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Hyrcania

Hyrcania (/hərˈkniə/) (Greek: Ὑρκανία Hyrkania,[1] Old Persian: 𐎺𐎼𐎣𐎠𐎴 Varkâna,[2] Middle Persian: 𐭢𐭥𐭫𐭢𐭠𐭭 Gurgān, Akkadian: Urqananu)[2] is a historical region composed of the land south-east of the Caspian Sea in modern-day Iran and Turkmenistan, bound in the south by the Alborz mountain range and the Kopet Dag in the east.[3]

Hyrcania
Gurgān
Province of the Median, Achaemenid, Seleucid, Arsacid, and Sasanian Empire
548 BC–651 AD

Achaemenid Empire, with Province of Hyrcania
CapitalZadracarta
(548 BC–225 AD)
Gurgān
(225–651 AD)
History
Historical eraAntiquity
• Established
548 BC
• Fall of the Sasanian Empire
651 AD
Today part of

The region served as a satrapy (province) of the Median Empire, a sub-province of the Achaemenid Empire, and a province within its successors, the Seleucid, Arsacid and Sasanian empires. Hyrcania bordered Parthia to the east (later known as Abarshahr), Dihistan to the north, Media to the south and Mardia to the west.

Etymology

Hyrcania (Ὑρκανία) is the Greek name for the region, a borrowing from the Old Persian Verkâna as recorded in Darius the Great's Behistun Inscription (522 BC), as well as in other Old Persian cuneiform inscriptions. Verkā means "wolf" in Old Iranian, cf. Avestan vəhrkō, Gilaki and Mazandarani verk, Modern Persian gorg, and Sanskrit vŗka (वृक). Consequently, Hyrcania means "Wolf-land". The name was extended to the Caspian Sea and underlies the name of the city Sari (Zadracarta), the then-largest city and the capital of ancient Hyrcania.

Another archaic name, Dahistān (not to be confused with dehestan – a modern Iranian word for "district" or "county") is sometimes used interchangeably with Hyrcania. Dahistān refers, strictly speaking to the "place of the Dahae": an extinct people who lived immediately north of Hyrcania, as early as the 5th century BC.[4] Apart from the geographical proximity of the Dahae, their ethnonym may have etymological similarities to "Hyrcanians"; for example, religious historian David Gordon White, reiterating a point made by previous scholars, suggests that Dahae resembles the Proto-Indo-European *dhau "strangle", which was apparently also a euphemism for "wolf".[5]

History

Pre-Hellenistic Period

Hyrcania formed part of the Median Empire by 600 BC, and according to Nicolaus Damascenus, was administered as a satrapy by the time of the last Median king, Astyages, who appointed a certain Artasyras as satrap (governor).[6] Upon the fall of the Median Empire, the region willingly submitted to the Achaemenid Empire and was occupied by Cyrus the Great in 549-548 BC,[7] and for a time Artasyras continued as satrap under Cyrus,[8] prior to his replacement by Astyages himself.[6] According to Ctesias, Astyages' grandson Megabernes also served as satrap of Hyrcania.[6] Hyrcanians gave their name to the Hyrcanian plain in the middle Hermus valley in Lydia where they were settled, most likely during the reign of Cyrus the Great, as part of a policy to establish military colonies in Asia Minor.[9] Under the Achaemenid Empire, Hyrcania served as a sub-province of the satrapy of Parthia, which was also known as the satrapy of Parthia and Hyrcania.[6] At times, Cadusia may have been administered as part of Hyrcania.[10] Fortifications to protect Hyrcania against nomadic incursions were constructed during the Achaemenid period.[11]

Following Darius the Great's victory over the Magian usurper, Gaumata, in September 522 BC, revolts spread throughout the empire.[12] In December 522 BC, a revolt in support of the Median leader Phraortes erupted in Hyrcania,[2] and in March 521 BC, the Hyrcanian rebels unsuccessfully attacked Hystaspes, satrap of Parthia.[13] In May, Phraortes was defeated and Hyrcania returned to Achaemenid rule.[13] Darius later settled Hyrcanians in the settlement of Dareionkome (Greek: Δαρειονκώμη) in the Hyrcanian Plain in Lydia.[9] Other Hyrcanian settlements in the Hermus valley include Ormoita and Tyanolla.[14] According to Herodotus, Hyrcanian soldiers participated in the Second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC under the command of Megapanus.[15] After the war, a garrison composed of Hyrcanian soldiers was posted in the valleys of the rivers Hermus and Caicus.[2] Under Xerxes I, Hyrcania was likely detached from the satrapy of Parthia and administered separately.[16] Some sources imply Hyrcania was later administered as a sub-province of Media.[16] According to Ctesias, Artaxerxes I appointed his illegitimate son Ochus as satrap of Hyrcania in c. 425 BC,[17] who later assumed the throne as Darius II and appointed Idernes as satrap.[15] Idernes' son Terituchmes succeeded him as satrap of Hyrcania following his death and was married to Amestris, daughter of Darius II, but Terituchmes was murdered by Udiastes, a henchman of Terituchmes, for conspiring to murder Amestris and revolt against Darius so he could wed his half-sister Roxana.[15]

