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Gundeshapur (Middle Persian: 𐭥𐭧𐭩𐭠𐭭𐭣𐭩𐭥𐭪𐭱𐭧𐭯𐭥𐭧𐭥𐭩, Weh-Andiōk-Ŝābuhr; New Persian: گندیشاپور, Gondēshāpūr) was the
intellectual centre of...
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centers of
education (Ctesiphon, Ras al-Ayn,
Gundeshapur) and
academy of
learning in the city of
Gundeshapur, Iran
during late antiquity, the intellectual...
- the
Church of the East, that was held in 484, in the
Persian city of
Gundeshapur (Bēth Lapaṭ, in the
Syriac language). The
council was
headed by Metropolitan...
- background. A
hospital and
medical training center existed at
Gundeshapur. The city of
Gundeshapur was
founded in AD 271 by the S****anid king
Shapur I. It was...
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Middle Persian. He died
shortly after being imprisoned by Bahram I in
Gundeshapur. The
exact meaning of the name
remains unsolved. It may have derived...
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advised to do so. As a result, he died on Wednesday, 5 June 879, in
Gundeshapur. He was
succeeded by his
brother Amr Saffari.
Although he was not viewed...
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corresponded to the present-day
province of Khuzestan. Its
capital was
Gundeshapur.
During the late
Sasanian era, the
province was
included in the southern...
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prominent route on the
southern Sasanian coast. The
factories of Susa,
Gundeshapur, and
Shushtar were
famously known for
their production of silk, and rivaled...
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killed while the rest were
deported to Shapur‘s
newly built city of
Gundeshapur It was
recaptured by the
Roman emperor Valerian the
following year. Antioch...
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Fables of Bidpai.
Under the
Abbasid caliphate,
Baghdad had
replaced Gundeshapur as the most
important centre of
learning in the then vast
Islamic Empire...