Yazdegerd III
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty Yazdegerd III (also Romanized as Yazdgerd, Yazdgird) was the last Sasanian King of Kings from 632 to 651. His father was Shahriyar and his grandfather was Khosrow II.
Ascending the throne at the age of eight, the young shah lacked authority and reigned as a figurehead, whilst real power was in the hands of the army commanders, courtiers, and powerful members of the aristocracy, who engaged in internecine warfare. The Sasanian Empire was weakened severely by these internal conflicts, resulting in invasions by the Göktürks from the east, and Khazars from the west.Template:Sfn Yazdegerd was unable to contain the Rashidun conquest of Iran, and spent most of his reign fleeing from one province to another in the vain hope of raising an army. Yazdegerd met his end at the hands of a miller near Merv in 651, bringing an end to the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire after more than 400 years of rule.Template:Sfn
Etymology
'Yazdegerd' is a theophoric name that means 'God-made'. It is a combination of the Old Iranian yazad yazata- 'divine being' and karta- 'made'. It is comparable to Persian Bagkart and Greek Theoktistos.Template:Sfn Yazdegerd is known in other languages as follows: Middle Persian—Yazdekert; New Persian—Yazd(e)gerd; Syriac—Yazdegerd, Izdegerd, and Yazdeger; Armenian—Yazkert; Talmudic Izdeger and Azger; Arabic—Yazdeijerd; Greek Isdigerdes.Template:Sfn
Background
Yazdegerd was the son of prince Shahriyar and the grandson of Khosrow II (Template:Reign), the last prominent shah of Iran. Khosrow II had been overthrown and executed in 628 by his own son Sheroe, who took the name Kavad II upon gaining the throne. Kavad then ordered the execution of all his brothers and half-brothers, including Yazdegerd's father Shahriyar.Template:Sfn The purging of the ranks of the ruling family dealt a blow to the empire from which it would never recover.
The murder of Khosrow II ignited a civil war that lasted four years, as the most powerful members of the nobility created their own autonomous government. Hostilities between the Persian (Parsig) and Parthian (Pahlav) noble families also resumed; they divided the treasury between themselves.Template:Sfn And months later, a devastating plague swept through the western Sasanian provinces and killed half of the population. Kavad II was one of its victims.Template:Sfn
Kavad was succeeded by his eight-year-old son Ardashir III who was killed two years later by the distinguished Sasanian general Shahrbaraz. Forty days later Shahrbaraz was deposed and murdered by the Pahlav leader Farrukh Hormizd, who installed the daughter of Khosrow II, Boran, on the throne.Template:SfnTemplate:Pn She was deposed a year later, and a succession of rulers followed until Boran was sovereign once more in 631, only to be murdered the following year by the Parsig leader Piruz Khosrow.Template:Sfn
Eventually the two most powerful magnates in the empire, Rostam FarrokhzadTemplate:Efn and Piruz Khosrow—threatened by their own men—agreed to ally. They installed Yazdegerd III on the throne, putting an end to the civil war.Template:Sfn He was crowned in the Temple of Anahita, Istakhr, where he had been hiding during the civil war. The site was chosen to be a symbol of the empire's rejuvenation, as it was the very place where the first Sasanian shah Ardashir I (Template:Reign) had crowned himself four centuries earlier. Template:Sfn Due to Kavad's massacre of his family, the new shah was among the few surviving members of the House of Sasan.Template:Sfn Most scholars agree that Yazdegerd was eight years old at his coronation.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn His coronation occurred around the same time that Abu Bakr became Caliph.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Early reign and instability

The eight-year-old Yazdegerd lacked the authority needed to bring stability to an empire that was quickly falling apart due to ceaseless internal conflict. Army commanders, courtiers, and powerful members of the aristocracy fought amongst each other in feuds that were often deadly. Many regional governors had proclaimed their independence from the crown and carved out their own kingdoms.Template:Sfn The governors of the provinces of Mazun and Yemen had already asserted their independence during the civil war of 628–632, resulting in the disintegration of Sasanian rule over the Arab tribes of the Arabian Peninsula who had united under the banner of Islam.Template:Sfn The Iranologist Khodadad Rezakhani argues that the Sasanians had likely already lost many of their possessions after Khosrow II's overthrow in 628.Template:Sfn
By 632, the Sasanian state resembled the feudal system of the Parthian Empire at its collapse in 224.Template:Sfn Yazdegerd, though acknowledged by both the Parsig and Pahlav factions as the rightful monarch, was not in control of the empire. Indeed, during the first years of his rule the Pahlav, based in the north, refused to mint coins of him.Template:Sfn
His coins were minted in Pars, Sakastan, and Khuzestan, approximately corresponding to the regions of the southwest (Xwarwarān) and southeast (Nēmrōz), where the Parsig was based.Template:Sfn In the south, a Sasanian claimant to the throne who called himself Khosrow IV minted his own coinage at Susa in Khuzestan; he would do so till 636.Template:Sfn According to Rezakhani, Yazdegerd also lost control over Mesopotamia and the imperial capital Ctesiphon. He argues that the conspiring aristocrats and the population of Ctesiphon "do not appear to have been too successful or eager in bringing Yazdgerd to the capital."Template:Sfn
The empire was being invaded on two fronts; by the Göktürks in the east and by Khazars in the west. The Khazars raided Armenia and Adurbadagan.Template:Sfn The Sasanian army had been heavily weakened due to the war with the Byzantines and to its continuous internal conflict.Template:Sfn The circumstances were so chaotic, and the condition of the state so alarming, that "the Persians openly spoke of the imminent downfall of their empire, and saw its portents in natural calamities."Template:Sfn
Early clash with the Arabs

