paralyzed for which the prophet then gained Vishtaspa s support and admiration The tale is obliquely referred to in the Anthology of Zadspram 24 6 which seems to presume that the reader already knows it 20 and it is summarized in the Denkard 7 4 64 86 and as workings of popular fancy 19 described in detail in the later Book of Zoroaster 942 1094 n 4 In the myth Zoroaster cures each of the horse s four legs in exchange for four concessions first that Vishtaspa himself accept Zoroaster s message secondly that Vishtaspa s son Spentodata MP Esfandiar do the same third that Vishtaspa s wife Hutaosa MP Hutos also convert n 5 and finally that the men who maligned Zoroaster be put to death When these four wishes are granted the horse stands up rejuvenated Vishtaspa having accepted the faith from Zoroaster then asks for four favours in return 22 first that he Vishtaspa should know his place in the next world secondly that he should become invulnerable third that he should know the future and fourth that his body should not leave his soul until the resurrection Zoroaster replies that these are too great to all be given to one man and that he should choose one Vishtaspa agrees and chooses the first Zoroaster then gives him consecrated wine to drink which puts Vishtaspa in a trance in which he has an epiphany he sees his spirit ascend to heaven where it beholds the glories of God n 6 Vishtaspa s conversion is traditionally said to have taken place during Zoroaster s forty second year a figure undoubtedly reached by later calculation 8 In medieval Zoroastrian chronology Vishtaspa is identified as a grandfather of Ardashir i e the 5th century BCE Artaxerxes I or II 24 This myth is tied to the Sassanid early 3rd early 7th century claim of descent from Artaxerxes and the claim of relationship to the Kayanids that is with Vishtaspa and his ancestors The full adoption of Kayanid names titles and myths from the Avesta by the Sassanids was a main component of Sassanid ideology 25 The association of Artaxerxes with the Kayanids occurred through the identification of Artaxerxes II s title Mnemon in Greek with the name of Vishtaspa s legendary grandson and successor Wahman both are theophorics of Avestan Vohu Manah Good Mind ed Middle Persian Wahman is a contraction of the Avestan name while Greek Mnemon is a calque of it The Sassanid association of their dynasty with Vishtaspa s is a development dated to the end of the 4th century and which arose to some extent because this was when the Sasanians conquered Balkh the birthplace of Vishtasp and the holy land of Zoroastrianism 26 n 7 As was also the case for the fourth century Roman identification of Zoroaster s patron with the late 6th century BCE father of Darius I see below the identification of Vishtaspa as a grandfather of Ardashir Artaxerxes I II was once perceived to substantiate the traditional date of Zoroaster which places the prophet in the 6th century BCE The traditional descriptions of Vishtaspa s ancestors as having chariots a description that puts them fully in the Bronze Age also contribute to the academic debate on the dating of Zoroaster for a summary of the role of Vishtaspa s ancestors in this issue see Boyce 1984 p 62 n 38 n 8 In the Sistan heroic cycle edit nbsp Gushtasp Slays the Dragon of Mount Saqila Miniature by Mirza Ali from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp Tabriz c 1530 35 Aga Khan Museum Non Zoroastrian literature in New Persian and Arabic uniformly reflects the regular development of Middle Persian wi into gu with Middle Persian Wishtasp thus becoming Goshtasb in Sistan national history Tarikh e Sistan Goshtasp in Firdausi s Book of Kings Shahnameh Goshtasf in the Mojmal al tawarikh 2 Beshtashb by Al Tabari In several respects for instance in Goshtasb s Goshtasf s etc mythological genealogy the Sistan cycle texts continue the Zoroastrian tradition So for example Goshtasp is identified as a member of the Kayanian dynasty is the son of Lohrasp Lohrasb etc is the brother of Zareh Zarer etc is the father of Esfandiar Isfandiar etc and Bashutan Beshotan etc and so on However in the Sistan legends Goshtasb Goshtasf etc is an abominable figure altogether unlike the hero of Zoroastrian tradition The