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Khvarenah

Khvarenah (also spelled khwarenah or xwarra(h): Avestan: 𐬓𐬀𐬭𐬆𐬥𐬀𐬵 xᵛarənah) is an Avestan word for a Zoroastrian concept literally denoting "glory" or "splendour" but understood as a divine mystical force or power projected upon and aiding the appointed. The neuter noun thus also connotes "(divine) royal glory", reflecting the perceived divine empowerment of kings. The term also carries a secondary meaning of "(good) fortune"; those who possess it are able to complete their mission or function.

In 3rd- to 7th-century Sassanid-era inscriptions as well as in the 9th- to 12th-century texts of Zoroastrian tradition, the word appears as Zoroastrian Middle Persian khwarrah, rendered with the Pahlavi ideogram GDE, reflecting Aramaic gada "fortune". Middle Persian khwarrah continues as New Persian k(h)orra. These variants, which are assumed to be learned borrowings from the Avestan, are the only Iranian language forms with an initial 'xᵛ-'. In all other dialects, the word has an initial f- (see details under related terms, below).

Etymology and related terms edit

Avestan khvarenah is probably[1] derived from Proto-Avestan *hvar "to shine", nominalized with the -nah suffix. Proto-Avestan *hvar is in turn related to Old Indic svar with the same meaning, and together descending from Proto-Indo-Iranian *súHr̥ "to shine", ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *sóhr "to shine". Other proposals suggest a linguistic relationship with Avestan xᵛar- "to eat".

Of the numerous Iranian languages in which the word is attested, the initial xᵛ- is evident only as Avestan khvar(e)nah and as Zoroastrian Middle Persian khwarrah, from which New Persian khorra then derives. In other Iranian dialects the word has an f- form, for instance as Median and Old Persian farnah-, from which Middle- and New Persian farr(ah) and adjectival farrokh derive. For many decades, the f- form was believed to represent a specific Median sound-law change of proto-Iranian xᵛ- to f-. The hypothesis has since been shown to be untenable, and the proto-Iranian form is today reconstructed as *hu̯,[2] preserved in Avestan as xᵛ- and dissimilated as f- in other Iranian dialects.

Pre-Christian Georgian kings of the Pharnavazid dynasty were divinely assigned kxwarrah and its loss usually led to the monarch's imminent death or overthrow in Georgian kingship. Many of the monarchs had names based on this etymological root like Pharnavaz, Pharnajom and Pharasmanes.[3] The word was borrowed into the Georgian language as p'ar[n].[4][5]

 
Coin of Kushan ruler Huvishka, with deity Pharro ("ΦΑΡΡΟ"). Circa 152-192 CE.

In the Iranian languages of the Middle Period, the word is also attested as Bactrian far(r)o, Khotanese pharra, Parthian farh, Sogdian f(a)rn, and Ossetic farnæ and farn, though in these languages the word does not necessarily signify "glory" or "fortune": In Buddhism, Sogdian farn and Khotanese pharra signified a "position of a Buddha," that is, with "dignity" or "high position." This meaning subsequently passed into Tocharian. In Manicheanism, Sogdian frn signified "luck" and was a designator of the "first luminary". Manichean Parthian farh again signifies "glory." In Scytho-Sarmatian and Alan culture, Digor-Ossetic farnæ and Iron-Ossetic farn signified "peace, happiness, abundance, fortune."

The term also appears as a borrowing in Armenian pʿarkʿ, but with a greater range of meaning than in Iranian languages.

In scripture edit

Bisyllabic khvarenah is only attested once in the Gathas, the oldest hymns of Zoroastrianism and considered to have been composed by the prophet himself. The one instance of Gathic khvarenah occurs in Yasna 51.18, where the word appears to mean royal glory. The primary source of information on khvarenah comes from the Yashts, the younger Avesta's collection of 21 hymns dedicated to individual divinities.

Two distinct forms of khvarenah are discernible in Yasht 19:[6]

  • kavam khvarenah (kauuaēm xᵛarənah), the fortune of the kavis, the Kayanian kings
  • akhvaretem khvarenah (axᵛarətəm xᵛarənah), glory that both divinities and mortals should strive for.

