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Mitra

Mitra (Proto-Indo-Iranian: *mitrás) is the name of an Indo-Iranian divinity that predates the Rigvedic Mitrá and Avestan Mithra.

The names, and some characteristics, of these established deities subsequently influenced other figures:

Indian Religious Texts edit

Both Vedic Mitra and Avestan Mithra derive from an Indo-Iranian common noun *mitra-, generally reconstructed to have meant "covenant, treaty, agreement, promise." This meaning is preserved in Avestan miθra "covenant". In Sanskrit and modern Indo-Aryan languages, mitra means "friend", one of the aspects of bonding and alliance.

The Indo-Iranian reconstruction is attributed[2] to Christian Bartholomae,[3] and was subsequently refined by A. Meillet (1907), who suggested derivation from the Proto-Indo-European root *mey- "to exchange".

A suggested alternative derivation was *meh "to measure" (Gray 1929). Pokorny (IEW 1959) refined Meillet's *mei as "to bind". Combining the root *mei with the "tool suffix" -tra- "that which [causes] ..." (also found in man-tra-, "that which causes to think"), then literally means "that which binds", and thus "covenant, treaty, agreement, promise, oath" etc. Pokorny's interpretation also supports "to fasten, strengthen", which may be found in Latin moenia "city wall, fortification", and in an antonymic form, Old English (ge)maere "border, boundary-post".

Meillet and Pokorny's "contract" did however have its detractors. Lentz (1964, 1970) refused to accept abstract "contract" for so exalted a divinity and preferred the more religious "piety". Because present-day Sanskrit mitra means "friend", and New Persian mihr means "love" or "friendship", Gonda (1972, 1973) insisted on a Vedic meaning of "friend, friendship", not "contract".

Meillet's analysis also "rectified earlier interpretations"[2] that suggested that the Indo-Iranian common noun *mitra- had anything to do with the light or the sun. When H. Lommel suggested[4] that such an association was implied in the Younger Avesta (since the 6th century BCE), that too was conclusively dismissed.[5] Today, it is certain that "(al)though Miθra is closely associated with the sun in the Avesta, he is not the sun" and "Vedic Mitra is not either."[2]

Old Persian Miθra or Miθra – both only attested in a handful of 4th-century BCE inscriptions of Artaxerxes II and III – "is generally admitted [to be] a borrowing from the Avesta,"[6] the genuine Old Persian form being reconstructed as *Miça. (Kent initially suggested Sanskrit[7] but later[6] changed his mind). Middle Iranian myhr (Parthian, also in living Armenian usage) and mihr (Middle Persian), derive from Avestan Mithra.

Greek/Latin "Mithras," the focal deity of the Greco-Roman cult of Mithraism is the nominative form of vocative Mithra. In contrast to the original Avestan meaning of "contract" or "covenant" (and still evident in post-Sassanid Middle Persian texts), the Greco-Roman Mithraists probably thought the name meant "mediator". In Plutarch's 1st-century discussion of dualistic theologies, Isis and Osiris (46.7) the Greek historiographer provides the following explanation of the name in his summary of the Zoroastrian religion: Mithra is a meson ("in the middle") between "the good Horomazdes and the evil Aremanius [...] and this is why the Pérsai call the Mediator Mithra". Zaehner[8] attributes this false etymology to a role that Mithra (and the sun) played in the now extinct branch of Zoroastrianism known as Zurvanism.

Indian Mitra edit

Vedic Mitra is a prominent deity of the Rigveda distinguished by a relationship to Varuna, the protector of rta as described in hymn 2, Mandala 1 of Rigveda. Together with Varuna, he counted among the Adityas, a group of solar deities, also in later Vedic texts. Vedic Mitra is the patron divinity of honesty, friendship, contracts and meetings.

The first extant record of Indo-Aryan [9] Mitra, in the form mi-it-ra-, is in the inscribed peace treaty of c. 1400 BC between Hittites and the Hurrian kingdom of the Mitanni in the area southeast of Lake Van in Asia Minor. Mitra appears there together with four other Indic divinities as witnesses and keepers of the pact.

Iranian Mithra edit

 
Mithra (left) in a 4th-century investiture sculpture at Taq-e Bostan in western Iran.