By the time of Alexander the Great's invasion of the Achaemenid Empire in 334 BC, Hyrcania was reattached to the satrapy of Parthia and administered as a sub-province.[16] Hyrcanian soldiers are mentioned in the Battle of Gaugamela against Alexander in 331 BC. After the death of Darius III in 330 BC, many Persian noblemen fled to Hyrcania.[2] Alexander reached Hyrcania in 330 BC, where he accepted the surrender of Phrataphernes, satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia, and chiliarch Nabarzanes.[15] Alexander seized Zadracarta, the capital of Hyrcania, hereafter known as Syrinx, later that year and received the surrender of other satraps and nobles.[18] Whilst in Hyrcania, Alexander appointed his general Amminapes as satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia,[19] but was succeeded as satrap of Hyrcania by Autophradates, satrap of Mardia and Tapuria, not long after.[20] In 328 BC, Autophradates rebelled against Alexander and Phrataphernes, who had been reinstated as satrap of Parthia, was sent to quell the revolt.[21] Autophradates was defeated and executed by Alexander at Pasargadae in 324 BC and Phrataphernes was granted the satrapies of Hyrcania, Tapuria, and Mardia.[21]

Hellenistic Period

Following the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, his empire was divided amongst the Diadochi in the Partition of Babylon, which confirmed Phrataphernes' control of Hyrcania and Parthia.[21] The Partition of Triparadisus in 321 BC granted Parthia and Hyrcania to Philip,[21] however, Philip was killed by Peithon, satrap of Media, in 318 BC and Peithon appointed his brother Eudemus as satrap.[15] Eudemus was driven from Parthia and Hyrcania in 317 BC by Peithon, satrap of the Indus, who was subsequently defeated in 315 BC by Antigonus, allowing Antigonus to take control of the Asian territories of the empire.[22] Antigonus appointed Nicanor satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia, also known as the upper satrapies, in 315 BC and continued in this office until his death during the Babylonian War in battle against Seleucus in 310 BC which allowed Seleucus to conquer the eastern territories of the empire and form the Seleucid Empire.[23]

Seleucus' son, Antiochus I, appointed Andragoras as satrap of Parthia and Hyrcania at an unknown date prior to 266 BC, but rebelled against his successor Antiochus II in c. 245 BC.[24] Andragoras may have founded the city of Dehestān during his tenure as satrap.[15] Andragoras was killed in 238 BC during the Parni conquest of Parthia, led by Arsaces, who went on to conquer Hyrcania in 235 BC, thereafter forming part of the Arsacid Empire.[25] Seleucus II attempted to reassert Seleucid control of Hyrcania and Parthia in 231 BC, but was unsuccessful as he was forced to return to Asia Minor to quell unrest.[26]

Following the Battle of Mount Labus in 209 BC, Antiochus III invaded Hyrcania and seized the cities of Tambrax and Syrinx,[15] forcing Arsaces II, who was permitted to continue his rule over Hyrcania and Parthia, to become a vassal of the Seleucid Empire.[27] During the siege of Syrinx, when the wall was breached, the garrison slaughtered the Greek inhabitants and attempted to flee.[28] Arsaces II may have reasserted his independence in 189 BC, following Antiochus' defeat at the hands of the Romans at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC.[29] During the reign of Antiochus IV, in the late 2nd century BC, Hyrcania still formed part of the Seleucid Empire.[30] After Mithridates' conquest of Media in 148 BC, Hyrcanians launched an unsuccessful revolt, which was crushed by Mithridates shortly afterwards.[31] Hyrcania served as a royal retreat and Mithridates retired there in 141 BC.[15] In 139 BC, Demetrius II launched an invasion of the Arsacid Empire only to be defeated and captured, following which he was provided a princely residence in Hyrcania and married to Rhodogune, daughter of Mithridates.[31] In 129 BC, the Saka tribes invaded and pillaged Hyrcania, alongside other eastern provinces, and defeated and killed two successive Arsacid kings.[32] Soon after his ascension to the throne in 124 BC, Mithridates II, recovered Hyrcania and re-established Arsacid control.[33]

Post-Hellenistic period

Artabanus, king of Hyrcania, belonging to a collateral branch of the Arsacid dynasty, led a revolt against the Roman-backed Vonones I in 10 AD and successfully usurped the throne, becoming Artabanus III.[34] Roman interference in the Arsacid Empire resulted in the ascension of Tiridates III in 36 AD, exiling Artabanus III to Hyrcania for a short time.[15] During his exile in Hyrcania, Artabanus III adopted Gotarzes, son of Ardawan,[35] satrap of Hyrcania.[36] Artabanus III retrieved the throne and was succeeded by his son Vardanes I in 38 AD, however, Gotarzes unsuccessfully attempted to usurp the throne and was forced into exile amongst the Dahae.[31] Gotarzes invaded Hyrcania in 46 AD with the support of the Hyrcanians and Dahae to press his claim to the throne, however, upon Gotarzes' discovery of a plot amongst the nobles to remove both Gotarzes and Vardanes I and place another upon the throne, the two brothers made peace.[31] Gotarzes agreed to not press his claim to the throne and was appointed satrap of Hyrcania, only to revolt with the support of a number of nobles and attempt to press his claim once more.[31] Gotarzes was defeated in Hyrcania and forced into exile amongst the Dahae until the death of Vardanes I in 47 AD, thus becoming Gotarzes II.[37]