In 633 Muslim Arabs defeated a Sasanian force under Azadbeh near the strategically important Sasanian city Hira, which the victors then occupied in short order. Yazdegerd's ministers began paying heed to the Muslims after the loss of Hira. Rostam Farrokhzad sent an army commanded by Bahman Jadhuyih and the Armenian Jalinus to face the enemy. Rostam ordered Bahman to return with Jalinus's head if the Armenian general lost. Template:Sfn The Sasanian army managed to defeat the Muslims at the Battle of the Bridge.
In 636 Yazdegerd ordered Rostam to subdue the invading Arabs, telling him "Today you are the [most prominent] man among the Iranians...[T]he people of Iran have not faced a situation like this since the family of Ardashir I assumed power."Template:Sfn Notwithstanding this speech, advisors asked Yazdegerd to dismiss Rostam and replace him with someone more popular and around whom the people would rally.Template:Sfn
Yazdegerd ordered Rostam to assess the Arab forces camped at Qadisiyyah.Template:Sfn Rostam reported that the Arabs were "a pack of wolves, falling upon unsuspecting shepherds and annihilating them."Template:Sfn Yazdegerd responded to Rostam thus:
Last stand

The two armies clashed again 636. The Battle of al-Qadisiyyah resulted in a crushing defeat for the Sasanian army. Rostam, Bahman Jaduya, Jalinus, and the Armenian princes Grigor II Novirak and Mushegh III Mamikonian were all slain in the fighting. The Arabs then headed for the imperial capital Ctesiphon, meeting no resistance along the way. Yazdegerd fled with the treasury and 1,000 servants to Hulwan in Media, leaving Rostam's brother Farrukhzad in charge of the capital. But rather than stay and fight the Arabs, Farrukhzad also fled to Hulwan. The Arabs reached Ctesiphon in 637, besieged the western parts of the city, and soon occupied all of it.Template:Sfn<ref name="Bearman 2013">Template:Cite journal</ref>
The Iranian defeat at al-Qadisiyyah has often been described as a turning point in the Arab invasion of Iran. The Iranians had finally became cognizant of the destructive consequences of their factionalism and internecine feuding. Template:Sfn Al-Tabari wrote that after the fall of Ctesiphon "the people... were about to go their separate ways, [but] they started to incite one another: 'If you disperse now, you will never get together again; this is a spot that sends us in different directions'."Template:Sfn
In 637 Arabs defeated another Sasanian army at the Battle of Jalula, and Yazdegerd fled deeper into Media.Template:Sfn He raised a new army there and ordered it to Nahavand to retake Ctesiphon in the hope of preventing Muslim advances.Template:Sfn The threat presented by the new army prompted Umar to combine his Arab forces. He ordered Al-Nu’man ibn Muqrin to take command of the armies of Kufa and Basra, with additional reinforcements from Syria and Oman.
In 642 this massive army attacked the Sasanians. The ensuing Battle of Nahavand is said to have lasted several days, with major losses on both sides. The dead included al-Nu'man ibn Muqrin and the Iranian generals Mardanshah and Piruz Khosrow. It marked a second military disaster for the Sasanians, six years after the crushing defeat at al-Qadisiyyah in 636.Template:Sfn
Flight

In the aftermath of the debacle at Nahavand, Yazdegerd fled to Isfahan where he raised a small army. He placed it under the command of an officer named Siyah who had lost property to the Arabs. But Siyah and his troops also agreed to fight for the Arabs in exchange for places to live Template:Sfn and mutinied against Yazdegerd. Meanwhile, Yazdegerd had arrived in Istakhr where he tried to establish a base of resistance in Pars Province. But in 650, the governor of Arab-controlled Basra, Abdullah ibn Aamir, invaded Pars and put an end to the Persian resistance. 40,000 Iranian defenders were slain—many of them nobles—and Istakhr was left in ruins. Following the Arab conquest of Pars, Yazdegerd fled to Kirman, pursued by an Arab force.Template:Sfn Yazdegerd managed to flee from the Arabs in a snowstorm at Bimand.
In Kirman, Yazdegerd managed to alienate the marzban (frontier military governor or "margrave"), before leaving for Sakastan. Then another Arab army from Basra arrived at Kirman. A fierce battle ensued in which the marzban was slain. And Yazdegerd alienated the governor of Sakastan with his demands for more and higher taxes to fund the army. Template:Sfn Yazdegerd next embarked to Merv to meet the leader of the Turks in the hope of forming an alliance. But when he reached Khorasan, the war-weary populace insisted on peace with the Arabs, and Yazdegerd refused. In 650–652, an Arab army entered Sakastan and captured the city. Template:Sfn Yazdegerd did secure the troops from the Principality of Chaghaniyan. He made the same demands on the marzban of Merv that he made in Kirman and Sakastsn and met with the same results. The marzban joined with Nezak Tarkan, the Hephthalite ruler of Badghis, and together they defeated Yazdegerd and his followers.
Chinese assistance

