Pages

The Late Sasanian Period: Adurbadagan and Arran (Caucasian Albania)

by Mahir Khalifa-zadeh

Original:

Khalifa-zadeh Mahir, "Adurbadagan and Arran (Caucasian Albania) in the Late Sasanian Period". International Journal of History, 2023, Vol. 5, issue , pp 15-18, DOI: 10.22271/27069109.2023.v5.i2a.220

PDF download:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/373421722_Adurbadagan_and_Arran_Caucasian_Albania_in_the_Late_Sasanian_Period

Abstract: The article considers the Sasanian King Khusrow I Anushirwan (Pahlavi: Xusrō I Anōšīrvān) reforms to improve the empire’s military and administrative architecture during the wars with Byzantium and the Turks. The author discusses the establishment of the region or kust-ī Ādurbādagān, which allowed the nomination of Arrān’s general. The author believes that it was a key element in the Sassanian strategy to enforce both central and military power in the defense-sensitive Caucasia challenged by the Byzantium and nomads. The reforms pulled Arrān (Latin: Albania) closer to the Sasanian crown, enforcing the dynastic ties between Sasanian shāhanshāh and Arrānshāh. These reforms facilitated the incorporation of Arranian (Albanian) troops into the Sasanian Army under Ādurbādagān’s general command to shield Ērānšahr from the Khazar’s and Turk’s incursions. The author argues that the reform initiated the projecting of Ādurbādagān’s name, military, and administrative functions in Arrān forming a strong interrelationship between the southern and northern sides of the Araxes as the entire Ādurbādagān šahr. Since Late Antiquity, Ādurbādagān and Arrān became interchangeable names and were in use on the northern bank of the Araxes.


Keywords: Sasanian, Adurbadagan, Arran, Caucasian Albania, Azerbaijan

Arranshah Javanshir (Pahlavi: Juansher), 637-669 CE,
National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan 

The Parthian and later Sasanian empires engaged in centuries-long wars with Rome and Byzantium, respectively. The intense rivalry between the two great empires shaped the history and politics of that period, as the Greco-Persian wars did during early Antiquity. The permanent struggle with Byzantium to dominate the Near East prompted the Sassanids to rethink and redesign the empire’s architecture to improve its military might and administrative stability. This strategic perception was realized not only because of the war with the Byzantines but also for the devastating invaders’ incursions deep into Ērānšahr from the Darband pass in Caucasia. The Sasanians were involved in a permanent struggle on two key fronts: in the northwest with the Byzantium Empire and in the north with the Turks in the Caucasus. This political and military reality forced the Sassanids to re-discover and re-evaluate the strategic importance of Arrān or Arrānšahr (Caucasus Albania), located on the north side of the Araz river.

In the 5th-6th centuries CE, Sasanian kings Kawād I (r. 488-96, 499-531) and his son Xusrō I Anōšīrvān (r. 531-579)[1] launched a fortifications’ improvement program[2] around the whole empire. They also initiated administrative reforms to upgrade the empire’s defense, military, and power architectures.[3] Parallelly, the reforms aimed to strengthen the Zoroastrian religion in the lands challenged by the Christian Orthodox Byzantium.

In the Seleucid and Parthian eras, the province of Āturpātākān (Pahlavi: Ādurbādagān) played a central role as a stronghold against the spread of the Greek and Roman pantheons in Ērānšahr. Moreover, it is highly likely that Āturpātākān was the place where the prophet Zarathustra was born, and the Holy Avesta was kept in the sacred fire Ātur (Old Persian) or Ādur Gušnasp (Middle Persian/Pahlavi) temple (now Takht-e Solayman).[4]

Thus, in the Sasanian era, Ādurbādagān became the religious center of the empire, preserving and expanding Zoroaster’s faith. The chief Median sacred fire temple of Ādur Gušnasp was established sometime in the Parthian period on a hill near Āturpātākān’s capital Ganzak/Gazaca (Greek: Γάζακα). The Sasanians proclaimed Zoroastrianism as the imperial religion and Ādurbādagān occupied the role of the empire’s religious core, holding the cathedral temple Ādur Gušnasp as the imperial sacred fire of the highest grade. Ādur Gušnasp continued to burn until the 11th century.[5]

Ādur Gušnasp - an Ataš Bahrām (Parthian: Ātaš-i- Wahrām or Pahlavi: Ādur Bahrām - “fires of Victory,” Zoroastrian name of God of War and Victory) was the Zoroastrian most sacred or “cathedral” fire of the highest grade established in the late Achaemenid or Parthian era in Ādurbādagān.  The temple was linked to the victorious warrior class (Pahlavi: artēštār) to which the Sasanian dynasty belonged itself. Since the reign of King Bahram V (r. 420-438 CE), all Sasanian kings after coronation pilgrimage to the temple providing royal gifts and celebrated Nowruz (Pahlavi: No Ruz).[6]

During the late Sasanian period, shāhanshāh Xusrō I Anōšīrvān launched the military and administrative reforms[7] and accelerated the building of fortifications in the empire’s defense-sensitive areas, particularly in Caucasus Albania. The reform was designed to strengthen the empire’s military operational and defense capacity following the establishment of four quarters or regions (kust) reported to the assigned trustworthy general (Pahlavi: spāhbed) for each region.[8]

King Xusrō I abolished the one-person command of Ērān-Spāhbed,[9],[10] (Pahlavi: iṣbahbadh al-bilād, Artēštārān sālār, the office of the marshal or general of all Iranian forces)[11] and replaced it with four generals reporting directly to shāhanshāh.  As a result of the reform, the kust-ī Ādurbādagān (quadrant or region of Ādurbādagān) was established holding Ādurbādagān’s general [12] and, as will be indicated later, Ādurbādagān’s āmārgar (financial or administrative officer) as well.[13]

The establishment of the kust-ī Ādurbādagān holding the specially assigned general was designed to improve the empire’s military and defense capabilities strengthening the central power of the shāhanshāh and Zoroaster’s faith in the lands contested by Christian Byzantium, particularly in Caucasia. The Sassanids considered the kust-ī Ādurbādagān to be the most important region for its military potential and strategic location as well as for its logistical closeness to the empire’s core – Ādurbādagān province – a power, military, and Zoroastrian center.[14]