Under the Arsacid Empire, the Great Wall of Gorgan, a series of forts and outposts with the plains of Hyrcania, was constructed to aid in the defence of Hyrcania against raids undertaken by the neighbouring Dahae tribes.[38] At the beginning of the Roman–Parthian War of 58–63, a rebellion erupted in Hyrcania and rebels sent envoys to Emperor Nero requesting aid.[39] The rebellion raged until 60 AD when Vologases I hastily concluded a peace treaty with the rebels to allow him to deal with the threat posed by the Romans.[40] However, the peace treaty did not last and the Hyrcanians launched another revolt that continued until at least 75 AD.[31] In 75 AD, the Hyrcanian rebels allied with nomadic Alan tribes and granted them safe passage through Hyrcania into Media, allowing the Alans to pillage Media and Armenia.[31] In the time of the reign of the Emperor Antoninus Pius (138–161), Hyrcania had made itself independent and was not considered part of the Arsacid Empire.[41] Hyrcania is mentioned as Li-chien (or Li-kan, 黎幹) in the 2nd century AD Book of Han.[42]

Hyrcania was annexed to the Sasanian Empire in 225 AD by Ardashir I,[15] after which the provincial centre was moved to Gurgān, which lent its name to the province during this period.[43] The House of Aspahbadh, one of the Seven Great Houses, held lands principally within the region.[44] Whilst staying in Hyrcania in 420 AD, Yazdegerd I was assassinated by the nobility who alleged that he had been killed by a white horse that emerged from and disappeared into a stream.[45] The myth propagated by the nobility led people to believe the white horse was an angel sent by Ahura Mazda to end Yazdegerd's tyranny.[46] Gurgān is known to have held a mint as early as the reign of Yazdegerd II.[43] An unsuccessful revolt led by Vahan Amatuni, assistant governor of Armenia, led to his, and other members of the Amatuni noble family, exile in Hyrcania in 451 AD.[47] Priests and other nobles who had led the revolt against Yazdegerd II were also deported to Hyrcania where they stayed until they were moved to the city of New-Shapur in Abarshahr in 453 AD.[48]

During the reign of Peroz I, the Hepthalites invaded Hyrcania and quartered at Gurgan in 465/469 AD. Peroz and his son Kavadh rallied against the Hepthalites and were defeated and captured in battle near Gurgan.[49] At the time of the usurper Bahrām Chōbin's movement eastward into Abarshahr in 591 AD, Hyrcania was governed by the House of Karen, one of the Seven Great Houses.[50] Following the defeat of the usurper Bahrām Chōbin in 591 AD, Khosrow II appointed Vistahm marzban (governor) of Hyrcania as a reward for his support during the rebellion, however, Khosrow's mistrust for Vistahm led him to attempt to execute him by luring him to the royal court. Vistahm was informed of Khosrow's intentions and rose in revolt, conquering much of the eastern provinces of the Sasanian Empire prior to his death and defeat in battle against Smbat Bagratuni in 596 AD.[51] Smbat was rewarded and appointed marzban of Hyrcania, which he served as until 602 AD,[52] during which time the region is known to have prospered.[53]

Religion

Hyrcania, and the rest of Iran in Antiquity, was dominated by Zoroastrianism which was practised by the majority of the population.[54] Christianity and Judaism were also practised in the region, and, Barshabba, the apocryphal 4th century AD bishop of Merv, is attributed to the foundation of Christian monasteries in Hyrcania.[55] A diocese of Gurgan of the Church of the East is known to have existed from 424 AD.[56] According to Paulus Orosius, following the suppression of a revolt in Phoenicia and the conquest of Egypt in 343 BC, Artaxerxes III deported Phoenician and Egyptian Jews to Hyrcania as punishment for opposing him.[57][58] Some Hyrcanian Jews returned to Palestine; however, they maintained a presence within the region as late as the 4th century AD.[58]

Literary references

In Latin literature, Hyrcania is often mentioned in relationship to tigers, which were apparently particularly abundant there during the Classical Age (though extinct in the area since the early 1970s).[59][60] Virgil, in the Aeneid, had the abandoned Dido accuse Aeneas:

Nec tibi diva parens generis nec Dardanus auctor,
perfide, sed duris genuit te cautibus horrens
Caucasus Hyrcanaeque admorunt ubera tigres. (IV.365-7)

"You had neither a goddess for a parent, nor was Dardanus the author of your race, faithless one, but the horrible Caucasus produced you from hard crags, and Hyrcanian tigers nursed you."

Following its geographical listing by Isidore of Seville in the early 7th century Etymologiae (a standard Mediaeval textbook), the name of Hyrcania became known and taught as far off as Ireland, where it was included in poems such as Cú-cen-máthair by Luccreth moccu Chiara (665 AD), the Auraicept na n-Éces, and Lebor Gabála Érenn (11th century).