Similarly Yasht 18, although nominally dedicated to Arshtat, is a short 9-verse ode to a third variant of khvarenah; the Iranian khvarenah (airiianəm xᵛarənah) that is created by Ahura Mazda and that is "full of milk and pastures," vanquishes the daevas and the Un-Iranians.

Yasht 19, which is nominally dedicated to Zam "Earth", further typifies khvarenah as a yazata,[7] that is, itself "worthy of worship." The same hymn includes a list of divinities and mortals who perform their duties due to the power of khvarenah. Among these are the mythological Kayanian kings – the kavis (kauuis) – who are rulers through the grace of, and empowered by, khvarenah.

Khvarenah is however also glory held by divinities: Ahura Mazda has it (19.9-13), the Amesha Spentas have it (19.14-20), the other yazatas as well (19.21-24). Yima loses it thrice, in turn to Mithra, Thraetaona and Keresaspa. Khvarenah assumes the shape of a bird when leaving Yima. (19.35-36, 19.82)

According to Yasht 13.14, the waters flow, the plants spring forth, and the winds blow through the khvarenah of the Fravashis. In Yasna 68.11, the waters of Aredvi Sura are invoked to bestow radiance and glory. Khvarenah is also associated with the waters in other texts; with the world-sea Vourukasha in Yasht 19.51 and 19.56-57; with the Helmand river in Yasht 19.66ff. It is also identified with Haoma, together with which it plays a seminal role in the legend of the birth of Zoroaster. In these passages, khvarenah has a seminal and germinal implication, being both fiery fluid and living seed.

In Yasna 60.2, the family priest is seen to request joy and blessings for the righteous, good nature, truth, prosperity, power, and glory for the house in which he offers prayers. The hymn to Mithra speaks of the divinity as the "dispenser of khvarenah" (Yasht 10.16, 10.128, 10.141). Other texts describe Mithra as "most endowed with glory" (Yasht 19.35, Vendidad 19.15).

In Yasht 19.46, Akem Manah, the demon of "evil purpose" attempts (but fails) to seize khvarenah. The Iranian khvarenah and Dahman, the hypostasis of prayer, render Bushyasta - the demoness of "sloth" – powerless (Yasht 10.97, 13.4).

At the final renovation of the world, the royal glory will follow the Saoshyants (Yasht 19.89).

In tradition edit

In the 9th-12th century texts of Zoroastrian tradition khvarenah (→ Middle Persian khwarrah) is a spiritual force that exists before the creation of the tan-gohr, the mortal body (Bundahishn II.7ff, Zadspram 3.75). In these later texts, the glory appears to be acquirable through learning and knowledge (Bundahishn II.9ff).

Khwarrah continues to be identified with astral bodies (Dadistan-i Denig I.25, I.35-36), but its primary function is in its role as the divine glory of kings, the continuation of the Avestan notion of the kavam khvarenah. New in tradition is an identification of khwarrah with religion, as in "the great khwarrah-bestowing force of the pure religion" (Dadistan-i Denig I.36)

The Kar-namag i Ardashir, a collection of hagiographic legends related to Ardashir, the founder of the Sassanid Empire, includes (4.11.16 and 4.11.22-23) a tale in which Ardashir – who at that point in the story is still a vassal of the Arsacid Parthians – escapes from the court of the last Arsacid king, Ardavan. In the story, Ardashir makes off with much Ardavan's treasure, as well as Ardavan's favourite concubine, and is being chased by Ardavan and his troops. On the road, Ardavan and his contingent are overtaken by an enormous ram, which is also following Ardashir. Ardavan's religious advisors explain that the ram is the manifestation of the khwarrah of the ancient Iranian kings, which is leaving Ardavan and the Parthians in favor of a new emperor.