However, the closeness of the war zones to the key Ādurbādagān province, holding the principal and foremost fire Ādur Gušnasp, made the province vulnerable, which needed to be secured by strengthening its defense. Thus, the security of the empire’s core regions of Media and Azerbaijan had to be guaranteed and both Sasanian and Zoroastrian influence were to be projected far afield from Ādurbādagān.[15]  The Sassanians were focused to ensure the safety Ādurbādagān, as the Zoroastrian core, from the ideological and religious contamination generated by Christian Byzantium and infiltrating from Caucasia. The Sassanids addressed this challenge by establishing the kust-ī Ādurbādagān holding the centralized office of the supreme military command (Pahlavi: isbahbadh) of Azerbaijan with specially assigned Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed covering Ādurbādagān itself and the surrounding lands of Arrān (Albania) and Armin (Arminyaya or Armenia).[16],[17]

It should be noted that the Byzantines, the Sasanian archenemies, acknowledged the imperial, military, and religious values of Ādurbādagān province. In 623, Byzantine emperor Heraclius, during the last Byzantine-Sassanian war of 602-628CE, occupied Ādurbādagān and sacked out the fire temple Ādur Gušnasp, aiming to crush the Sassanids’ will and power to fight.[18],[19]

Thus, the kust-ī Ādurbādagān included the province of Ādurbādagān (a power and religious center of the empire) and all adjoining lands in the north and west from the Araz River up to the Khazar lands in the Caspian Sea. The establishment of the kust Ādurbādagān allowed for the re-design of the Sassanian military and power architecture in this part of the empire. It initiated the Ādurbādagān province’s military command (spāhbed) and administrative functions such as the office of tax/revenue (āmārgar) to the north from the Araz River up to the Darband fortress in Caucasia. The recently discovered Sasanian kust-ī Ādurbādagān spāhbed seal in Azar Goshnasp (now Takht-e Solayman, Iranian Azerbaijan)[20] and the Pahlavi official inscriptions on the Darband fortress walls (now Derbent) confirm the extension of šahr (region or country in Pahlavi) Ādurbādagān to the Caucasus.[21]

The Sasanian reforms’ strategy was pragmatic and effective, allowing an increase in the empire’s capacity to fight its enemies. It strengthened the empire’s defense and military capabilities by incorporating Arranian (Albanian) troops into the Sasanian Imperial army under Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed command. The projection of Ādurbādagān’s military and administrative functions to the north from the Araxes was of paramount significance to the Sassanids, enforcing both the central shāhanshāh’s power and Zoroaster’s faith in Albania challenged by the Orthodox Byzantium (Caucasus Albania was re-baptized into Nestorian Orthodox Christianity at the beginning of the 7th CE).  Generally, this strategy increased the gravity of the Zoroastrian religion and the importance of the province Ādurbādagān, cementing the Sasanian power and Zoroaster’s faith (as the unique imperial religion) on the northern bank of the Araxes (under the entire Ādurbādagān šahr umbrella)[22], where the military and religious rivalry with the Orthodox Byzantium were in the stages of war.

Indeed, the sign of the Moon, as a key Zoroastrian symbol that was exposed on top of the principal Sassanian fire temple Ādur Gušnasp in Ādurbādagān, was indicated as the moon-chariot on Arrānshāh Aswagen’s state seal.[23]

Next, the establishment of Ādurbādagān’s command (isbahbadh) under a specially assigned general[24] increased the effectiveness of military operations up to the Darband fortress on the frontier with the Turks and Khazars in Caucasia. Despite Darband, at the time, being within the semi-independent or vassal Arrān country (Arrān šahr), the Sassanids maintained huge military garrisons under the direct supervision of Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed. They strongly believed that Arraninan (Albanian) forces alone were not sufficient to shield the invaders’ incursions via the Darband passage deep into Ērānšahr.  

The Sasanian kings and kings of Arrān improved Darband’s fortifications by constructing double walls and the Narin Gala citadel on a hill. The fortified defense line was erected to protect a narrow passage between the Caucasus Mountains and the Caspian Sea, blocking the invasion of Turks and Khazars.

It is noteworthy that Azerbaijani and Dagestani scholars translated many Pahlavi inscriptions on the Darband walls. One of the inscriptions confirms Darband’s subordination to šahr Ādurbādagān’s āmārgār (tax or revenue officer). The Pahlavi Darband’s wall inscription “en ud az en abarbar Darius-i Ādurbādagān āmārgār” was translated as: “This and higher than this made by Dariush, Ādurbādagān’s revenue/tax collector.”[25] 

It can be assumed that the Darband walls’ Pahlavi Ādurbādagān inscription and the Sasanian garrisons[26] presence in Arrān’s fortresses (Darband, Torpakh kala or Saharestan Yazdagerd, Beshbarmag, in the Gilgilchay Defense Wall)[27]  under Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed command as well as the kust-ī Ādurbādagān marzpān (administrative officer) location in Ardebil (at the time Ādurbādagān’s capital city) clearly confirm the projecting of the province Ādurbādagān political, military and administrative functions to the north over the Araxes to Arran forming the entire Ādurbādagān šahr.[28] 

It is not surprising that Ādurbādagān’s name, military and administrative functions were projected onto Arrān (Albania). The local Arranian (Albanian) nobility was close to the Sasanian crown. Since the rein of Arrānshāh Urnayn (r. 350-375), one can speak of the establishment of close dynastic ties with the shāhanshāh’s family. Thus, King Urnayn was married to the daughter of shāhanshāh Šāpur II (r. 309-379) and Arrānshah Aswahen (r. 415-440) was the son of the sister of Šāpur III (r. 383-388) and the husband of the daughter of shāhanshāh Yazdagird II (r. 439-457). Arrānshāh Vache II (r. 440-462) was the son of the sister of shāhanshāh Hormizd (r. 457-459) and Peroz (r. 459-484).[29]

Undoubtedly, the close family ties between the Sasanian Kings and the Kings of Arran were a key element in the Sasanian strategy to enforce central and military power as well as Zoroaster’s faith which were eroded by the Orthodox Byzantium in strategically important Arrān šahr. One can state that Arrānshāh and his court were close to the Sasanian, using Pahlavi as the official language.

Following shāhanshāh Xusrō I Anōšīrvān’s reform, one can assume that it facilitated the integration of Arranian (Albanian) troops into the Sasanian army under the command of Adurbadagan‘s spāhbed. Although Caucasus Albania[30] was an independent (from time to time) or semi-independent state, the defense was under Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed command. During the late Sasanian period, the commander was the famous Iranian military and political hero – spāhbed Rostam Farrokhād of Ādurbādagān [Azerbaijan]. General and Prince of Ādurbādagān Rostam Farrokhād was a member of the Pahlav clan of Ispahbudhan family (House) - one of the Seven Great (Pahlavi: wuzurgān) Houses of the Sasanian Empire claiming its descent to the Arsacids of Parthia.