reason for this discrepancy is unknown According to the Sistan tradition Goshtasb demands the throne from his father Lohrasp but storms off to India Hind when the king declines Goshtasb s brother Zareh Zareh Zarer etc Avestan Zairivairi is sent to fetch him but Goshtasb flees to Rome where he marries Katayoun Katayun Katayoun etc the daughter of the qaysar Goshtasb subsequently becomes a military commander for the Roman emperor and encourages the emperor to demand tribute from Iran Again Zareh is sent to fetch Goshtasb who is then promised the throne and is thus persuaded to return Back in Sistan Goshtasb imprisons his own son Esfandiar Esfandiar Isfandiar etc Avestan Spentodata but then has to seek Esfandiar s help in defeating Arjasp Avestan Aurvataspa who is threatening Balkh Goshtasb promises Esfandiar the throne in return for his help but when Esfandiar is successful his father stalls and instead sends him off on another mission to suppress a rebellion in Turan Esfandiar is again successful and upon his return Goshtasb hedges once again and aware of a prediction that foretells the death of Esfandiar at the hand of Rostam sends him off on a mission in which Esfandiar is destined to die In the Shahnameh the nobles upbraid Goshtasb as a disgrace to the throne his daughters denounce him as a heinous criminal and his younger son Bashutan Avestan Peshotanu condemns him as a wanton destroyer of Iran 11 1 As in Zoroastrian tradition in the Sistan cycle texts Goshtasp is succeeded by Esfandiar s son Bahman lt MP Wahman 1 The identification of Bahman with Ardashir see above reappears in the Sistan cycle texts as well In Greek and Roman thought editThe name Visthaspa is Hystaspes in the Greek and Latin texts of the Hellenistic era Besides referring to historically attested persons named Vishtaspa it was also applied to Zoroaster s patron who the Greeks and Romans imagined to be a sage of great antiquity and the putative author of a set of prophecies written under his name n 9 Although the works attributed to Pseudo Hystaspes draw on real Zoroastrian sources the Greek and Roman portraits of his person are just as fanciful as those of the other two les Mages hellenises Pseudo Zoroaster and Pseudo Ostanes 29 While Pseudo Zoroaster was identified as the inventor of astrology and Pseudo Ostanes was imagined to be a master sorcerer Pseudo Hystaspes seems to have been stereotyped as an apocalyptic prophet None of the works attributed to him are still extant but quotations and references have survived in the works of others especially in those of two early Christian writers Justin Martyr ca 100 165 CE in Samaria and the mid 3rd century Lactantius in North Africa who drew on them by way of confirmation that what themselves held to be revealed truth had already been uttered 30 Only one of these pseudepigraphic works referred to as the Book of Hystaspes or the Oracles of Hystaspes or just Hystaspes is known by name This work or set of works of the first century BCE is referred to by Lactantius Justin Martyr Clement of Alexandria Lydus and Aristokritos all of whom describe it as foretelling the downfall of the Roman empire the return of rule to the east and of the coming of the saviour 31 Lactantius provides a detailed summary of the Oracles of Hystaspes in his Divinae Institutiones Book VII from the end of chapter 15 through chapter 19 It begins with Hystaspes awaking from a dream and needing to have it interpreted for him This is duly accomplished by a young boy here representing according to convention the openness of youth and innocent to divine visitations 32 As interpreted by the boy the dream predicts the iniquity of the last age and the impending destruction of the wicked by fire The divine fire will burn both the righteous and the wicked but only the wicked will be hurt and neither will be destroyed During the eschatological inferno the followers of truth will separate themselves from the wicked and ascend a mountain The evil king who dominates the world will be angered on hearing this and he will resolve to encircle the mountain with his army The righteous implore to Jupiter who sends them a saviour who will descend from heaven accompanied by angels and before him a flaming