-
Valashabad (also
spelled as Valakhshkert,
Valakhshgerd and Valakhshkard),
known in Gr****
sources as Vologesocerta, and in
Arabic sources as
Sabat (ساباط)...
- the
church of the
Nestorian patriarch. To the
south of Veh-Ardashir was
Valashabad.
Ctesiphon had
several other districts which were
named Hanbu Shapur,...
- of Justinian, the
Byzantine historian Procopius refers to the city as
Valashabad (Balashabad),
named after king
Vologases I of Armenia. The name evolved...
-
military leader in the
early Islamic conquest of Persia. He
captured Valashabad, Weh
Antiok Khusrau (al-Rumiyya) and Veh-Ardashir for the
Rashidun Caliphate...
- of the
Church of the East patriarch. To the
south of Veh-Ardashir was
Valashabad. In 495,
during the
turbulent reign of
Emperor Kavad I, ****za (as the...
- was put
under the
control of
veteran general Rostam and was
cantoned at
Valashabad near Ctesiphon.
Receiving news of
preparations for a m****ive counterattack...
- name, as
preserved by
Byzantine historian Procopius (Persian Wars), was
Valashabad—"Valash/Balash city"
named after king Balash/Valash/Valarsh of Armenia...
-
companions later conquered Babylon (Battle of
Babylon (636)), Kūthā, Sābāṭ (
Valashabad) and Bahurasīr (Veh-Ardashir). Ctesiphon, the
capital of the S****anid...
- the Gr****
elites who
questioned his rule.
Vologases founded the town of
Valashabad in the
neighborhood of
Ctesiphon and Seleucia, with the
intention of breaking...
- the
second w**** of
January 637, the
Muslim avant-garde
reached Sābāṭ (
Valashabad), at 7 km.
about the S****anian capital,
without finding any
Persian garrisons...