At the same time, the King of Arrān Varaz Grigor (r. 628-637), a Zoroastrian name that may have been Gadvsnasp before his second baptizing into Dyophysite Orthodox Nestorian Christianity, was adopted as the title of Arranshah. He was a member of the wuzurgān Mehrān family (a Pahlav noble- family, separated or branch of the Ispahbudhan House). Moreover, Arrānshāh Varaz Grigor was related to the Sasanian shāhanshāh Xusrō I Anōšīrvān or even “being himself a noble of the family of Ardashir I” and Prince Javanshir (Pahlavi: Juanšer) of the Caucasus Albania (Arrān) was a son of Varaz Grigor. The Pahlav (Parthian) House of Mehrān held high-ranking positions in the Sasanian hierarchy and occupied high command over the frontline in the north, leading the negotiations with the Khaqan of Turks.[31]

Notably, the famous Sasanian general Rostam Farrokhzad of Ādurbādagān [Azerbaijan] escorted and introduced Prince Javanshir to the last Sasanian King Yazdagird III (r. 632-651) in Ctesiphon, the Sasanian capital. In 16-19 November 636, in the famous Battle of al-Qadisiyyah between the Sasanians and Muslim Arabs, Prince Javanshir was the commander (spāhbed) of the Arranian (Albanian) troops, which were part of the Sasanian Imperial Army under the command of spāhbed Rostam Farrokhād of Ādurbādagān. For his gallantry at al-Qadisiyyah, Javanshir was rewarded with villages as well as military and court insignia.[32] 

In 637, Javanshir with 3000-4000 troops, helped arrange King Yazdagird III’s evacuation from the Sasanian capital Ctesiphon sieged by Muslims. Sasanian King Yazdagird III awarded Javanshir two golden spears and shields and acknowledged his bravery, awarding a flag – the Standard of Jamshid (Derafsh-e Kavian) which was the highest honor for loyalty and bravery.[33]  Before the final defeat of the Sassanian army in the Battle of Nahavand in 642, Javanshir arrived in Ādurbādagān. One can assume that he planned to resume command of the Sassanian Ādurbādagān military in the wake of Rostam’s death and because of Yazdagird’s strong will to collect a new army in Media to fight the Arabs. However, Rostam’s brother Farrukhzad was assigned Ādurbādagān’s spāhbed and Javanshir fled back to Arrān's (Albania) capital Partaw (now Barda, present-day Azerbaijan).[34]

There was confirmed evidence that after the collapse of the Sasanian Empire, Muslim Arabs offered to Arrānshāh Javanshir to become the ruler of the entire Ādurbādagān šahr, but he refused it for obscure reasons. Soon after, Javanshir was killed during Christian service at Partaw’s Albanian (Arranian) church.[35]

Conclusion

In the 5th-6th century, the Sassanids, particularly King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān, implemented reforms aimed at improving the empire’s architecture to lead a long-lasting rivalry with the Orthodox Byzantium to dominate the Near Est. The devastating incursions of the Turks and Khazars via Darband pass in Caucasia as well as Arsacids Armenians turned towards the Byzantium prompting the Sassanids to re-evaluate and recognize the strategic and military importance of Arran (Caucasus Albania) located on the north bank of the Araxes.

Sasanian King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān established the region or kust-ī Ādurbādagān, holding Ādurbādagān’s general (spāhbed) command covering all lands in the north and northwest of the Araz river. including Arrān (Arrānšahr). The Sasanian strategy aimed to strengthen both the central power and Zoroaster’s faith as a unique imperial religion eroded by Christian Byzantium in Caucasia. The establishment of the kust-i Adurbadagan spahbed allowed the incorporation of Arranian (Albanian) troops into the Sassanian Imperial Army under Ādurbādagān’s general command containing the Byzantines and Turks, as well as enforcing the defense of the empire’s power and the religious core province of Ādurbādagān holding the cathedral fire temple Ādur Gušnasp.

The reform pulled Arrānšahr closer to the Sasanian crown supported by the establishment of dynastic or family ties between the families of shāhanshāh and Arrānshah. The recently discovered Arrānshah Aswahen’s state seal clearly confirms the closeness of Arranian (Albanian) nobility to the Sasanian crown using Pahlavi as the official court language.

Thus, the Sassanids reorganized the empire’s architecture, expanding Ādurbādagān’s military and administrative functions to Arrānšahr to form the entire Ādurbādagān šahr on both sides of the Araz River to contain the Byzantium and Turks. It was a turning point to project Ādurbādagān’s name and functions in the northern bank of Araxes, particularly on Arrān. The establishment of the kust-ī Ādurbādagān with specially assigned Adurbadagan’s general strengthened both Sasanian power and Zoroastrianism up to Darband fortress in Caucasia forming entire Adurbadagan šahr on both sides of the Araxes.

Finally, since Late Antiquity, particularly as a result of the reforms of the Sasanian King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān, names Arrān and Ādurbādagān became interchangeable in the north bank of the Araxes, facilitating of the strengthening of the empire’s central military, administrative and religious power to contain Byzantium. The following historical developments demonstrate that term Arrān (Albania) lost its political functions, surviving as a geographical or toponymical term. However, Ādurbādagān evolved into the Turkified form of Azerbaijan.

NOTES


[1] Katarzina Maksymiuk. “The Parthian nobility in Xusrō I Anōšīrvān court”, Elites in the Ancient World,2, eds. D. Okoń, P. Briks, Szczecin, (2015): 189-198.

[2] Touraj Daryaee T. "Sasanian Persia, The Rise and Fall of an Empire", (London/New York: 2009). 

[3] Kabekh Farrokh, Gholam Reza, Hamid Karamian. “Military Architecture and the Four-Spāhbed System for Defense of the Sasanian Empire (224-651 CE)” Historia i Swiat, 10, (2021): 117-151. 

[4] Mehrdad Ghodrat-Dizaji. “Administrative Geography of the Early Sasanian Period: The Case of Ādurbādagān.” Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 45, (2007): 87-96.