Hyrcania is mentioned in the short story "Rinconete y Cortadillo" by Miguel de Cervantes, and constitutes one of his exemplary stories which were published in 1613. Cervantes uses this reference to portray the illiteracy of Juliana la Cariharta, a member of Monipodio's guild. She is intending to make reference to Ocaña, a provincial town in Toledo, Spain; but she has misheard it and does not realise the difference.

Shakespeare, relying on his Latin sources, makes repeated references in his plays to the "Hyrcan tiger" (Macbeth, III.iv.1281) or "th' Hyrcanian beast" (Hamlet, II.ii.447) as an emblem of bloodthirsty cruelty. In Henry VI, Part 3, the Duke of York compares Queen Margaret unfavorably to "Tygers of Hyrcania" (I.iv.622) for her inhumanity.[61] Even in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, the Prince of Morocco also made references to Hyrcania. He said (an excerpt), "The Hyrcanian deserts and the vasty wilds/Of wild Arabia are as thoroughfares now."

Sir Walter Scott in an epigraph to the thirty-fifth chapter of Ivanhoe refers to "the tiger of the Hyrcanian deserts" as a "lesser [...] risk than [...] the slumbering fire of wild fanaticism" (the epigraph is cited as being written by an anonymous author).[62]

The comic book heroine Red Sonja is described as coming from Hyrkania, an imaginary locale bordering an inland sea based loosely on Hyrcania and set in Robert E. Howard's fictional Hyborian Age. Howard's Conan the Barbarian also has various adventures set in this locale, including as a pirate on the inland sea.

List of governors

Although the below list is incomplete, they are the known governors of Hyrcania.

See also

References

  1. ^ Woodhouse (1910), p. 1013
  2. ^ a b c d e Lendering (1996)
  3. ^ Sherwin-White & Kuhrt (1993), p. 81
  4. ^ François de Blois & Willem Vogelsang, 2011, "Dahae", Encyclopedia Iranica (23 May 2015).
  5. ^ David Gordon White, 1991, Myths of the Dog-Man, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, pp. 27, 239.
  6. ^ a b c d Jacobs (2006)
  7. ^ Dandamayev (1993), pp. 516-521
  8. ^ Dandamayev (1986), p. 652
  9. ^ a b Ramsay (1890), p. 124
  10. ^ Schmitt (1990), p. 612
  11. ^ Lendering (2005)
  12. ^ Rawlinson (1867)
  13. ^ a b Lendering (2000)
  14. ^ Ramsay (1890), p. 125
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bivar (2002), pp. 151-153
  16. ^ a b c Frye (1983), p. 112
  17. ^ Brunner (2004)
  18. ^ Walbank (2015)
  19. ^ Lendering (2004)
  20. ^ Dandamayev (1987), p. 29
  21. ^ a b c d Badian (2015)
  22. ^ Lendering (1999)
  23. ^ Lendering (2002)
  24. ^ Frye (1985), p. 26
  25. ^ Frye (1983), p. 208
  26. ^ Schippmann (1986), pp. 525-536
  27. ^ Debevoise (1938), p. 18
  28. ^ Boyce & Grenet (1991), p. 30
  29. ^ Frye (1963), p. 173
  30. ^ Strootman (2015)
  31. ^ a b c d e f g Rawlinson (1873)
  32. ^ Yarshater (1983), p. 54
  33. ^ Yarshater (1983), p. 55
  34. ^ Frye (1983), p. 237
  35. ^ Nasrollahzadeh (2011), pp. 157-175
  36. ^ Verstandig (2008), pp. 251-252
  37. ^ Boyce et al. (2001), pp. 31-39
  38. ^ Jakubiak (2008)
  39. ^ Frye (1983), p. 283
  40. ^ Tacitus, Annals XV.2
  41. ^ Frye (1983), p. 243
  42. ^ Pulleyblank (1991); Anthony François Paulus Hulsewé (ed.), China in Central Asia: The Early Stage: 125 BC - AD 23, an annotated translation of Chapters 61 and 96 of the History of the Former Han Dynasty, with an introduction by M.A.N.Loewe. Volume 14 of Sinica Leidensia, Leiden, Brill Archive, 1979, p.118.
  43. ^ a b Kiani (2002), pp. 148-151
  44. ^ Pourshariati (2008), p. 49
  45. ^ Pourshariati (2008), pp. 66-67
  46. ^ Shahbazi (2003)
  47. ^ Toumanoff (1989), pp. 928-929
  48. ^ Perry et al. (1994), pp. 297-312
  49. ^ Schippmann (1999), pp. 631-632
  50. ^ Pourshariati (2008), p. 112
  51. ^ Shahbazi (1989), pp. 180-182
  52. ^ Toumanoff (1988), pp. 419-422
  53. ^ Garsoian (2005)
  54. ^ Choksy (2015)
  55. ^ Sims-Williams (1988), p. 823
  56. ^ Chabot, 285
  57. ^ Bruce (1990), p. 117
  58. ^ a b Sarshar (2014), p. 15
  59. ^ Humphreys, P., Kahrom, E. (1999). Lion and Gazelle: The Mammals and Birds of Iran. Images Publishing, Avon.
  60. ^ Firouz, E. (2005). The complete fauna of Iran. I. B. Tauris. pp. 5–67. ISBN 978-1-85043-946-2.
  61. ^ Shakespeare 1.4.622
  62. ^ Scott, Walter (1997). Ivanhoe : a romance (Modern Library ed.). New York: Modern Library. pp. 388. ISBN 0679602631. OCLC 35919304.