In Zoroastrianism, Mithra is a member of the trinity of ahuras, protectors of asha/arta, "truth" or "[that which is] right". Mithra's standard appellation is "of wide pastures" suggesting omnipresence. Mithra is "truth-speaking, ... with a thousand ears, ... with ten thousand eyes, high, with full knowledge, strong, sleepless, and ever awake." (Yasht 10.7). As preserver of covenants, Mithra is also protector and keeper of all aspects of interpersonal relationships, such as friendship and love.

Related to his position as protector of truth, Mithra is a judge (ratu), ensuring that individuals who break promises or are not righteous (artavan) are not admitted to paradise. As also in Indo-Iranian tradition, Mithra is associated with (the divinity of) the sun but originally distinct from it. Mithra is closely associated with the feminine yazata Aredvi Sura Anahita, the hypostasis of knowledge.

 
Mithras-Helios, in Phrygian cap with solar rays, with 1st century BC Antiochus I Theos of Commagene. Found at Mount Nemrut, in present-day eastern Turkey.

Mithra in Commagene edit

There is a deity Mithra mentioned on monuments in Commagene. According to the archaeologist Maarten Vermaseren, 1st century BC evidence from Commagene demonstrates the "reverence paid to Mithras" but does not refer to "the mysteries".[b][10]

In the colossal statuary erected by King Antiochus I (69–34 BC) at Mount Nemrut, Mithras is shown beardless, wearing a Phrygian cap,[11][12] and was originally seated on a throne alongside other deities and the king himself.[13] On the back of the thrones there is an inscription in Greek, which includes the name Apollo-Mithras-Helios in the genitive case (Ἀπόλλωνος Μίθρου Ἡλίου).[14]

Vermaseren also reports about a Mithras cult in Fayum in the 3rd century BC.[c][15] R.D. Barnett has argued that the royal seal of King Saussatar of Mitanni from c. 1450 BC depicts a tauroctonous Mithras.[d][16]

Buddhist Maitreya edit

Maitreya is sometimes represented seated on a throne, and venerated both in Mahāyāna and non-Mahāyāna Buddhism. Some have speculated that inspiration for Maitreya may have come from the ancient Iranian deity Mithra. The primary comparison between the two characters appears to be the similarity of their names. According to Tiele (1917) "No one who has studied the Zoroastrian doctrine of the Saoshyants or the coming saviour-prophets can fail to see their resemblance to the future Maitreya."[17]

Paul Williams claims that some Zoroastrian ideas like Saoshyant influenced the beliefs about Maitreya , such as expectations of a heavenly helper, the need to opt for positive righteousness, the future millennium, and universal salvation.[citation needed] Possible objections are that these characteristics are not unique to Zoroastrianism, nor are they necessarily characteristic of the belief in Maitreya .

 
Relief of Roman Mithras, in a tauroctony scene.

Graeco-Roman Mithras edit

The name Mithra was adopted by the Greeks and Romans as Mithras, chief figure in the mystery religion of Mithraism. At first identified with the Sun-god Helios by the Greeks, the syncretic Mithra-Helios was transformed into the figure Mithras during the 2nd century BC, probably at Pergamon. This new cult was taken to Rome around the 1st century BC and was dispersed throughout the Roman Empire. Popular among the Roman military, Mithraism was spread as far north as Hadrian's Wall and the Germanic Limes.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "The Iranian Manichaeans adopted the name of the Zoroastrian god Mithra (Av. Miθra; Mid. Pers. Mihr) and used it to designate one of their own deities. [...] The name appears in Middle Persian as Mihr (myhr, unrelated to Old Persian form *miça-), in Parthian as Mihr (myhr) and in Sogdian as Miši (myšyy; Sundermann, 1979a, p. 10, sub 3/11.2). The spellings mytr, mytrg, however, are not variants of the name Mithra, they rather denote Maitreya."[1]
  2. ^ Other early evidence of the first decades B.C. refers only to the reverence paid to Mithras without mentioning the mysteries: Examples which may be quoted are the tomb inscriptions of King Antiochus I of Commagene at Nemrud Dagh, and of his father Mithridates at Arsameia on the Orontes. Both the kings had erected on vast terraces a number of colossal statues seated on thrones to the honour of their ancestral gods. At Nemrud we find in their midst King Antiochus (69–34 BC and in the inscription Mithras is mentioned ...[10]
  3. ^ According to Vermaseren, there was a Mithras cult in the Fayum in the third century BC, and according to Pettazzoni the figure of Aion has its iconographic origin in Egypt.[15]
  4. ^ I ... see these figures, or some of them, in the impression of the remarkable royal seal of King Saussatar of Mitanni (c. 1450 BC great-great-grandfather of Kurtiwaza): The only royal Mitannian seal that we possess. ... Mithra tauroctonos – characteristically kneeling on the bull to despatch it. We can even see also the dog and snake ... below him are twin figures, one marked by a star, each fighting lions ... below a winged disc between lions and ravens, stands a winged, human-headed lion, ...[16]