[6] Yumiko Yamamoto. “The Zoroastrian Temple Cult of Fire in Archaeology and Literature”, Orient, 17, (1981): 67-104. doi: https://doi.org/10.5356/orient1960.17.67

[7] Zeev Rubin (1995), "The Reforms of Khusro Anushiwan", ed. A.Cameron, The Byzantine and early Islamic Near East 3, (Pricenton: 1995), 227-298.

[8] Rika Gyselen. “The Four Generals of the Sasanian Empire: Some Sigillographic Evidence”, Istituto Italiano per l’Africa e l’Oriente, Conferenze 14, Roma, (2001): 53. https://doi.org/10.4000/abstractairanica.34354

[9] Touraj Daryaee, and Keyvan Safdari. “Spāhbed Bullae: The Barakat Collection”, e-Sasanica, 12, (2010): 1-15.

[10] Katarzina Maksymiuk. “The Pahlav-Mihrani family faithful allies of Xusto I Anoshirvan”, Metamorvozi Istorii, 6, (2015): 163-179.

[11] Mehrdad Ghodrat-Dizaji. “Ādurbādagān during the Late Sasanian Period: A Study in Administrative Geography”, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 48, (2010): 69-80. https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2010.11864774

[12] Kavekh Farrokh, Gholam Reza and Hamid Karamian. “Military Architecture and the Four-Spāhbed System for Defense of the Sasanian Empire (224-651 CE)”. Historia i Swiat, 10, (2021): 117-151. https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2021.10.05

[13] Sara Kasumova. “K tolkovaniyu sredne-persidskikh nadpiseĭ iz Derbenta (On the interpretation of the Middle Persian inscriptions from Darband)”, VDI, 1, (1979): 113-126.

[14] Mehrdad Ghodrat-Dizaji. “Administrative Geography of The Early Sasanian Period: Case of Ādurbādagān”, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 45, (2007): 87-93. https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2007.11864720

[15] James Howard-Johnston. “The Late Sasanian Army”, In: Late Antiquity: Eastern Perspectives ed. Teresa Bernheimer and Adam Silverstein, (Warminster: The Gibb Memorial Trust, 2012), 87-127.

[16] Mehrdad Ghodrat-Dizaji. “Disintegration of Sasanian Hegemony over Northern Iran (AD 623-643)”, Iranica Antiqua, 46, (2011): 315-329.

[17] Sara Kasumova. “New Findings Middle Persian Inscriptions in Derbent”, Vestnik Istorii, 1, (1988): 88-95.

[18] Katarzina Maksymiuk. (2017), “Destruction of the Ādur Gušnasp temple in Ādurbādagān as a revenge for abduction of the Holy Cross from Jerusalem in the context of the letters of Heraclius”, Matamorfozii istorii, 9, (2017): 109-125.

[19] Parvaneh Poursharriati. "Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire: Sasanian-Parthian Empire Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran", (London/New York: 2006), 552

[20] Rika Gyselen. “Sasanian Seals and Sealings in the A. Saeedi Collection, Acta Iranica”, Peeters, 2007, 407.

[21] Karim Alizadeh. “Borderland Projects of Sasanian Empire: Intersection of Domestic and Foreign Policies”, Journal of Ancient History, 2, (2014): 93-115. https://doi.org/10.1515/jah-2014-0015 

[22] Sara Kasumova and Murtuzali Gadjiev M. “Middle Persian Inscriptions of Derbent, the 6-th c. AD”, Moscow, Vosticnaya Literatura, 2006, 128.

[23] Murtuzali Gadjiyev. “A Seal of Āhzwahēn, King of Caucasian Albania”, Journal of Ancient History, 1, (2003): 102-119.

[24] Kavelh Farrokh, Hamid Karamian, Katarzina Maksymiuk. A Synopsis of Sasanian Military Organization and Combat Units, Siedlce University, Tehran, (2018): 160.

[25] Sara Kasumova, On the interpretation, 113-126

[26] Touraj Daryaee. “If these Walls Could Speak The Barrier of Alexander, Wall of Darband and Other Defensive Moats”, Borders: Itineraries on the Edges of Iran”, (Venice: 2016): 79-88.

[27] Asker Aliyev, Murtuzali Gdajiyev, Gayhe Gaithner, Philip Kohl, Rabadan Magomedov and Idris Aliev. “Gilgilchay Long Defensive Wall: New Investigations”, Ancient East and West, 5, 1-2, (2006): 143-177.

[28] Murtuzali Gadjiev. “Armenia and the land of Mazkurt (3rd-5th Centuries AD): Written Sources and Archaeological Data”, ELECTRUM, 28, (2021): 207-119. doi:10.4467/20800909EL.21.014.13372 

[29] Katarzina Maksymiuk. (2015), “The Pahlav-Mehrān family faithful allies of Xusrō I Anōšīrvān”, Metamorvozi Istorii, 6, (2015): 163-179.

[30] Clifford Bosworth. ARRĀN, Encyclopædia Iranica, II/5, 520-522, 30 December 2012 https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/arran-a-region

[31] Murtuzali Gadjiev. “The Role and Place Of Middle Persian Language And Writing In Caucasus Albania”, Vostok (Oriens), 5, (2021): 59–70.

[32] C.J.Dowsett. Moses Dasxuranc’i’s History of the Caucasus Albanians, (London: Oxford University Press, 1961), 252.

[33] Mahir Khalifa-Zadeh and Leyla Khalifazadeh. “Sasanian Adurbadagan and Modern Azerbaijan: Historical Roots and Development”, Advances in Historical Studies, 12, 2, (2023): 63-75 DOI: 10.4236/ahs.2023.122005

[34] Ismail Zardabli I. "The History of Azerbaijan: From Ancient Times to The Present Day", United Kingdom: Lulu Pres, 2014), 600

[35] Robert Hoyland. "FROM ALBANIA TO ARRĀN: The East Caucasus between the Ancient and Islamic Worlds (ca. 330 BCE–1000 CE)", (Gorgias Press LLC: 2020), 406

Sassanids' Adurbadagan and Modern Azerbaijan: History and Development

 by Mahir Khalifa-zadeh1,2 and Leyla Khalifazadeh3

1Canadian Political Science Association, Toronto, Canada.

2Azerbaijan in Global Context, Media and Analysis Centre, Toronto, Canada.

3Don Mills Collegiate Institute, Toronto, Canada.