Yazdegerd had sent an envoy to the Chinese emperor seeking assistance in 638 after his first defeat to the Arabs, but nothing seems to have come of the visit.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He sent another envoy to the Tang dynasty court in 639 "for offering tribute”.<ref name="XZ"/> Yazdegerd continued to send envoys to China in 647 and again 647, even as he suffered defeats, in order to “seek assistance from the Chinese court with the hope to form a new army".<ref name="XZ"/> The Chinese did eventually send assistance, but only after Yazdegerd was dead. His son Peroz III again sent envoys in 654 and 661. Following the second of these embassies, the Chinese established a "Persian military commandery" (波斯都督府) in 661 in the city of Zābol (疾陵城 Jilingcheng) in Tokharistan, and Peroz was appointed as Military Commander (都督 Dudu).<ref name="XZ"/> In 679 a Chinese army accompanied Narsieh, the exiled son of Peroz, with orders to restore him to the Sasanian throne. But the army was detained in Tokharistan to repel the invasion of Western Turkic Khan Ashina Duzhi, which left Narsieh to fight against the Muslim Arabs without Chinese assistance for the next twenty years.<ref name="XZ">Template:Cite journal</ref> Yazdegard III's grandson Prince Khosrau, son of Bahram VII (recorded as Juluo (Template:Zh) in Chinese sources) attempted to continue his father's military efforts. He is likely the same "Khosrow" mentioned by al-Tabari. Khosrau's campaigns, and his first invasion of Persia, proved unsuccessful.<ref name=Zanous>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Death, legacy and personality
After his defeat in 651, Yazdegerd sought refuge with a miller near Merv. Rather than sheltering Yazdegerd, the miller murdered him. According to Kia, the miller killed Yazdegerd for his jewelry,Template:Sfn whilst The Cambridge History of Iran states that the miller was sent by Mahoe Suri.Template:Sfn
The death of Yazdegerd marked the end of the Sasanian Empire, and made it easier for the Arabs to conquer the rest of Iran. All of Khorasan was soon conquered by the Arabs, who would use it as a base to attack Transoxiana.Template:Sfn The death of Yazdegerd thus marked the end of the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire after more than 400 years of rule. The empire—which had a generation earlier conquered Egypt and Asia Minor, reaching as a far as Constantinople—fell to a force of lightly-equipped Arabs used to skirmishes and desert warfare. The heavy Sasanian cavalry was too sluggish and systematized to contain them; employing light-armed Arab or East Iranian mercenaries from Khorasan and Transoxiana would have been more effective.Template:Sfn
Yazdegerd was according to tradition buried by Christian monks in Merv, in a tall tomb situated in a garden and decorated with silk and musk. A funeral and mausoleum were organized by Church of the East bishop Elias of Merv in honor of Yazdegerd's Christian grandmother Shirin. For his part in the murder of the Sassanian king, Mahoe had his arms, legs, ears and nose cut off by the Turks, who eventually left him to die under the scorching summer sun. The corpse of Mahoe was then burned at the stake, along with the bodies of his three sons.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
According to one tradition, the monks cursed Mahoe and made a hymn to Yazdegerd, mourning the fall of a "combative" king and the "house of Ardashir I".Template:Sfn Whether the tradition was factual or not, it emphasizes that the Christians of the empire remained loyal to the Zoroastrian Sasanians, even possibly more than the Iranian nobles who had deserted Yazdegerd.Template:Sfn Indeed, there were close links between the late Sasanian rulers and Christians, whose conditions had greatly improved compared to that of the early Sasanian era. Yazdegerd's wife was according to folklore a Christian, whilst his son and heir, Peroz III was seemingly an adherent of Christianity, and had a church built in China where he had taken refuge.Template:Sfn Yazdegerd became remembered in history as a martyred prince; many rulers and officers of Islamic Iran would claim descent from him.Template:Sfn
Yazdegerd was well-educated and cultured, but his arrogance, pride and inability to compare his demands with the real situation led to his constantly falling out with his governors and to his influence diminishing as he, pursued by Arabs, moved from one city to another. At each new place, he behaved as if he was still the all-powerful monarch of the kingdom and not an outcast running away from enemies. Combined with his military failures, this arrogance turned many of his most loyal subjects away from him.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Zoroastrian calendar
The Zoroastrian religious calendar, which is still in use today, uses the regnal year of Yazdegerd III as its base year,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and its calendar era (year numbering system) is accompanied by a Y.Z. suffix.Template:Sfn
Magians took Yazdegerd III's death as the end of the millennium of Zoroaster and the beginning of the millennium of Oshetar (see "Saoshyant".Template:Sfn
See also
Notes
References
Sources
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External links
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