References edit

  1. ^ Sundermann, Werner (2002). "Mithra; iii. in Manichaeism". Encyclopedia Iranica.
  2. ^ a b c Schmidt, Hans-Peter (2006), "Mithra i: Mithra in Old Indian and Mithra in Old Iranian", Encyclopaedia Iranica, New York: iranica.com (accessed April 2011)
  3. ^ Bartholomae, Christian (1904), Altiranisches Wörterbuch, Strassburg: Trübner (fasc., 1979, Berlin: de Gruyter), at column 1183.
  4. ^ Lommel, Herman (1970), "Die Sonne das Schlechteste?", in Schlerath, Bernfried (ed.), Zarathustra, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, pp. 360–376
  5. ^ Gershevitch, Ilya (1975), "Die Sonne das Beste", in Hinnells, John R. (ed.), Mithraic Studies: Proceedings of the First International Congress of Mithraic Studies., vol. 1, Manchester: UP/Rowman & Littlefield, pp. 68–89
  6. ^ a b Ware, James R.; Kent, Roland G. (1924), "The Old Persian Cuneiform Inscriptions of Artaxerxes II and Artaxerxes III", Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, 55, The Johns Hopkins University Press: 52–61, doi:10.2307/283007, JSTOR 283007 at p. 55.
  7. ^ Kent, Ronald G. (1953), Old Persian: Grammar, Lexicon, Texts (2nd ed.), New Haven: American Oriental Society, §78/p. 31b
  8. ^ Zaehner, Richard Charles (1955), Zurvan, a Zoroastrian dilemma, Oxford: Clarendon at pp. 101–102.
  9. ^ Thieme, Paul (1960), "The 'Aryan' Gods of the Mitanni Treaties", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 80 (4): 301–317, doi:10.2307/595878, JSTOR 595878. pp. 301–317.
  10. ^ a b Vermaseren, M.J. (1963). Mithras: The secret god. London, UK: Chatto and Windus. p. 29.
  11. ^ Hopfe, Lewis M. (1994). "Archaeological indications on the origins of Roman Mithraism". In Hopfe, Lewis M. (ed.). Uncovering Ancient Stones: Essays in memory of H. Neil Richardson. Eisenbrauns. pp. 147–158, esp. 156.
  12. ^ Vermaseren, Maarten Jozef, ed. (1956). Corpus inscriptionum et monumentorum religionis mithriacae. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. CIMRM 29. Head of a beardless Mithras in Phrygian cap, point of which is missing.
  13. ^ Vermaseren, Maarten Jozef (1956). Corpus Inscriptionum et Monumentorum Religionis Mithriacae. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. CIMRM 28. The gods are represented in a sitting position on a throne and are: Apollo-Mithras (see below); Tyche-Commagene; Zeus-Ahura-Mazda; Antiochus himself and finally Ares-Artagnes.
  14. ^ Vermaseren, Maarten Jozef (1956). Corpus Inscriptionum et Monumentorum Religionis Mithriacae. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. CIMRM 32, verse 55.
  15. ^ a b Barnett, R.D. (1975). Hinnells, John R. (ed.). Mithraic Studies. First International Congress of Mithraic Studies. Vol. II. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press ND. p. 467 ff.
  16. ^ a b Barnett, R.D. (1975). Hinnells, John R. (ed.). Mithraic Studies. First International Congress of Mithraic Studies. Vol. II. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press ND. pp. 467–468.
  17. ^ Tiele, C.P. (1917). The Religion of the Iranian Peoples. Translated by Nariman, G.K. Bombay: The Parsi Publishing Co. p. 159.