Original: 

Khalifa-zadeh M., Khalifazadeh L., "Sasanian Adurbadagan and Modern Azerbaijan: Historical Roots and Development", Advances in Historical Studies2023, Vol.12, No 2, pp 63-75. DOI10.4236/ahs.2023.122005 

PDF download:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/371857719_Sasanian_Adurbadagan_and_Modern_Azerbaijan_Historical_Roots_and_Development

Sassanids' Adurbadagan shahr

Abstract: The article analyzes application of the name Adurbadagan to both sides of modern Azerbaijan divided by the Araz river into southern or Iranian and northern or the independent Republic of Azerbaijan. The authors believe that name Azerbaijan roots to the Avestan words Azar or Atash. As a historical and political term, Azerbaijan originates from Achaemenids’ Aturpatakan (Atropatena) evolving into the Sassanian Adurbadagan—a Zoroastrian center of the empire. Since late Antiquity, Adurbadagan’s military and administrative functions were extended and applied by the Sassanids to all lands in the north from the Aras River, up to Darband fortress in the Caucasus. In the Islamic period, Adurbadagan evolved into Turkified form of Azarbadajan or Azerbaijan, cementing the modern Azerbaijani Turks’ identity in the south and north sides of the entire Azerbaijan divided by the Araxes.

 Keywords: Sasanian, Khosrow, Aturpatakan, Adurbadagan, Arran, Caucasus Albania, Azerbaijan, Caucasus

 Share and Cite: Khalifa-Zadeh, M. and Khalifazadeh, L. (2023) Sasanian Adurbadagan and Modern Azerbaijan: Historical Roots and Development. Advances in Historical Studies, vol 12, pp 63-75. DOI: 10.4236/ahs.2023.122005 

Sasanian Adurbadagan and Arran shahr (Caucasian Albania)

1. Introduction

A couple of hypotheses exist regarding the origins of the name Azerbaijan. According to the classic tradition, the name comes from the time of Alexander of Macedon’s conquest of the Achaemenid Empire. In particular, it presumably originates from general Aturpat—a commander of the Persian King Darius III’s army’s right wing in the Battle of Gaugamela in 331 BC (Chaumont, 1987) .

2. Aturpat (Atropates)

Aturpat (Middle Persian/Pahlavi) or Atropates (in Greek) was King Darius III’s general and satrap of Media. He commanded Median, Arranian (Albanian), Iberian, Sacasenian, Arminian (Greek: Arminyaya/Armenia) troops in the Battle of Gaugamela. In the battle, the Macedonian troops, facing Atropates, were forced to retreat. Only Alexander’s personal intervention with fresh troops allowed the Macedonians to stop their retreat and concentrate on a victorious advance in the center, facing troops under direct the command of Darius III. It was a unique moment in the battle. The Macedonian right wing had begun to retreat and, if King Darius III realized and utilized it, the battle’s outcome would have been completely different. However, as is well-known, Darius III’s poor commanding and leadership skills resulted in the catastrophic defeat of the Achaemenids Army (Shifman, 1988) .

Aturpat (Atropates) meets Alexander of Macedon,
painting, National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan

One month after Darius III’s death in June 330 B.C., Atropates surrendered to Alexander. Later, in a personal meeting, Alexander mentioned Atropate’s military skills and esteemed him so high that Atropate’s daughter was married to Perdiccas—a close ally to Alexander and commander of the Macedonian cavalry. The marriage took place at the famous mass wedding in Susa in February 324 BC. Moreover, Atropates also offered 100 Amazons, as Greeks called beautiful female archers from Media and Albania, for Alexander’s military elite massive wedding in Susa (Mayor, 2017). Moreover, Atropates also offered 100 Amazons, as Greeks called beautiful female archers from Media and Albania, for Alexander’s military elite massive wedding in Susa.

In 324 B.C. Atropates pacified unrest against the Greeks, and Alexander decided to keep Atropates as a King of the land which later became the independent Kingdom of Atropatena (in Greek) or Aturpatakan (in Parthian or Arsakid Pahlavi). Thus, as we believe, Aturpat (Atropates) occupies a significant place in the history of Azerbaijan. His name, possibly, is the key to understand the origin of the name Azerbaijan—a land of fire.

Indeed, Aturpat, a nobleman and general, was a follower of Zarathustra (Zoroaster). The name Aturpat comes from Avesta’s word “Atare-pata”. The word “Atur” is derived from the Avestan “Atar” or “Atash” or “Azar” that means fire. “Pat” may be derived from the Avestan “payu” meaning “guardian” or “protector”. The transcription of name Aturpat from Middle Persian (Pahlavi) could be “protected by fire” (Khalifa-Zadeh, 2017).

3. Aturpatakan (Atropatena)

After Alexander’s death in June 323 B.C., Atropates secured his rule in a part of Media, known as Atropatena or Lesser Media, which was mostly settled by the Medes, a founding Iranian tribe of the Median Empire, preceding the Achaemenids.

Atropatena is Aturpatan in Old Persian. During the subsequent Parthian era the Old Persian name Aturpatan evolved to the Middle Persian Aturpatakan. In Old and Middle Persian (Pahlavi), “Atur”, as mentioned earlier, means fire. The Encyclopedia Iranica describes Aturpatakan as “a place where the holy fire is protected”.

Indeed, Aturpatakan was the only place in Ancient Iran where Zoroastrianism was never challenged by other religions, particularly the Greek pantheon. Moreover, it is highly likely that Aturpatakan was the place where the prophet Zarathustra was born and the Holy Avesta was kept in the sacred fire Adur Gushnasp temple (now Takht-e Soleyman, Iranian Azerbaijan) (Ghodrat-Dizaji, 2007) .

Under the Seleucids, Atropates, as King of Atropatena, tried to minimize the impact of the Hellenistic religion on Zoroastrianism. He enjoyed full support from the Zoroastrian clergy—Magi and priests. The Atropatena’s capital was Ganzak, a cultural and logistical hub. It was a fortress and stronghold of Zoroastrianism. The Encyclopedia Iranica mentions: “It was presumably the capital of Atropates and his descendants, under whom, it seems, the chief Median sacred fire Ādur Gušnasp was established on a hill nearby. Later developments show that the fire became closely associated with both Ganzak and Lake Urmia.” (Boyce, 2012) .

Aturpatakan or Atropatena was an independent or semi-independent (vassal of Arsakid Parthia) kingdom until 3 CE. Atropatena and Parthia considered Rome a great threat and allied themselves in a long-lasting war with the Romans. Later, Atropatena was absorbed by the Sasanian Empire and Aturpatakan evolved into Adurbadagan (in Pahlavi).

