Yazdin

Yazdin (died 627) was a Iranian aristocrat, who served as the financial minister of the Sasanian king Khosrau II (r. 590-628).

Family and conversion

A native of Kirkuk from a high-class Iranian family[1] (although of original Aramean descent) which practiced Zoroastrianism, Yazdin was the son a certain Mihryar, and had a brother named Dadgushnasp.[2] Yazdin's mother was the daughter of the governor (marzban) of Nisibis.[3] When Yazdin grew up, he was sent to a Zoroastrian school, which he, however, disliked and fled from. He shortly arrived to his foster parents who received him warmly. He was later found by his father, who, after having beaten him, sent him back to the school. Yazdin fled once again, and was in the end allowed to stay with his foster parents, while his brother Dadgushnasp would go to school instead. Yazdin visited the church several times with his foster parents, but in the end fled from them and got baptized.[2]

Financial ministry and death

Due to his aristocratic origin, Yazdin had much land under his possession, mostly near Kirkuk and Margha.[1] He is later mentioned as serving as the financial minister of king Khosrau II. Because Yazdin was a Christian and member of the Church of the East, he did everything, to improve the position of his coreligionists. Yazdin built numerous churches and enjoyed the fullest confidence of Khosrau.[1]

During the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628, a certain Yazden was appointed as the governor of Armenia. This Yazden may have been the same person as Yazdin.[4] In 614, the Sasanians seized the True Cross and brought it to the capital Ctesiphon, where Yazdin took care of the cross and had a celebration along with the other Christians of the Empire. He then sent a peace a of the cross to Mount Izla, a place near Nisibis.[5]

Yazdin also had rivals at the Sasanian court of Ctesiphon, which included Khosrau's wife Shirin, and the royal physician Gabriel of Sinjar, who unlike him, were both Miaphysite Christians, and were attempting to push back the influence of the Nestorian Christians in favor of their church.

However, in 624, the Byzantine emperor Heraclius turned the tide of war against the Sasanians, and advanced into northern Adurbadagan, and by 627, he was close to Ctesiphon. These Sasanian failures made Khosrau so angry that he had several of his officers, including Yazdin, executed. Yazdin had a son named Shamta, who is said to have killed Khosrau.[1] However, according to other sources, it was the Iranian aristocrat Mihr Hormozd, who had Khosrau killed.[6]

References

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.