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For other uses see Mitra disambiguation Mitra Proto Indo Iranian mitras is the name of an Indo Iranian divinity that predates the Rigvedic Mitra and Avestan Mithra The names and some characteristics of these established deities subsequently influenced other figures Maitreya a vrddhi derived form of Sanskrit mitra a bodhisattva in Buddhist tradition Latin Mithras the principal figure of the first century Roman mystery cult of Mithraism whose name derives from the Avestan theonym via Greek and some Anatolian intermediate In Hellenistic era Asia Minor Avestan Mithra was conflated with various local and Greek figures leading to several different variants of Apollo Helios Mithras Hermes Stilbon In Middle Iranian the Avestan theonym evolved among other Middle Iranian forms into Sogdian Misi Middle Persian and Parthian Mihr and Bactrian Miuro mihru citation needed Aside from Avestan Mithra these derivative names were also used for Greco Bactrian Mithro Miiro Mioro and Miuro Mithra the first messenger of Iranian Manichaeans a Contents 1 Indian Religious Texts 2 Indian Mitra 3 Iranian Mithra 4 Mithra in Commagene 5 Buddhist Maitreya 6 Graeco Roman Mithras 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesIndian Religious Texts edit nbsp Look up Reconstruction Proto Indo Iranian mitra in Wiktionary the free dictionary Both Vedic Mitra and Avestan Mithra derive from an Indo Iranian common noun mitra generally reconstructed to have meant covenant treaty agreement promise This meaning is preserved in Avestan mi8ra covenant In Sanskrit and modern Indo Aryan languages mitra means friend one of the aspects of bonding and alliance The Indo Iranian reconstruction is attributed 2 to Christian Bartholomae 3 and was subsequently refined by A Meillet 1907 who suggested derivation from the Proto Indo European root mey to exchange A suggested alternative derivation was meh to measure Gray 1929 Pokorny IEW 1959 refined Meillet s mei as to bind Combining the root mei with the tool suffix tra that which causes also found in man tra that which causes to think then literally means that which binds and thus covenant treaty agreement promise oath etc Pokorny s interpretation also supports to fasten strengthen which may be found in Latin moenia city wall fortification and in an antonymic form Old English ge maere border boundary post Meillet and Pokorny s contract did however have its detractors Lentz 1964 1970 refused to accept abstract contract for so exalted a divinity and preferred the more religious piety Because present day Sanskrit mitra means friend and New Persian mihr means love or friendship Gonda 1972 1973 insisted on a Vedic meaning of friend friendship not contract Meillet s analysis also rectified earlier interpretations 2 that suggested that the Indo Iranian common noun mitra had anything to do with the light or the sun When H Lommel suggested 4 that such an association was implied in the Younger Avesta since the 6th century BCE that too was conclusively dismissed 5 Today it is certain that al though Mi8ra is closely associated with the sun in the Avesta he is not the sun and Vedic Mitra is not either 2 Old Persian Mi8ra or Mi8ra both only attested in a handful of 4th century BCE inscriptions of Artaxerxes II and III is generally admitted to be a borrowing from the Avesta 6 the genuine Old Persian form being reconstructed as Mica Kent initially suggested Sanskrit 7 but later 6 changed his mind Middle Iranian myhr Parthian also in living Armenian usage and mihr Middle Persian derive from Avestan Mithra Greek Latin Mithras the focal deity of the Greco Roman cult of Mithraism is the nominative form of vocative Mithra In contrast to the original Avestan meaning of contract or covenant and still evident in post Sassanid Middle Persian texts the Greco Roman Mithraists probably thought the name meant mediator In Plutarch s 1st century discussion of dualistic theologies Isis and Osiris 46 7 the Greek historiographer provides the following explanation of the name in his summary of the Zoroastrian religion Mithra is a meson in the middle between the good Horomazdes and the evil Aremanius and this is why the Persai call the Mediator Mithra Zaehner 8 attributes this false etymology to a role that Mithra and the sun played in the now