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hyrcania, confused, with, hercynia, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Ὑρκανία, hyrkania, persian, 𐎺𐎼𐎣𐎠𐎴, varkâna, middle, persian, 𐭢𐭥𐭫𐭢𐭠𐭭, gurgān, akkadian, urqananu, historical, region, composed, land, south, east, caspian, modern, iran, turkmenistan, bound. Not to be confused with Hercynia For other uses see Hyrcania disambiguation Hyrcania h er ˈ k eɪ n i e Greek Ὑrkania Hyrkania 1 Old Persian 𐎺𐎼𐎣𐎠𐎴 Varkana 2 Middle Persian 𐭢𐭥𐭫𐭢𐭠𐭭 Gurgan Akkadian Urqananu 2 is a historical region composed of the land south east of the Caspian Sea in modern day Iran and Turkmenistan bound in the south by the Alborz mountain range and the Kopet Dag in the east 3 HyrcaniaGurganProvince of the Median Achaemenid Seleucid Arsacid and Sasanian Empire548 BC 651 ADAchaemenid Empire with Province of HyrcaniaCapitalZadracarta 548 BC 225 AD Gurgan 225 651 AD HistoryHistorical eraAntiquity Established548 BC Fall of the Sasanian Empire651 ADToday part ofIranTurkmenistanThe region served as a satrapy province of the Median Empire a sub province of the Achaemenid Empire and a province within its successors the Seleucid Arsacid and Sasanian empires Hyrcania bordered Parthia to the east later known as Abarshahr Dihistan to the north Media to the south and Mardia to the west Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Hellenistic Period 2 2 Hellenistic Period 2 3 Post Hellenistic period 3 Religion 4 Literary references 5 List of governors 6 See also 7 References 8 SourcesEtymology EditHyrcania Ὑrkania is the Greek name for the region a borrowing from the Old Persian Verkana as recorded in Darius the Great s Behistun Inscription 522 BC as well as in other Old Persian cuneiform inscriptions Verka means wolf in Old Iranian cf Avestan vehrkō Gilaki and Mazandarani verk Modern Persian gorg and Sanskrit vŗka व क Consequently Hyrcania means Wolf land The name was extended to the Caspian Sea and underlies the name of the city Sari Zadracarta the then largest city and the capital of ancient Hyrcania Another archaic name Dahistan not to be confused with dehestan a modern Iranian word for district or county is sometimes used interchangeably with Hyrcania Dahistan refers strictly speaking to the place of the Dahae an extinct people who lived immediately north of Hyrcania as early as the 5th century BC 4 Apart from the geographical proximity of the Dahae their ethnonym may have etymological similarities to Hyrcanians for example religious historian David Gordon White reiterating a point made by previous scholars suggests that Dahae resembles the Proto Indo European dhau strangle which was apparently also a euphemism for wolf 5 History EditPre Hellenistic Period Edit Hyrcania formed part of the Median Empire by 600 BC and according to Nicolaus Damascenus was administered as a satrapy by the time of the last Median king Astyages who appointed a certain Artasyras as satrap governor 6 Upon the fall of the Median Empire the region willingly submitted to the Achaemenid Empire and was occupied by Cyrus the Great in 549 548 BC 7 and for a time Artasyras continued as satrap under Cyrus 8 prior to his replacement by Astyages himself 6 According to Ctesias Astyages grandson Megabernes also served as satrap of Hyrcania 6 Hyrcanians gave their name to the Hyrcanian plain in the middle Hermus valley in Lydia where they were settled most likely during the reign of Cyrus the Great as part of a policy to establish military colonies in Asia Minor 9 Under the Achaemenid Empire Hyrcania served as a sub province of the satrapy of Parthia which was also known as the satrapy of Parthia and Hyrcania 6 At times Cadusia may have been administered as part of Hyrcania 10 Fortifications to protect Hyrcania against nomadic incursions were constructed during the Achaemenid period 11 Following Darius the Great s victory over the Magian usurper Gaumata in September 522 BC revolts spread throughout the empire 12 In December 522 BC a revolt in support of the Median leader Phraortes erupted in Hyrcania 2 and in March 521 BC the Hyrcanian rebels unsuccessfully attacked Hystaspes satrap of Parthia 13 In May Phraortes was defeated and Hyrcania returned to Achaemenid rule 13 Darius later settled Hyrcanians in the settlement of Dareionkome Greek Dareionkwmh in the Hyrcanian Plain in Lydia 9 Other Hyrcanian settlements in the Hermus valley include Ormoita and Tyanolla 14 According to Herodotus Hyrcanian soldiers participated in the Second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC under the command of Megapanus 15 After the war a garrison composed of Hyrcanian soldiers was posted in the valleys of the rivers Hermus and Caicus 2 Under Xerxes I Hyrcania was likely detached from the satrapy of Parthia and administered separately 16 Some sources imply Hyrcania was later administered as a sub province of Media 16 According to Ctesias