4. Adurbadagan/Adarbadagan

As a result of the transition from Old Persian to Middle Persian (Pahlavi), the word “Atur” or “Atar” evolved to “Adur” or “Adar”, and so Aturpatakan has been named Adurbadagan or Adarbadagan by the Sasanians.

In the Seleucid and Parthian eras, Aturpatakan (Adurbadagan) played a central role as a stronghold against the Greek and Roman pantheons, respectively, to preserve and expand Zoroaster’s faith. In the Sasanian era, Adurbadagan became the religious center of the empire. The chief Median sacred fire temple of Atur or Adur Gushnasp (Pahlavi) was established sometime in the Parthian period on a hill near Aturpatakan’s capital Ganzak.

The Sasanians proclaimed Zoroaster’s faith as an imperial religion and Adurbadagan occupied the role of the empire’s religious core, holding the temple Adur Gushnasp as the imperial sacred fire of the highest grade. The Byzantines as well acknowledged the imperial and religious value of Adurbadagan holding fire Adur Gushnasp. During the Byzantine-Sassanian War of 602-628 CE, Byzantine emperor Heraclius, in 623 CE, occupied Adurbadagan and sacked out fire Adur Gushnasp, aiming to crash the Sassanian will and power to fight. (Maksymiuk, 2017)

Adur Gushnasp—an Atash Bahram (Parthian: Ataxsh-i-Wahram (Yamamoto, 1979) or Pahlavi: Adur Wahram—“fires of Victory”, Zoroastrian name of God of War and Victory) was the Zoroastrian most sacred or “cathedral” fire of the highest grade established in the late Achaemenid or Parthian era in Adurbadagan. The temple was linked to the warrior class (Pahlavi: arteshtar) to which the Sasanian dynasty belonged itself. Since King Bahram V (420-438 CE), the Sasanian kings after their coronation pilgrimage to the temple provided royal gifts and celebrated Nowruz (Pahlavi: No Ruz). Adur Gushnasp continued to burn down up to the 11th century (Boyce, 2014) .


Ruins of Sassanids'  most sacred fire temple Adur Gushnasp (now Azargushnasp),
Takht-e Suleyman, Azerbaijan, Iran

During the late Sasanian period, the Sasanian King Kawad I (488-96, 499-531) and Khosrow I Anushirvan (531-579) conducted military and administrative reforms to establish a quadripartition of the empire. The reform was aimed improving the empire’s military and defense capabilities to lead a long-lasting permanent war with Byzantium, as well as to address direct threats from Turks and Khazars in Caucasia. The reform was designed to strengthen the empire’s defense following the establishment of four quarters or sides (Pahlavi: kust) reported to the assigned trustworthy general (Pahlavi: spahbed) for each quarter (Farrokh, 2021; Ghodrat-Dizaji, 2010 ).

King Khosrow I Anushirvan abolished the one-person command of Eranspahbed (Pahlavi: Isbahbadh al-bilad, Artestaran salar, the office of the marshal or general of all Iranian forces) (Maksymiuk, 2015) and replaced it with four generals (spahbed) reporting directly to the Shahanshah (king of kings). As a result of the reform, kust-i Adurbadagan (quadrant or side of Adurbadagan) was established holding Adurbadagan spahbed (general) and Adurbadagan amargar (financial or administrative officer) as well. The office of supreme military command (Isbahbadh) of Azerbaijan, with specially assigned Adurbadagan general (spahbed), was covered Adurbadagan, Armin (Armenia) and Arran (Caucasus Albania) (Maksymiuk, 2015; Farrokh, 2021; Ghodrat-Dizaji, 2011; Gylesen, 2001; Kasumova, 1988) (Figure 1 and Figure 2). 

Figure 1. The Sasanian Military Commander seal: "Gorgon i Mehran…ud hujadag Xusro wuzurg eran— kust-i Adurbadagan spahbed", (Maksymiuk, 2015). The seal was found in Azargushnasp (Pahlavi: Adur Gusnasp), Takht-e Soleyman, Iranian Azerbaijan); (M. Khalifa-zadeh translation: "Gorgon of Mihran, grandee of Great Khusrow of Iran (ians) - region Adurbadagan's [Azerbaijan] general").

Figure 2The Sasanian Military Commander seal: "Sed-hos i Mehran shahr asbed ud hujadag Xusro wuzurg eran— kust-i Adurbadagan's spahbed", (Maksymiuk, 2015)The seal was found in Azar Gushnasp (Pahlavi: Adur Gusnasp), Takht-e Soleyman, Iranian Azerbaijan. (M.Khalifa-zadeh translation: "Cavalry Commander Sedhosi of Mehran, grandee of Great Khusrow of Iran (ians), region Adurbadagan's [Azerbaijan] general")

Figure 3. Arran (Albania) Darband fortress' wall Pahlavi inscription. It transcribes as, “ēn ud az ēn ābarbar Daryuš ī Ādurbādagān āmārgar”, and translates as "this and higher than this made by Dariush,  Adurbadagan's [Azerbaijan] revenue/tax collector" (Kasumova, 1988; Gadjiev & Kasumova, 2006).


Figure 4. The Darband wall Pahlavi inscription “ēn ud az ēn ābarbar Daryuš ī Ādurbādagān āmārgar”,

The establishment of kust-i Adurbadagan with a specially assigned general was designed to improve the empire’s military and defense capabilities and to strengthen the central power of the Shahanshah. Moreover, as we believe, the reform aimed to strengthen Zoroastrianism in lands bordering the Christian Orthodox Byzantium and Turks in the Caucasus. The Sassanids considered kust-i Adurbadagan the most important quadrant because of its military potential and geographical location. The kust included the province of Adurbadagan (a religious center of the empire) and all adjoining lands in the north and west from the Araz River up to the Khazar lands in the Caspian Sea.

The establishment of kust-i Adurbadagan allowed redesigning the Sassanian military architecture in this part of the empire, projecting Adurbadagan’s structures and functions to the north over the Araz river up to Caucasia’s Darband fortress as Adurbadagan shahr (country, in Pahlavi) (Gadjiev & Kasumova, 2006) .