extinct branch of Zoroastrianism known as Zurvanism Indian Mitra editMain article Mitra Vedic Vedic Mitra is a prominent deity of the Rigveda distinguished by a relationship to Varuna the protector of rta as described in hymn 2 Mandala 1 of Rigveda Together with Varuna he counted among the Adityas a group of solar deities also in later Vedic texts Vedic Mitra is the patron divinity of honesty friendship contracts and meetings The first extant record of Indo Aryan 9 Mitra in the form mi it ra is in the inscribed peace treaty of c 1400 BC between Hittites and the Hurrian kingdom of the Mitanni in the area southeast of Lake Van in Asia Minor Mitra appears there together with four other Indic divinities as witnesses and keepers of the pact Iranian Mithra edit nbsp Mithra left in a 4th century investiture sculpture at Taq e Bostan in western Iran Main article Mithra In Zoroastrianism Mithra is a member of the trinity of ahuras protectors of asha arta truth or that which is right Mithra s standard appellation is of wide pastures suggesting omnipresence Mithra is truth speaking with a thousand ears with ten thousand eyes high with full knowledge strong sleepless and ever awake Yasht 10 7 As preserver of covenants Mithra is also protector and keeper of all aspects of interpersonal relationships such as friendship and love Related to his position as protector of truth Mithra is a judge ratu ensuring that individuals who break promises or are not righteous artavan are not admitted to paradise As also in Indo Iranian tradition Mithra is associated with the divinity of the sun but originally distinct from it Mithra is closely associated with the feminine yazata Aredvi Sura Anahita the hypostasis of knowledge nbsp Mithras Helios in Phrygian cap with solar rays with 1st century BC Antiochus I Theos of Commagene Found at Mount Nemrut in present day eastern Turkey Mithra in Commagene editThere is a deity Mithra mentioned on monuments in Commagene According to the archaeologist Maarten Vermaseren 1st century BC evidence from Commagene demonstrates the reverence paid to Mithras but does not refer to the mysteries b 10 In the colossal statuary erected by King Antiochus I 69 34 BC at Mount Nemrut Mithras is shown beardless wearing a Phrygian cap 11 12 and was originally seated on a throne alongside other deities and the king himself 13 On the back of the thrones there is an inscription in Greek which includes the name Apollo Mithras Helios in the genitive case Ἀpollwnos Mi8roy Ἡlioy 14 Vermaseren also reports about a Mithras cult in Fayum in the 3rd century BC c 15 R D Barnett has argued that the royal seal of King Saussatar of Mitanni from c 1450 BC depicts a tauroctonous Mithras d 16 Buddhist Maitreya editMain article Maitreya Maitreya is sometimes represented seated on a throne and venerated both in Mahayana and non Mahayana Buddhism Some have speculated that inspiration for Maitreya may have come from the ancient Iranian deity Mithra The primary comparison between the two characters appears to be the similarity of their names According to Tiele 1917 No one who has studied the Zoroastrian doctrine of the Saoshyants or the coming saviour prophets can fail to see their resemblance to the future Maitreya 17 Paul Williams claims that some Zoroastrian ideas like Saoshyant influenced the beliefs about Maitreya such as expectations of a heavenly helper the need to opt for positive righteousness the future millennium and universal salvation citation needed Possible objections are that these characteristics are not unique to Zoroastrianism nor are they necessarily characteristic of the belief in Maitreya nbsp Relief of Roman Mithras in a tauroctony scene Graeco Roman Mithras editMain article Mithraic mysteries The name Mithra was adopted by the Greeks and Romans as Mithras chief figure in the mystery religion of Mithraism At first identified with the Sun god Helios by the Greeks the syncretic Mithra Helios was transformed into the figure Mithras during the 2nd century BC probably at Pergamon This new cult was taken to Rome around the 1st century BC and was dispersed throughout the Roman Empire Popular among the Roman military Mithraism was spread as far north as Hadrian s Wall and the Germanic Limes Footnotes edit The Iranian Manichaeans adopted the name of the Zoroastrian god Mithra Av Mi8ra