Artaxerxes I appointed his illegitimate son Ochus as satrap of Hyrcania in c 425 BC 17 who later assumed the throne as Darius II and appointed Idernes as satrap 15 Idernes son Terituchmes succeeded him as satrap of Hyrcania following his death and was married to Amestris daughter of Darius II but Terituchmes was murdered by Udiastes a henchman of Terituchmes for conspiring to murder Amestris and revolt against Darius so he could wed his half sister Roxana 15 By the time of Alexander the Great s invasion of the Achaemenid Empire in 334 BC Hyrcania was reattached to the satrapy of Parthia and administered as a sub province 16 Hyrcanian soldiers are mentioned in the Battle of Gaugamela against Alexander in 331 BC After the death of Darius III in 330 BC many Persian noblemen fled to Hyrcania 2 Alexander reached Hyrcania in 330 BC where he accepted the surrender of Phrataphernes satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia and chiliarch Nabarzanes 15 Alexander seized Zadracarta the capital of Hyrcania hereafter known as Syrinx later that year and received the surrender of other satraps and nobles 18 Whilst in Hyrcania Alexander appointed his general Amminapes as satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia 19 but was succeeded as satrap of Hyrcania by Autophradates satrap of Mardia and Tapuria not long after 20 In 328 BC Autophradates rebelled against Alexander and Phrataphernes who had been reinstated as satrap of Parthia was sent to quell the revolt 21 Autophradates was defeated and executed by Alexander at Pasargadae in 324 BC and Phrataphernes was granted the satrapies of Hyrcania Tapuria and Mardia 21 Hellenistic Period Edit Following the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC his empire was divided amongst the Diadochi in the Partition of Babylon which confirmed Phrataphernes control of Hyrcania and Parthia 21 The Partition of Triparadisus in 321 BC granted Parthia and Hyrcania to Philip 21 however Philip was killed by Peithon satrap of Media in 318 BC and Peithon appointed his brother Eudemus as satrap 15 Eudemus was driven from Parthia and Hyrcania in 317 BC by Peithon satrap of the Indus who was subsequently defeated in 315 BC by Antigonus allowing Antigonus to take control of the Asian territories of the empire 22 Antigonus appointed Nicanor satrap of Hyrcania and Parthia also known as the upper satrapies in 315 BC and continued in this office until his death during the Babylonian War in battle against Seleucus in 310 BC which allowed Seleucus to conquer the eastern territories of the empire and form the Seleucid Empire 23 Seleucus son Antiochus I appointed Andragoras as satrap of Parthia and Hyrcania at an unknown date prior to 266 BC but rebelled against his successor Antiochus II in c 245 BC 24 Andragoras may have founded the city of Dehestan during his tenure as satrap 15 Andragoras was killed in 238 BC during the Parni conquest of Parthia led by Arsaces who went on to conquer Hyrcania in 235 BC thereafter forming part of the Arsacid Empire 25 Seleucus II attempted to reassert Seleucid control of Hyrcania and Parthia in 231 BC but was unsuccessful as he was forced to return to Asia Minor to quell unrest 26 Following the Battle of Mount Labus in 209 BC Antiochus III invaded Hyrcania and seized the cities of Tambrax and Syrinx 15 forcing Arsaces II who was permitted to continue his rule over Hyrcania and Parthia to become a vassal of the Seleucid Empire 27 During the siege of Syrinx when the wall was breached the garrison slaughtered the Greek inhabitants and attempted to flee 28 Arsaces II may have reasserted his independence in 189 BC following Antiochus defeat at the hands of the Romans at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC 29 During the reign of Antiochus IV in the late 2nd century BC Hyrcania still formed part of the Seleucid Empire 30 After Mithridates conquest of Media in 148 BC Hyrcanians launched an unsuccessful revolt which was crushed by Mithridates shortly afterwards 31 Hyrcania served as a royal retreat and Mithridates retired there in 141 BC 15 In 139 BC Demetrius II launched an invasion of the Arsacid Empire only to be defeated and captured following which he was provided a princely residence in Hyrcania and married to Rhodogune daughter of Mithridates 31 In 129 BC the Saka tribes invaded and pillaged Hyrcania alongside other eastern provinces and defeated and killed two successive Arsacid kings 32 Soon after his ascension to the throne in 124 BC Mithridates II recovered Hyrcania and re established Arsacid control 33 Post Hellenistic period Edit Artabanus king of Hyrcania belonging to a collateral branch of the Arsacid dynasty led a revolt against the Roman backed Vonones I in 10 AD and successfully usurped the throne becoming Artabanus III 34 Roman interference in the Arsacid Empire resulted in the ascension of Tiridates III in 36 AD exiling Artabanus