The Sasanian reform strategy was pragmatic and effective. It strengthened the empire’s defense and military capabilities by incorporating Arranian (Albanian) troops into the Sasanian Imperial army under the Adurbadagan spahbed’s (general) command. However, the establishment of kust Adurbadagan had a clear religious function, as mentioned, because the province Adurbadagan, holding the most sacred fire Adur Gushnasp, was the imperial center of Zoroastrianism. Thus, projecting Adurbadagan’s military and administrative functions to the north of the Araz River (Araxes) was of paramount significance to the Sassanids enforcing both the central Shahanshah’s power and the Zoroastrian faith in Arran (Albania) which was challenged by the Orthodox Byzantium (Caucasus Albania was baptized into Nestorian Orthodox Christianity at the beginning of the 7th CE) (Rapp Jr., 2012) . It increased Zoroastrian gravity and the importance of Adurbadagan as an imperial religious center, cementing the Sasanian power and Zoroastrianism (as the unique imperial religion) under Adurbadagan shahr umbrella in the geographical region where the military and religious rivaling with the Orthodox Byzantium was in the stages of war (Rapp Jr., 2012) .

The establishment of Adurbadagan’s command (Isbahbadh) (Maksymiuk, 2015) under a specially assigned general (spahbed) centralized and expanded military operations up to the Darband fortress on the frontier with the Turks and Khazars in Caucasia. Despite Darband, at the time, being within the semi-independent Arran state (Pahlavi: Arran shahr), the Sasanians maintained military garrisons under the direct supervision of Adurbadagan’s spahbed. They strongly believed that Arraninan (Albanian) forces alone were not enough to stop the Turks from penetrating the Darband passage deep into Iran (Pahlavi: Eranshahr) (Farrokh et al., 2018; Farrokh et al., 2019) .

The Sassanian Kings (Shahanshah) and Kings of Arran (Arranshah) improved Darband’s fortifications by constructing double walls and the Narin Gala citadel on the hill. The fortified defense line was erected to protect a narrow passage between the Caucasus Mountains and the Caspian Sea, blocking the invasion of Turks and Khazars.

It is noteworthy that Azerbaijani and Dagestani scholars translated many Pahlavi inscriptions on the Darband walls. One of the inscriptions confirms the Darband’s subordination to Adurbadagan’s tax or revenue officer (Pahlavi: amargar). The Pahlavi wall inscription “en ud az en abarbar Darius-i Adurbadagan amargar” was translated as: “This and higher than this made by Dariush, Adurbadagan’s revenue/tax collector” (Gadjiev & Kasumova, 2006) (Figure 3 and Figure 4).

The Pahlavi writings on the Darband wall and the Sasanian garrisons’ location (Gadjiyev, 2003) in Arran’s (Albanian) fortresses of Darband, Torpakh kala (Sahrestan Yazdegerd), Beshbarmag and in the Gilgilchay Defense Wall under the Adurbadagan’s general (spahbed) command as well as kust-i Adurbadagan marzban (administrative office) location in the Adurbadagan province’s city of Ardebil clearly confirm the projection of Adurbadagan’s political, military and administrative functions to the north from the Araxes. Later, historical developments indicate that Arran and Adurbadagan became interchangeable names in the region (Bosworth, n.d.; ARRAN, n.d.) .

It is not surprising that Adurbadagan’s name and functions were projected onto Arran (Albania). The local Arranian (Albanian) nobility was close to the Sasanian crown and Arranian (Albanian) troops were integrated into the Sasanian army under the command of Adurbadagan spahbed. Thus, despite that the Caucasus Albania (Arran) was an independent (from time to time) or semi-independent state, however, the defense was under Adurbadagan spahbed command who was at the time a famous Iranian military and political hero—spahbed Rostam Farrokhzad of Adurbadagan. General and Prince of Adurbadagan Rostam Farrokhzad was a member of the Pahlav clan of Ispahbudhan family (House)—one of the Seven Great (Pahlavi: wuzurgan) House of the Sasanian Empire claiming its descent to the Arsacids of Parthia (Maksymiuk, 2015) .

At the same time, the King of Arran (Varaz Grigor (628-637), Zoroastrian name that may have been Gadvsnasp prior to his second baptizing into Dyophysite (Chalcedonian doctrine) (Toumanoff, 1961) Orthodox Nestorian Christianity, was adopted as the title of Arranshah. He was a member of the wuzurgan Mihran family (a Pahlav noble family, separated or branch of the Ispahbudhan House). Moreover, Arranshah Varaz Grigor was related to the Sasanian Shahanshah Khosrow I Anushirvan or even “being himself a noble of the family of Ardashir I” and Prince Javanshir (Pahlavi: Juansher) of the Caucasus Albania (Arran) was a son of Varaz Grigor. The Pahlav House of Mihran held high-ranking positions in the Sasanian hierarchy and occupied high command over the frontline in the north, leading the negotiations with the Khaqan of Turks (Maksymiuk, 2015) .

Notably, the famous Sasanian general Rostam Farrokhzad of Adurbadagan escorted and introduced Prince Javanshir to the last Sasanian King Yazdegird III (632-651) in Ctesiphon, the Sasanian capital. Prince Javanshir has occupied a significant place in the history of Azerbaijan and Iran.

Javanshir, Prince and General (Pahlavi: Spahbed) of Arran (Latin: Caucasian Albania),
National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan

On November 636, in the famous Battle of al-Qadisiyyah between the Sasanians and Muslim Arabs, Prince Javanshir was the commander of the Arranian (Albanian) troops, which were part of the Imperial Army under the command of spahbed Rostam Farrokhzad of Adurbadagan.

In 637, Javanshir with 3000 - 4000 troops (Hoyland, 2020) , helped arrange King Yazdegird III’s evacuation from the Sasanian capital Ctesiphon sieged by the Muslims. Later, Yazdegerd III awarded Javanshir two golden spears and shields and acknowledged his bravery, awarding a flag—the Standard of Jamshid (Pahlavi: Derafsh-e Kavian) which was the highest honor for loyalty and bravery in the fight with the Muslim Arabs. Before the final defeat of the Sassanian army at the Battle of Nahavand in 642, Javanshir arrived in Adurbadagan. One can assume, that he planned to resume command of the Sassanian Adurbadagan military in the wake of the death of Rostam, and because of Yazdegerd’s strong will to collect a new army in Media to fight the Arabs. However, Rostam’s brother Farrukhzad was assigned as the Adurbadagan spahbed and Javanshir fled back to the Albanian capital Partaw (now Barda, present-day Azerbaijan).