Mid Pers Mihr and used it to designate one of their own deities The name appears in Middle Persian as Mihr myhr unrelated to Old Persian form mica in Parthian as Mihr myhr and in Sogdian as Misi mysyy Sundermann 1979a p 10 sub 3 11 2 The spellings mytr mytrg however are not variants of the name Mithra they rather denote Maitreya 1 Other early evidence of the first decades B C refers only to the reverence paid to Mithras without mentioning the mysteries Examples which may be quoted are the tomb inscriptions of King Antiochus I of Commagene at Nemrud Dagh and of his father Mithridates at Arsameia on the Orontes Both the kings had erected on vast terraces a number of colossal statues seated on thrones to the honour of their ancestral gods At Nemrud we find in their midst King Antiochus 69 34 BC and in the inscription Mithras is mentioned 10 According to Vermaseren there was a Mithras cult in the Fayum in the third century BC and according to Pettazzoni the figure of Aion has its iconographic origin in Egypt 15 I see these figures or some of them in the impression of the remarkable royal seal of King Saussatar of Mitanni c 1450 BC great great grandfather of Kurtiwaza The only royal Mitannian seal that we possess Mithra tauroctonos characteristically kneeling on the bull to despatch it We can even see also the dog and snake below him are twin figures one marked by a star each fighting lions below a winged disc between lions and ravens stands a winged human headed lion 16 References edit Sundermann Werner 2002 Mithra iii in Manichaeism Encyclopedia Iranica a b c Schmidt Hans Peter 2006 Mithra i Mithra in Old Indian and Mithra in Old Iranian Encyclopaedia Iranica New York iranica com accessed April 2011 Bartholomae Christian 1904 Altiranisches Worterbuch Strassburg Trubner fasc 1979 Berlin de Gruyter at column 1183 Lommel Herman 1970 Die Sonne das Schlechteste in Schlerath Bernfried ed Zarathustra Darmstadt Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft pp 360 376 Gershevitch Ilya 1975 Die Sonne das Beste in Hinnells John R ed Mithraic Studies Proceedings of the First International Congress of Mithraic Studies vol 1 Manchester UP Rowman amp Littlefield pp 68 89 a b Ware James R Kent Roland G 1924 The Old Persian Cuneiform Inscriptions of Artaxerxes II and Artaxerxes III Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 55 The Johns Hopkins University Press 52 61 doi 10 2307 283007 JSTOR 283007 at p 55 Kent Ronald G 1953 Old Persian Grammar Lexicon Texts 2nd ed New Haven American Oriental Society 78 p 31b Zaehner Richard Charles 1955 Zurvan a Zoroastrian dilemma Oxford Clarendon at pp 101 102 Thieme Paul 1960 The Aryan Gods of the Mitanni Treaties Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 4 301 317 doi 10 2307 595878 JSTOR 595878 pp 301 317 a b Vermaseren M J 1963 Mithras The secret god London UK Chatto and Windus p 29 Hopfe Lewis M 1994 Archaeological indications on the origins of Roman Mithraism In Hopfe Lewis M ed Uncovering Ancient Stones Essays in memory of H Neil Richardson Eisenbrauns pp 147 158 esp 156 Vermaseren Maarten Jozef ed 1956 Corpus inscriptionum et monumentorum religionis mithriacae The Hague Martinus Nijhoff CIMRM 29 Head of a beardless Mithras in Phrygian cap point of which is missing Vermaseren Maarten Jozef 1956 Corpus Inscriptionum et Monumentorum Religionis Mithriacae The Hague Martinus Nijhoff CIMRM 28 The gods are represented in a sitting position on a throne and are Apollo Mithras see below Tyche Commagene Zeus Ahura Mazda Antiochus himself and finally Ares Artagnes Vermaseren Maarten Jozef 1956 Corpus Inscriptionum et Monumentorum Religionis Mithriacae The Hague Martinus Nijhoff CIMRM 32 verse 55 a b Barnett R D 1975 Hinnells John R ed Mithraic Studies First International Congress of Mithraic Studies Vol II Manchester UK Manchester University Press ND p 467 ff a b Barnett R D 1975 Hinnells John R ed Mithraic Studies First International Congress of Mithraic Studies Vol II Manchester UK Manchester University Press ND pp 467 468 Tiele C P 1917 The Religion of the Iranian Peoples Translated by Nariman G K Bombay The Parsi Publishing Co p 159 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mitra amp oldid 1198785120, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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