The representation of khwarrah as a ram reappears on Sassanid seals and as an ornament in Sassanid architecture. Khwarrah also appears in Sassanian crowns as a bird with a pearl in its beak. Depictions of khwarrah as a bird are allusions to the Avestan myth of Yasht 19.35-36, 19.82 in which khvarenah takes the shape of a bird as it leaves Yima (MP: Jamshid), a metamorphosis similar to that of the yazata of victory, Verethragna.[8] The crown as a repository of khwarrah is also attested in the Paikuli inscription of Narseh, which describes the punishment meted out to an individual who has been "driven by Ahriman and the devs" to steal khwarrah by placing the crown on the head of a false ruler.[9] Another ubiquitous motif in Sassanian art is the symbol of a boar, which is a representation of the protection of the yazata Verethragna (MP: Wahram) given to rulers that hold khwarrah.

The ring of kingship that appears in Sassanian investiture reliefs is often identified as representing khwarrah.[10] This is also the case for the ring held by the bearded figure in the Achaemenid winged sun-disk symbol that is traditionally considered to represent a fravashi (MP: fravahr). The Achaemenid winged sun-disk has in its entirety also been occasionally been interpreted as a representation of khvarenah.[10]

That khwarrah – in addition to its significance as "royal fortune" – also signified "fortune" in a general sense is demonstrated by the use of an Aramaic ideogram GDE in the Middle Persian texts of the Sassanid and post-Sassanid periods.[11] The custom of using this Aramic ideogram to represent khvarenah is probably inherited from Achaemenid times.[11]

Syncretic influences edit

"The fundamental motif of Iranian kingship, a hereditary dynastic charisma [...], which, could however be lost, was at the root of ideas that were widespread in the Hellenistic and Roman periods."[11] For example, as the tyche basileos, fortuna regia, the saving grace (luck) of fortune of a king; and probably also the royal farrah in the tyche of the various Hellenistic rulers of the Seleucid and Arsacid periods as well as of the Kushan kings.[11]

Because the concepts of khvarenah/khwarrah and Aramaic gd(y) circulated in the same areas and have many characteristics in common, it is possible that the Mesopotamian concept influenced the Zoroastrian one.[8] On the other hand, khvarenah may also be a facet of Zoroastrianism's Indo-Iranian cultural inheritance since khvarenah appears to have a parallel in Indic tejas, in which kingship is likewise associated with the bright splendor and power of light and fire.[8]

The concept of the royal khwarrah survived the 7th century downfall of the Sassanid Empire, and remained a central motif (for instance as the farr-e elahi) in the culture, philosophy and epics of Islamic Iran.[11]

In culture edit

  • The 1995 Ossetian film "ФАРН" (en:Farn) produced for North Ossetian Television by Murat Dzhusoyty.[12]

See also edit

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ Gnoli 1999, p. 313.
  2. ^ Gnoli 1996, p. 171.
  3. ^ Rapp, S. H. Jr. (2016) The Sasanian World Through Georgian Eyes, Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature, Sam Houston State University, US, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-4724-2552-2; location: 6731
  4. ^ Canepa, Matthew P. (2018). The Iranian Expanse: Transforming Royal Identity through Architecture, Landscape, and the Built Environment, 550 BCE–642 CE. University of California Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-520-96436-5.
  5. ^ Rapp, Stephen H. Jr (2014). The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes: Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature. Routledge. pp. 151, 228. ISBN 978-1-4724-2552-2.
  6. ^ Lubotsky 1998, p. 480.
  7. ^ Boyce 1975, pp. 66–68.
  8. ^ a b c Gnoli 1999, p. 316.
  9. ^ de Jong 2004, p. 364.
  10. ^ a b cf. Gnoli 1999, p. 316.
  11. ^ a b c d e Gnoli 1999, p. 315.
  12. ^ "ФАРН (1995)", www.kino-teatr.ru
Bibliography
  • Boyce, Mary (1975), History of Zoroastrianism, vol. 1, Leiden: Brill.
  • de Jong, Albert (2004), "Sub Specie Maiestatis: Reflections on Sasanian Court Rituals", in Stausberg, Michael (ed.), Zoroastrian Rituals in Context, Numen 102, Leiden: Brill, pp. 345–365.
  • Gnoli, Gherardo (1996), "Über das iranische *hu̯arnah-: lautliche, morphologische und etymologische Probleme. Zum Stand der Forschung", Altorientalische Forschungen, 23: 171–180, doi:10.1524/aofo.1996.23.1.171, S2CID 163727744.
  • Gnoli, Gherardo (1999), "Farr(ah)", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 9, Costa Mesa: Mazda, pp. 312–316.
  • Lubotsky, Alexander (1998), "Avestan xᵛarənah-: the etymology and concept", in Meid, W. (ed.), Sprache und Kultur. Akten der X. Fachtagung der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft Innsbruck, 22.-28. September 1996, Innsbruck: IBS, pp. 479–488.

