- the
Mihranids who
exterminated all of the
members of the
Aranshahik dynasty with the
exception of a
certain Zarmihr, who was
related to the
Mihranids through...
- Khosro[v]ianni, Georgian: ხოსრო[ვ]იანები), also
known as the
Iberian Mihranids, were a
dynasty of
kings and
later presiding princes of the
early Georgian...
- polities:
Iberia (Chosroids),
Gogarene and
Caucasian Albania/Gardman (
Mihranids). The much
later Samanid dynasty that
ruled most of Iran in the 9th and...
-
succeeded by
another Iranian royal family in the 5th
century AD, the
Mihranids.
Aghuank (Old Armenian: Աղուանք Ałuankʿ,
Modern Armenian: Աղվանք Aġvank’)...
- was
elected as shah by the
Iranian magnates, most
notably Sukhra and the
Mihranid general Shapur Mihran.
Balash (484–488) was a mild and
generous monarch...
- the
lands and
titles of the
Mihranids was
acquired by the
Armenian Bagratuni princes, thus
marking the end of the
Mihranids of Gugark.
Based on available...
- successors.
According to tradition, in the
beginning of the 7th
century the
Mihranids had
invited 60 men of the
Aranshahiks to a
banquet and had
killed them...
-
branch of the
Mihranid family in the
Kingdom of Iberia,
known as the
Chosroid dynasty (otherwise
known as the
Iberian Mihranids, or
Mihranids of Iberia)...
- 274–293)
secured the
Iberian throne for Mirian,
which laid the
foundation for
Mihranid rule in Iberia,
which would last into the
sixth century. Thus, the Chosroid...
-
daughter of the
Armenian military commander Vardan Mamikonian and
married the
Mihranid ruler (pitiakhsh) Varsken, son of
Arshusha II.
Varsken was a
defiant v****al...