- Ardashir-Khwarrah (Middle Persian: Arđaxšēr-Xwarra,
meaning "glory of Ardashir") was one of the four (later five)
administrative divisions of the Sasanian...
-
successors were; his son Marzban; his
grandson Binagar; his great-grandson
Khurrah Khosrow; and then a
certain Badhan, who was
unrelated to the
family of...
- 628)
Javanshir Arwandrang († 628)
Guranshah († 628)
Afrudshah († 628)
Khurrah († 628)
Pusdil († 628)
Boran (629–630, 631–632)
Farrukhzad Khosrow V (631)...
- on this site. Ardashir's new city was
known as Khor Ardashīr, Ardashīr
Khurrah and Gōr. It had a
circular plan so
precise in
measurement that the Persian...
- as Meyān Kharreh, Mīān Kherreh, Mīān Khowreh,
Miyan Khazeh, and Miyān
Khurrah) is a
village in
Khvormuj Rural District, in the
Central District of Dashti...
- disobe****, and
moved to Asuristan,
where he set up a camp in
Ardashir Khurrah.
Khosrow then sent
Farrukhzad to
negotiate with him. However, Farrukhzad...
-
diocese of Rev
Ardashir is
first mentioned in 420, the
dioceses of
Ardashir Khurrah (Shiraf), Darabgard,
Istakhr and
Kazrun (Shapur or Bih Shapur) in 424,...
-
Adarbaigan Al-Bariya Al-Kuj Al-Qabba Al-Rustaq
Aoustan d'Arzun
Armenia Ardashir Khurrah (Shiraf)
Arzun [[Dioceses of the
Church of the East to 1318|[ʿ] Error:...
- Umayya, son of Ziyad's
deputy governor of Fars
province or its Ardashir-
Khurrah district and
later the
deputy governor of Kufa,
Abdallah ibn
Khalid ibn...
- Christianity. The 9th/10th-century
Iranian scholar al-Tabari
stated that
Khurrah Khosrow, the
fourth governor of
Sasanian Yemen, was
replaced by the governor...