III to Hyrcania for a short time 15 During his exile in Hyrcania Artabanus III adopted Gotarzes son of Ardawan 35 satrap of Hyrcania 36 Artabanus III retrieved the throne and was succeeded by his son Vardanes I in 38 AD however Gotarzes unsuccessfully attempted to usurp the throne and was forced into exile amongst the Dahae 31 Gotarzes invaded Hyrcania in 46 AD with the support of the Hyrcanians and Dahae to press his claim to the throne however upon Gotarzes discovery of a plot amongst the nobles to remove both Gotarzes and Vardanes I and place another upon the throne the two brothers made peace 31 Gotarzes agreed to not press his claim to the throne and was appointed satrap of Hyrcania only to revolt with the support of a number of nobles and attempt to press his claim once more 31 Gotarzes was defeated in Hyrcania and forced into exile amongst the Dahae until the death of Vardanes I in 47 AD thus becoming Gotarzes II 37 Under the Arsacid Empire the Great Wall of Gorgan a series of forts and outposts with the plains of Hyrcania was constructed to aid in the defence of Hyrcania against raids undertaken by the neighbouring Dahae tribes 38 At the beginning of the Roman Parthian War of 58 63 a rebellion erupted in Hyrcania and rebels sent envoys to Emperor Nero requesting aid 39 The rebellion raged until 60 AD when Vologases I hastily concluded a peace treaty with the rebels to allow him to deal with the threat posed by the Romans 40 However the peace treaty did not last and the Hyrcanians launched another revolt that continued until at least 75 AD 31 In 75 AD the Hyrcanian rebels allied with nomadic Alan tribes and granted them safe passage through Hyrcania into Media allowing the Alans to pillage Media and Armenia 31 In the time of the reign of the Emperor Antoninus Pius 138 161 Hyrcania had made itself independent and was not considered part of the Arsacid Empire 41 Hyrcania is mentioned as Li chien or Li kan 黎幹 in the 2nd century AD Book of Han 42 Hyrcania was annexed to the Sasanian Empire in 225 AD by Ardashir I 15 after which the provincial centre was moved to Gurgan which lent its name to the province during this period 43 The House of Aspahbadh one of the Seven Great Houses held lands principally within the region 44 Whilst staying in Hyrcania in 420 AD Yazdegerd I was assassinated by the nobility who alleged that he had been killed by a white horse that emerged from and disappeared into a stream 45 The myth propagated by the nobility led people to believe the white horse was an angel sent by Ahura Mazda to end Yazdegerd s tyranny 46 Gurgan is known to have held a mint as early as the reign of Yazdegerd II 43 An unsuccessful revolt led by Vahan Amatuni assistant governor of Armenia led to his and other members of the Amatuni noble family exile in Hyrcania in 451 AD 47 Priests and other nobles who had led the revolt against Yazdegerd II were also deported to Hyrcania where they stayed until they were moved to the city of New Shapur in Abarshahr in 453 AD 48 During the reign of Peroz I the Hepthalites invaded Hyrcania and quartered at Gurgan in 465 469 AD Peroz and his son Kavadh rallied against the Hepthalites and were defeated and captured in battle near Gurgan 49 At the time of the usurper Bahram Chōbin s movement eastward into Abarshahr in 591 AD Hyrcania was governed by the House of Karen one of the Seven Great Houses 50 Following the defeat of the usurper Bahram Chōbin in 591 AD Khosrow II appointed Vistahm marzban governor of Hyrcania as a reward for his support during the rebellion however Khosrow s mistrust for Vistahm led him to attempt to execute him by luring him to the royal court Vistahm was informed of Khosrow s intentions and rose in revolt conquering much of the eastern provinces of the Sasanian Empire prior to his death and defeat in battle against Smbat Bagratuni in 596 AD 51 Smbat was rewarded and appointed marzban of Hyrcania which he served as until 602 AD 52 during which time the region is known to have prospered 53 Religion EditHyrcania and the rest of Iran in Antiquity was dominated by Zoroastrianism which was practised by the majority of the population 54 Christianity and Judaism were also practised in the region and Barshabba the apocryphal 4th century AD bishop of Merv is attributed to the foundation of Christian monasteries in Hyrcania 55 A diocese of Gurgan of the Church of the East is known to have existed from 424 AD 56 According to Paulus Orosius following the suppression of a revolt in Phoenicia and the conquest of Egypt in 343 BC Artaxerxes III deported Phoenician and Egyptian Jews to Hyrcania as punishment for opposing him 57 58 Some Hyrcanian Jews returned to Palestine however they maintained a presence within the region as late as the 4th century AD 58 Literary references EditIn Latin literature Hyrcania is often mentioned in relationship to tigers which were apparently particularly abundant