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First Iranian queen regnant who ruled Iran over Sassanid empire

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  • First Iranian queen regnant who ruled Iran over Sassanid empire

    Persian Journal, Iran
    Sept 2 2005

    FIRST IRANIAN QUEEN REGNANT WHO RULED IRAN OVER SASSANID EMPIRE
    Sep 2, 2005
    Manouchehr Saadat Noury - Persian Journal



    INTRODUCTION:
    A Queen Regnant is a female monarch, who holds all the imperial
    powers that a King would have, without regard to gender. This is in
    contrast with a Queen Consort, who is merely the spouse or the mother
    of a ruling King, and each one on her own has no official powers of
    the country. During the Sassanid Dynasty (224-651), Iran had two
    Queen Regnants, Pourandokht (PRD) and Azarmidokht (AZD), who ruled
    for about three years (629-632). In Ferdowsi's epic Book of Kings or
    Shahnameh, there is also a mythological reference to yet another
    Queen Regnant named Homa Shahrzad who ruled over 32 years. In this
    article, the information available on First Iranian Queen Regnants,
    PRD and AZD, are presented and discussed.




    Iranian army of Sassanid Empire included women as fighters



    THE STUTUS OF IRANIAN WOMEN IN SASSANID ERA:
    In the Iranian tradition, women have always had special respect and
    equal treatment. Throughout history, researchers have come across
    references to the special role of women in the traditional Iranian
    society. According to Plutarch, the Greek historian and biographer,
    [Iranian women used to participate in social affairs and fight in the
    battlefield]. It is also known that the Iranian army of Sassanid
    Empire included women as fighters, and Roman sources have described
    them a group of excellent fighters. There are, however, some reports
    indicating in Sassanid Empire women were not considered as
    independent individuals and were completely under the custody of the
    patriarch (in Persian: Pedar-Shahi, Pedar-Saalari) of their family.
    On the one hand, those reports are most unlikely because there is no
    ample evidence to support them. On the other hand, the study of
    Avesta, the Zoroastrian holy book, indicates that women in Iranian
    society were to some extent equal to men and enjoyed a number of
    legal and social freedoms. As is described in Din Kard, an ancient
    religious text, women could manage their property, could represent
    their husbands at court, could become judges, and could perform
    religious ceremonies. It should be also noted that due to the
    significant role (s) of women in the society, the ancient Iranian
    coins show the queen on one side of the coin.

    CONDITIONS WHICH MADE PRD TO BE SELECTED AS A QUEEN:
    Since the reign of Khosrow I or Khosrow Anoshirvan (ruled 531-579),
    each General (in Persian: Spahbod) or Governor (in Persian:
    Ostandaar) in Sassanid Empire regrettably considered his province as
    something like a hereditary fief or property. Such Generals or
    Governors were tempted more and more to play the part of kingmakers.
    For example, Bahram Chobin, and Farrukhan Shahrvaraz (Shiruyeh) made
    themselves kings with temporary success. The fatal example was set by
    Bahram Chobin and was followed by Shiruyeh with disastrous results
    for the unity and independence of the Empire. But the assassination
    of Shiruyeh in 629 convinced the nobles of the country that the game
    of assuming the throne was too dangerous, and one, which the country,
    devoted as it was to the Sassanian dynasty, was not likely to
    tolerate. It is documented when Shiruyeh and his son, Ardeshir, were
    also murdered, it seemed as if neither a man nor even a male child of
    the king's family survived the bloody rivalries for the throne to
    become the king, so the courtiers, though reluctantly, went for PRD,
    the daughter of Khosrow Parviz (591-628).

    PRD AS A QUEEN REGNANT OF IRAN:
    PRD started her ruling as the first Iranian queen regnant in
    Ctesiphon (in Persian: Tyssfoon) on May 20, 629 and tried to revive
    the sovereignty of Sassanid dynasty. The reign of PRD, whose name
    means [successor girl] and it is also synonymous to [a girl with a
    rosy face], become contemporary to Abu-Bakr and Omar caliphates. In
    ancient books and resources she is described as a wise, just, and a
    good-natured woman. PRD is quoted in a letter to her army writing, [A
    monarch, regardless of being a queen or a king, must defend his or
    her land and treat the people with justice].The outstanding
    characteristics of PRD were even undeniable to the first Iranian epic
    poet, Ferdowsi (935-1020). Despite his patriarchal attitudes,
    Ferdowsi, in his masterpiece of the Book of Kings or Shahnameh, noted
    PRD's justice and the welfare that farmers enjoyed during her reign.
    Sadly, after 16 months, when preparing for the deployment of her army
    to confront the invader Arabs, PRD got sick and passed away in
    Ctesiphon in 631.

    HER SUCCESSOR:
    AZD, the sister of PRD, ruled Iran as the second queen regnant from
    631 to 632 when Hormuz V took over. There is not much information
    available on the life story of AZD. It is, however, reported that
    General Farrukh-Hormuzd (GFH) who was the governor of Khorassan,
    according to historian Tabari, or prince of Azarbaijan, according to
    Armenian sources, aspired to the crown and attempted to secure it by
    proposing a marriage to queen AZD who refused the proposal. GFH was
    the father of Rostam-e-Farrokh Zaad (590-636), who became the first
    Iranian famous commander-in-chief few years later.


    TODAY, IRANIANS REMEMBER [PRD], [AZD], AND ALL THOSE WHO SERVED THE
    COUNTRY DURING A TURBULENT TIME, AND STOOD UP AGAINST INJUSTICE AND
    TYRANNY, AND WHO DIED OR SUFFERED FOR HUMAN DIGNITY, THE FREEDOM OF
    SPIRIT, AND A FREE CONSCIENCE.

    http://www.iranian.ws/iran_news/publish/article_9356.shtml
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