sword Hystaspes prophesies that the wicked king i e the Roman emperor will survive the destruction of his armies but will lose power It was presumably 33 the prophecy of the destruction of a victorious power i e the Roman empire that caused the work to be proscribed by Rome according to Justin Martyr Apologia I 44 12 reading the work was punishable by death 34 35 Unlike the works attributed to the other two les Mages hellenises the Oracles of Hystaspes was apparently based on the genuine Zoroastrian myths and the argument for ultimate magian composition is a strong one As prophecies they have a political context a function and a focus which radically distinguish them from the philosophical and encyclopedic wisdom of the other pseudepigrapha 36 Although p rophecies of woes and iniquities in the last age are alien to orthodox Zoroastrianism there was probably a growth of Zoroastrian literature in the late fourth early third centuries denouncing the evils of the Hellenistic age and offering hope of the coming kingdom of Ahura Mazda 37 The Greco Roman obsession with Zoroaster as the inventor of astrology also influenced the image of Hystaspes So for example in Lydus On the months de Mensibus II 4 which credits the Chaldeans in the circle of Zoroaster and Hystaspes and the Egyptians for the creation of the seven day week after the number of planets 38 The fourth century Ammianus Marcellinus xxiii 6 32 identifies Zoroaster s patron with another Vishtaspa better known as Hystaspes in English the late 6th century BCE father of Darius I The sixth century Agathias was more ambivalent observing that it wasn t clear to him whether the name of Zoroaster s patron referred to the father of Darius or to another Hystaspes ii 24 As with the medieval Zoroastrian chronology that identifies Vishtaspa with Ardashir see above Ammianus identification was once considered to substantiate the traditional date of Zoroaster 39 Notes edit YAv Haugvan is Gathic Hvogva Named members of this clan are Jamaspa and Frashaoshtra Y 51 17 18 Gatha 3 two members of Vishtaspa s court In Yasna 53 Gatha 5 Zoroaster is the celebrant priest at the marriage of his daughter Pouruchista to Jamaspa Hvogva In Zoroastrian tradition e g Denkard 21 17 one of Zoroaster s wives Hvovi is the daughter of the other named Hvogva Frashaoshtra In Yasht 15 95 96 Vishtaspa s wife Hutaosa is also said to be a member of the Naotara clan In Yasht 17 Ashi Fortune is said to have fled from the swift horsed Naotaras The meaning of this myth is obscure 3 For a review of older early 20th century interpretations see Kent 1945 pp 55 57 On theological issues the Book of Zoroaster does not demonstrate significant differences to the older Middle Persian tractates However the untypical focus on the figure of Zoroaster on the one hand and the assimilation of the figure of Zoroaster with the prophetic type intrinsic to Mohammed on the other hand are unmistakable Without losing its Zoroastrian character the text portrays Zoroaster as the bearer of the perfect book as the figure of a prophet in the Islamic sense The perhaps most obvious example of the Islamization of Zoroaster s functions is in the scene in which according to the Book of Zoroaster Zoroaster presents himself to Vishtaspa with I am the prophet that God has sent to you ZN 281 in which the originally Arabic word rasul in Islam used for the Prophet of God is used 21 In an alternate tradition based on Yasht 9 25 26 Hutaosa is said to have been the first to listen to Zoroaster s teachings 4 In the Book of Zoroaster Zoroaster performs the dron yasht a lesser service at which he consecrates wine milk incense and a pomegranate The wine he gives to Vistaspa who then falls into a dream in which he learns of his soul s ascent to heaven The remaining three favors are distributed among Vishtaspa s son Peshotanu MP Peshotan who becomes undying by drinking the milk Vishtaspa s minister Jamasp who gains all knowledge by inhaling the incense and Spentodata who attains invincibility by eating the pomegranate 23 In a legend that persisted down to Sasanian times and beyond both Zoroaster and his patron Vishtaspa were associated with the Bactrian capital of Balkh 27 Bactria was not the only region that claimed