khvarenah, also, spelled, khwarenah, xwarra, avestan, 𐬓𐬀𐬭𐬆𐬥𐬀𐬵, xᵛarənah, avestan, word, zoroastrian, concept, literally, denoting, glory, splendour, understood, divine, mystical, force, power, projected, upon, aiding, appointed, neuter, noun, thus, also, conno. Khvarenah also spelled khwarenah or xwarra h Avestan 𐬓𐬀𐬭𐬆𐬥𐬀𐬵 xᵛarenah is an Avestan word for a Zoroastrian concept literally denoting glory or splendour but understood as a divine mystical force or power projected upon and aiding the appointed The neuter noun thus also connotes divine royal glory reflecting the perceived divine empowerment of kings The term also carries a secondary meaning of good fortune those who possess it are able to complete their mission or function In 3rd to 7th century Sassanid era inscriptions as well as in the 9th to 12th century texts of Zoroastrian tradition the word appears as Zoroastrian Middle Persian khwarrah rendered with the Pahlavi ideogram GDE reflecting Aramaic gada fortune Middle Persian khwarrah continues as New Persian k h orra These variants which are assumed to be learned borrowings from the Avestan are the only Iranian language forms with an initial xᵛ In all other dialects the word has an initial f see details under related terms below Contents 1 Etymology and related terms 2 In scripture 3 In tradition 4 Syncretic influences 5 In culture 6 See also 7 ReferencesEtymology and related terms editAvestan khvarenah is probably 1 derived from Proto Avestan hvar to shine nominalized with the nah suffix Proto Avestan hvar is in turn related to Old Indic svar with the same meaning and together descending from Proto Indo Iranian suHr to shine ultimately from Proto Indo European sohr to shine Other proposals suggest a linguistic relationship with Avestan xᵛar to eat Of the numerous Iranian languages in which the word is attested the initial xᵛ is evident only as Avestan khvar e nah and as Zoroastrian Middle Persian khwarrah from which New Persian khorra then derives In other Iranian dialects the word has an f form for instance as Median and Old Persian farnah from which Middle and New Persian farr ah and adjectival farrokh derive For many decades the f form was believed to represent a specific Median sound law change of proto Iranian xᵛ to f The hypothesis has since been shown to be untenable and the proto Iranian form is today reconstructed as hu 2 preserved in Avestan as xᵛ and dissimilated as f in other Iranian dialects Pre Christian Georgian kings of the Pharnavazid dynasty were divinely assigned kxwarrah and its loss usually led to the monarch s imminent death or overthrow in Georgian kingship Many of the monarchs had names based on this etymological root like Pharnavaz Pharnajom and Pharasmanes 3 The word was borrowed into the Georgian language as p ar n 4 5 nbsp Coin of Kushan ruler Huvishka with deity Pharro FARRO Circa 152 192 CE In the Iranian languages of the Middle Period the word is also attested as Bactrian far r o Khotanese pharra Parthian farh Sogdian f a rn and Ossetic farnae and farn though in these languages the word does not necessarily signify glory or fortune In Buddhism Sogdian farn and Khotanese pharra signified a position of a Buddha that is with dignity or high position This meaning subsequently passed into Tocharian In Manicheanism Sogdian frn signified luck and was a designator of the first luminary Manichean Parthian farh again signifies glory In Scytho Sarmatian and Alan culture Digor Ossetic farnae and Iron Ossetic farn signified peace happiness abundance fortune The term also appears as a borrowing in Armenian pʿarkʿ but with a greater range of meaning than in Iranian languages In scripture editBisyllabic khvarenah is only attested once in the Gathas the oldest hymns of Zoroastrianism and considered to have been composed by the prophet himself The one instance of Gathic khvarenah occurs in Yasna 51 18 where the word appears to mean royal glory The primary source of information on khvarenah comes from the Yashts the younger Avesta s collection of 21 hymns dedicated to individual divinities Two distinct forms of khvarenah are discernible in Yasht 19 6 kavam khvarenah kauuaem xᵛarenah