there during the Classical Age though extinct in the area since the early 1970s 59 60 Virgil in the Aeneid had the abandoned Dido accuse Aeneas Nec tibi diva parens generis nec Dardanus auctor perfide sed duris genuit te cautibus horrens Caucasus Hyrcanaeque admorunt ubera tigres IV 365 7 You had neither a goddess for a parent nor was Dardanus the author of your race faithless one but the horrible Caucasus produced you from hard crags and Hyrcanian tigers nursed you Following its geographical listing by Isidore of Seville in the early 7th century Etymologiae a standard Mediaeval textbook the name of Hyrcania became known and taught as far off as Ireland where it was included in poems such as Cu cen mathair by Luccreth moccu Chiara 665 AD the Auraicept na n Eces and Lebor Gabala Erenn 11th century Hyrcania is mentioned in the short story Rinconete y Cortadillo by Miguel de Cervantes and constitutes one of his exemplary stories which were published in 1613 Cervantes uses this reference to portray the illiteracy of Juliana la Cariharta a member of Monipodio s guild She is intending to make reference to Ocana a provincial town in Toledo Spain but she has misheard it and does not realise the difference Shakespeare relying on his Latin sources makes repeated references in his plays to the Hyrcan tiger Macbeth III iv 1281 or th Hyrcanian beast Hamlet II ii 447 as an emblem of bloodthirsty cruelty In Henry VI Part 3 the Duke of York compares Queen Margaret unfavorably to Tygers of Hyrcania I iv 622 for her inhumanity 61 Even in Shakespeare s Merchant of Venice the Prince of Morocco also made references to Hyrcania He said an excerpt The Hyrcanian deserts and the vasty wilds Of wild Arabia are as thoroughfares now Sir Walter Scott in an epigraph to the thirty fifth chapter of Ivanhoe refers to the tiger of the Hyrcanian deserts as a lesser risk than the slumbering fire of wild fanaticism the epigraph is cited as being written by an anonymous author 62 The comic book heroine Red Sonja is described as coming from Hyrkania an imaginary locale bordering an inland sea based loosely on Hyrcania and set in Robert E Howard s fictional Hyborian Age Howard s Conan the Barbarian also has various adventures set in this locale including as a pirate on the inland sea List of governors EditAlthough the below list is incomplete they are the known governors of Hyrcania Artasyras Astyages Megabernes Ochus c 425 423 BC Idernes 423 BC Terituchmes Phrataphernes 330 BC Amminapes 330 BC Autophradates 330 324 BC Phrataphernes 324 321 BC Philip 321 318 BC Eudemus 318 317 BC Nicanor 315 310 BC Andragoras 238 BC Artabanus 10 AD Ardawan Gotarzes 46 47 AD Vistahm 591 596 AD Smbat Bagratuni 596 602 AD See also EditHyrcanian forests Gorgan Gonbad e Kavus Golestan Province Mazandaran Gilan Name of Georgia country Amol SariReferences Edit Woodhouse 1910 p 1013 a b c d e Lendering 1996 Sherwin White amp Kuhrt 1993 p 81 Francois de Blois amp Willem Vogelsang 2011 Dahae Encyclopedia Iranica 23 May 2015 David Gordon White 1991 Myths of the Dog Man Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 27 239 a b c d Jacobs 2006 Dandamayev 1993 pp 516 521 Dandamayev 1986 p 652 a b Ramsay 1890 p 124 Schmitt 1990 p 612 Lendering 2005 Rawlinson 1867 a b Lendering 2000 Ramsay 1890 p 125 a b c d e f g h i j Bivar 2002 pp 151 153 a b c Frye 1983 p 112 Brunner 2004 Walbank 2015 Lendering 2004 Dandamayev 1987 p 29 a b c d Badian 2015 Lendering 1999 Lendering 2002 Frye 1985 p 26 Frye 1983 p 208 Schippmann 1986 pp 525 536 Debevoise 1938 p 18 Boyce amp Grenet 1991 p 30 Frye 1963 p 173 Strootman 2015 a b c d e f g Rawlinson 1873 Yarshater 1983 p 54 Yarshater 1983 p 55 Frye 1983 p 237 Nasrollahzadeh 2011 pp 157 175 Verstandig 2008 pp 251 252 Boyce et al 2001 pp 31 39 Jakubiak 2008 Frye 1983 p 283 Tacitus Annals XV 2 Frye 1983 p 243 Pulleyblank 1991 Anthony Francois Paulus Hulsewe ed China in Central Asia The Early Stage 125 BC AD 23 an annotated translation of Chapters 61 and 96 of the History of the Former Han Dynasty with an introduction by M A N Loewe Volume 14 of Sinica Leidensia Leiden Brill Archive 1979 p 118 a b Kiani 2002 pp 148 151 Pourshariati 2008 p 49 Pourshariati 2008 pp 66 67 Shahbazi 2003 Toumanoff 1989 pp 928 929 Perry et al 1994 pp 297 312 Schippmann 1999 pp 631 632 Pourshariati 2008 p 112 Shahbazi 1989 pp 180 182 Toumanoff 1988 pp 419 422 Garsoian 2005 Choksy 2015 Sims Williams 1988 p 823 Chabot 285 Bruce 1990 p 117 a b Sarshar 2014 p 15 Humphreys P Kahrom E 1999 Lion and Gazelle The Mammals and Birds of Iran Images Publishing Avon Firouz E 2005 The complete fauna of Iran I B Tauris pp 5 67 ISBN 978 1 85043 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periods 1 ISBN 9780521200929 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hyrcania amp oldid 1133419826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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