Vishtaspa for its own as recorded in post Sassanid sources but apparently older at least four other Iranian provinces Parthia Drangiana Sistan Atropatene and Persia also attributed events in their local history to Vishtaspa 28 Additionally and within the framework of the arguments that Cyrus the Great was a Zoroastrian Boyce 1982 pp 68 69 speculates that the reason why Cyrus name is never mentioned in the Pahlavi books or in the later royal genealogies was because tradition identified Cyrus with Vishtaspa with the use of Vishtaspa s name instead of Cyrus thus leading to complete oblivion for Cyrus in Zoroastrian tradition For the primary sources see Bidez amp Cumont 1938 vol I pp 215 223 vol II pp 359 377 References edit a b c d e f g Skjaervo 2013 a b Shabazi 2003 p 171 Boyce 1975 p 65 a b Boyce 1975 p 187 n 35 Boyce 1975 p 187 a b Boyce 1975 p 188 Boyce 1975 p 67 a b Boyce 1975 p 187 a b c Boyce 1975 p 249 cf Christensen 1931 pp 24 25 a b Shabazi 2003 p 175 Kent 1945 p 57 Boyce 1975 p 187 n 36 Mayrhofer 1977 p 97 a b Boyce 1975 p 11 Boyce 1975 p 288 Boyce 1975 p 279 cf Stausberg 2002 p 46 a b Boyce 1975 p 280 Stausberg 2002 p 46 Stausberg 2002 p 48 Boyce 1975 p 281 Boyce 1984 p 60 cf Williams Jackson 1899 pp 158 160 Daryaee 1995 p 136 Lukonin 1983 pp 697 698 Boyce 1975 pp 275 276 Shabazi 2003 p 174 Beck 1991 pp 491ff Boyce amp Grenet 1991 pp 376 377 Hinnels 1973 pp 126 Boyce amp Grenet 1991 p 378 Boyce amp Grenet 1991 pp 378 379 Boyce amp Grenet 1991 p 379 n 68 cf Hinnels 1973 pp 127 128 Beck 1991 p 493 n 4 Boyce amp Grenet 1991 p 382 cf Beck 1991 p 524 n 83 Williams Jackson 1899 pp 158 160 Sources editChristensen Arthur 1931 Les Kayanides Copenhagen AF Host amp Son Beck Roger 1991 Thus Spake Not Zarathushtra Zoroastrian Pseudepigrapha of the Greco Roman World in Boyce Mary Grenet Frantz eds A History of Zoroastrianism vol 3 Leiden Brill pp 491 565 Bidez Joseph Cumont Franz 1938 Les Mages Hellenises Le Museon 512 Paris Societe d Editions Les Belles Lettres Boyce Mary 1975 History of Zoroastrianism vol 1 Leiden Brill Boyce Mary 1982 History of Zoroastrianism vol 2 Leiden Brill Boyce Mary 1984 On the Antiquity of Zoroastrian Apocalyptic Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 47 1 57 75 doi 10 1017 S0041977X0002214X S2CID 170804351 Boyce Mary Grenet Frantz 1991 History of Zoroastrianism vol 3 Leiden Brill Boyce Mary 1992 Zoroastrianism Its Antiquity and Constant Vigour Costa Mesa Mazda Press Daryaee Touraj 1995 National History or Keyanid History The Nature of Sasanid Zoroastrian Historiography Iranian Studies 28 3 4 129 141 doi 10 1080 00210869508701832 Hinnels John R 1973 The Zoroastrian Doctrine of Salvation in the Roman World A Study of the Oracles of Hystaspes in Sharpe Eric John Hinnels John R eds Man and His Salvation Manchester Manchester UP pp 125 148 Kent Roland G 1945 The Name of Hystaspes Language 21 2 55 58 doi 10 2307 409718 JSTOR 409718 Lukonin V G 1983 Political Social and Administrative Institutions in Yarshater Ehsan ed Cambridge History of Iran vol 3 2 The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian Periods London Cambridge UP pp 681 747 Mayrhofer Manfred ed 1977 Vistaspa Die avestischen Namen Iranisches Personennamenbuch vol I 1 Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften n 379 p 97 Russell James R 1993 On Mysticism and Esotericism among the Zoroastrians Iranian Studies 26 2 73 94 doi 10 1080 00210869308701787 Shabazi A Shapur 2003 Gostasp Encyclopedia Iranica vol 11 Costa Mesa University of California Press pp 171 176 Skjaervo Prods Oktor 2013 Kauui Vistaspa Kay Wistasp Kay Bestasb Gostasb Encyclopaedia Iranica Stausberg Michael 2002 Die Religion Zarathushtras vol I Stuttgart Kohlhammer Williams Jackson A V 1893 Where Was Zoroaster s Native Place Journal of the American Oriental Society 15 221 232 doi 10 2307 592356 JSTOR 592356 Williams Jackson A V 1899 Zoroaster the prophet of ancient Iran New York Columbia UP Preceded byKay Lohrasp Legendary Kings of the Shahnama120 years 2871 2991 after Keyumars Succeeded byKay Bahman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vishtaspa amp oldid 1218949067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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