the fortune of the kavis the Kayanian kings akhvaretem khvarenah axᵛaretem xᵛarenah glory that both divinities and mortals should strive for Similarly Yasht 18 although nominally dedicated to Arshtat is a short 9 verse ode to a third variant of khvarenah the Iranian khvarenah airiianem xᵛarenah that is created by Ahura Mazda and that is full of milk and pastures vanquishes the daevas and the Un Iranians Yasht 19 which is nominally dedicated to Zam Earth further typifies khvarenah as a yazata 7 that is itself worthy of worship The same hymn includes a list of divinities and mortals who perform their duties due to the power of khvarenah Among these are the mythological Kayanian kings the kavis kauuis who are rulers through the grace of and empowered by khvarenah Khvarenah is however also glory held by divinities Ahura Mazda has it 19 9 13 the Amesha Spentas have it 19 14 20 the other yazatas as well 19 21 24 Yima loses it thrice in turn to Mithra Thraetaona and Keresaspa Khvarenah assumes the shape of a bird when leaving Yima 19 35 36 19 82 According to Yasht 13 14 the waters flow the plants spring forth and the winds blow through the khvarenah of the Fravashis In Yasna 68 11 the waters of Aredvi Sura are invoked to bestow radiance and glory Khvarenah is also associated with the waters in other texts with the world sea Vourukasha in Yasht 19 51 and 19 56 57 with the Helmand river in Yasht 19 66ff It is also identified with Haoma together with which it plays a seminal role in the legend of the birth of Zoroaster In these passages khvarenah has a seminal and germinal implication being both fiery fluid and living seed In Yasna 60 2 the family priest is seen to request joy and blessings for the righteous good nature truth prosperity power and glory for the house in which he offers prayers The hymn to Mithra speaks of the divinity as the dispenser of khvarenah Yasht 10 16 10 128 10 141 Other texts describe Mithra as most endowed with glory Yasht 19 35 Vendidad 19 15 In Yasht 19 46 Akem Manah the demon of evil purpose attempts but fails to seize khvarenah The Iranian khvarenah and Dahman the hypostasis of prayer render Bushyasta the demoness of sloth powerless Yasht 10 97 13 4 At the final renovation of the world the royal glory will follow the Saoshyants Yasht 19 89 In tradition editIn the 9th 12th century texts of Zoroastrian tradition khvarenah Middle Persian khwarrah is a spiritual force that exists before the creation of the tan gohr the mortal body Bundahishn II 7ff Zadspram 3 75 In these later texts the glory appears to be acquirable through learning and knowledge Bundahishn II 9ff Khwarrah continues to be identified with astral bodies Dadistan i Denig I 25 I 35 36 but its primary function is in its role as the divine glory of kings the continuation of the Avestan notion of the kavam khvarenah New in tradition is an identification of khwarrah with religion as in the great khwarrah bestowing force of the pure religion Dadistan i Denig I 36 The Kar namag i Ardashir a collection of hagiographic legends related to Ardashir the founder of the Sassanid Empire includes 4 11 16 and 4 11 22 23 a tale in which Ardashir who at that point in the story is still a vassal of the Arsacid Parthians escapes from the court of the last Arsacid king Ardavan In the story Ardashir makes off with much Ardavan s treasure as well as Ardavan s favourite concubine and is being chased by Ardavan and his troops On the road Ardavan and his contingent are overtaken by an enormous ram which is also following Ardashir Ardavan s religious advisors explain that the ram is the manifestation of the khwarrah of the ancient Iranian kings which is leaving Ardavan and the Parthians in favor of a new emperor The representation of khwarrah as a ram reappears on Sassanid seals and as an ornament in Sassanid architecture Khwarrah also appears in Sassanian crowns as a bird with a pearl in its beak Depictions of khwarrah as a bird are allusions to the Avestan myth of Yasht 19 35 36 19 82 in which khvarenah takes the shape of a bird as it leaves Yima MP Jamshid a metamorphosis similar to that of the yazata of victory Verethragna 8 The crown as a repository of khwarrah is also attested in the Paikuli inscription of Narseh which describes the punishment meted out to an individual who has been driven by Ahriman and the devs to steal khwarrah by placing the crown on the head of a false ruler 9 Another ubiquitous motif in Sassanian art is the symbol of a boar which is a representation of the protection of the yazata Verethragna MP Wahram given to rulers that hold khwarrah The ring of kingship that appears in Sassanian investiture reliefs is often identified as representing khwarrah 10 This is also the case for the ring held by the bearded figure in the Achaemenid winged sun disk symbol that is traditionally considered to represent a fravashi MP fravahr The Achaemenid winged sun disk has in its entirety also been occasionally been interpreted as a representation of khvarenah 10 That khwarrah in addition to its significance as royal fortune also signified fortune in a general sense is demonstrated by the use of an Aramaic ideogram GDE in the Middle Persian texts of the Sassanid and post Sassanid periods 11 The custom of using this Aramic ideogram to represent khvarenah is probably inherited from Achaemenid times 11 Syncretic influences edit The fundamental motif of Iranian kingship a hereditary dynastic charisma which could however be lost was at the root of ideas that were widespread in the Hellenistic and Roman periods 11 For example as the tyche basileos fortuna regia the saving grace luck of fortune of a king and probably also the royal farrah in the tyche of the various Hellenistic rulers of the Seleucid and Arsacid periods as well as of the Kushan kings 11 Because the concepts of khvarenah khwarrah and Aramaic gd y circulated in the same areas and have many characteristics in common it is possible that the Mesopotamian concept influenced the Zoroastrian one 8 On the other hand khvarenah may also be a facet of Zoroastrianism s Indo Iranian cultural inheritance since khvarenah appears to have a parallel in Indic tejas in which kingship is likewise associated with the bright splendor and power of light and fire 8 The concept of the royal khwarrah survived the 7th century downfall of the Sassanid Empire and remained a central motif for instance as the farr e elahi in the culture philosophy and epics of Islamic Iran 11 In culture editThe 1995 Ossetian film FARN en Farn produced for North Ossetian Television by Murat Dzhusoyty 12 See also editSenmurv ShekinahReferences editCitations Gnoli 1999 p 313 Gnoli 1996 p 171 Rapp S H Jr 2016 The Sasanian World Through Georgian Eyes Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature Sam Houston State University US Routledge ISBN 978 1 4724 2552 2 location 6731 Canepa Matthew P 2018 The Iranian Expanse Transforming Royal Identity through Architecture Landscape and the Built Environment 550 BCE 642 CE University of California Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 520 96436 5 Rapp Stephen H Jr 2014 The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature Routledge pp 151 228 ISBN 978 1 4724 2552 2 Lubotsky 1998 p 480 Boyce 1975 pp 66 68 a b c Gnoli 1999 p 316 de Jong 2004 p 364 a b cf Gnoli 1999 p 316 a b c d e Gnoli 1999 p 315 FARN 1995 www kino teatr ru BibliographyBoyce Mary 1975 History of Zoroastrianism vol 1 Leiden Brill de Jong Albert 2004 Sub Specie Maiestatis Reflections on Sasanian Court Rituals in Stausberg Michael ed Zoroastrian Rituals in Context Numen 102 Leiden Brill pp 345 365 Gnoli Gherardo 1996 Uber das iranische hu arnah lautliche morphologische und etymologische Probleme Zum Stand der Forschung Altorientalische Forschungen 23 171 180 doi 10 1524 aofo 1996 23 1 171 S2CID 163727744 Gnoli Gherardo 1999 Farr ah Encyclopaedia Iranica vol 9 Costa Mesa Mazda pp 312 316 Lubotsky Alexander 1998 Avestan xᵛarenah the etymology and concept in Meid W ed Sprache und Kultur Akten der X Fachtagung der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft Innsbruck 22 28 September 1996 Innsbruck IBS pp 479 488 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khvarenah amp oldid 1186252592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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