5. Azarbaijan/Azerbaijan

Since the Muslim conquest of Iran following the disintegration of the Sasanian empire and Caucasus Albania, Muslim Arabs have followed the Sassanian tradition applying Adurbadagan as shahr to both the south and north banks of the Araz River (Ghodrat-Dizaji, 2010) . The Muslims followed the Sasanian military command structure and Sasanian fortifications’ infrastructure designed to protect the Araxes’s northern lands keeping a garrison in Caucasia’s Darband. In the meantime, since the Muslim conquest of Iran, the Middle Persian (Pahlavi) experienced great Arabic influence, and many Pahlavi words evolved into a new form of writing and reading. In fact, Adurbadagan shahr transformed into Azarbadajan (Arabic pronunciation), and finally, thanks to the Turkification that followed, evolved into Azarbaijan or Azerbaijan (in Azerbaijani Turkish).

Since the Sasanian era, the central and northern, and northwestern parts of Iran particularly Adurbadagan, Arran, and Armin (Arminiyaya or Armenia), experienced a high degree of Turkification (Aray, 2010) . The first Oghuz Turkic tribes (Afshars) began penetrating Iran as early as the 5th CE. The local population of Sassanian Adurbadagan shahr (province and kust) was involved in the permanent and long-lasting (5th-11th centuries) process of Turkification following the gradual transition from the Adari Iranian language to Azeri Turkic or Azerbaijani Turkish. Simultaneously, the entire Adurbadagan region experienced of the settlement of Turkic tribes fueling the partial or full absorption of the local population by the Turks.

The Seljuk Turk’s conquering of Iran in the 11th century (Peacock, 2000) became a dominant force in creating the ethnic and cultural foundation of contemporary Azerbaijani Turks or Azerbaijanis identity on both sides of the Araxes. The Seljuk Turk’s massive influx and conquering accelerated local Adari language degradation (Kasravi, 1993) and its gradual replacement by Azeri or Azeri Turkish. This process created a common political, religious, ethnic, cultural, and linguistic space, or the sole identity of Azerbaijani Turks on both sides of the Araxes (Alstadt, 1992) .

The conquering of the Seljuk Turks and the subsequent Turkification fundamentally changed the ethnic composition of Iran. It created a new political balance within Iran, resulting in the origin of the entire Azerbaijan and later Azerbaijani Turks’ identity on both banks of the Araxes, and shifted the nature of Iran into Muslim Shi’a power under the Turkic dynasties’ rule.

Notably, after the defeat of Jahan Shah (Sultan of Azerbaijan, Emperor of Persia, son of Sultan of Azerbaijan Yusef Kara of Kara Koyunly, a leader of the Kara Koyunlu Turkic dynasty in Azerbaijan and Arran) (Uzun Ḥasan & Turkmen Ruler, n.d.) by Uzun Hasan, the 9th Shahanshah of the Turkic Ak Koyunlu dynasty, in the Battle of Chapakchur (November 11, 1467), the name Arran was totally abolished (Bosworth, n.d.) as a political term. Uzun Hasan (1453-1478) proclaimed Azerbaijan’s Tabriz as the capital of the Turkic Ak Koyunlu Empire and translated the Quran into Turkic.

Next, with the rise of the Safavid Turkic dynasty in Iran, the forces of Shah Ismail I Safavid (1487-1524, maternal grandson of Uzun Hasan of Ak Koyunlu) defeated and killed Shirvanshah Farruh Yassar of Shirvan (Persianized dynasty) in the Battle of Jabani in 1500. The Shirvanshah Yassar’s defeat accelerated the disintegration of the state of Shirvanshahs on the northern side of the Araxes, following its absorption by the Safavid Empire in 1538. The disintegration of Shirvanshahs terminated Shirvans’ political functioning, cementing the entire Azerbaijan under the Safavids. However, Shirvan and Arran, as geographical terms, have survived until today. The Turkic Safavids proclaimed Azerbaijan’s Tabriz as the capital of the empire. The Safavids, following the Sasanian tradition, valued both parts of Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan (Adurbadagan) as the core of the empire.

The Savafids appointed Beglarbegis in the following major provinces: Isfahan, Azerbaijan, Qaradag, and Qarabaq. The administrative reform in the Safavid period confirmed the final political abolishment of the Arran (Caucasus Albania) and Shirvan (state of Shirvanshahs) to the north of the Araxes as independent or semi-independent entities, securing them as geographical and historical toponomies till modern times.

Undoubtedly, the Seljuk and later Safavid eras facilitated the sailing of the northern part of Iran as Azerbaijan to the 18th-century Iran of Qajars, which was the Iranian royal dynasty of Turkic origin from present-day Azerbaijan. However, several defeats of Qajar Iran by the Russian empire, following the early 19th century Russo-Persian wars, pushed them to sign the painful Treaties of Golestan (1813) and Turkmanchay (1828). Both treaties forced Iran to cede the Qajar’s Caucasian or Azerbaijani khanates including the Iravan khanate (present-day Armenia), to Imperial Russia (Zardabli, 2014; Ismailov, 2017) .

6. Modern Azerbaijan: South (Iranian) Azerbaijan and North (Independent Republic of) Azerbaijan

Many the Imperial Russia’s official documents indicate the newly gained territories from Qajar Iran as Aderbeijani (Azerbaijani) khanates. On September 4, 1795, Russia’s Empress Catherin the Great wrote to General Gudovich: [we] “…have cordially to invite officers of Aga Mohammad Shah [Qajar] and, if he wants to be acknowledged as a Shah, he must stop his [military] operations in the region close to the Caspian Sea and named as the khanates of Darband, Baku, Talish, Shusha and others locating in Aderbeijan [present-day Azerbaijan]” (Dubrovin, 1871) .

Southern (Iranian) Azerbaijan and Northern (Independent Republic of) Azerbaijan

On January 8, 1804, following the capture of Ganja fortress (present-day Azerbaijan), the Commander-in-chief of the Russian forces in Caucasia, General Titsianov, wrote to Russia’s Caucasian Governor Kasparov: “Thanks to the location of Ganja fortress, which keeps the whole Aderbeijan [Azerbaijan] in fear, it is the most important purchase for Russia; and I would like to update you on this event recommending you to inform about this great victory in all places of the gubernia [region] which is under your control” (Gezalov, n.d.) .

Next, British Imperial cables from Persia confirmed that the ceded Caucasian khanates were Azerbaijan. On June 27, 1864, British Keith E. Abbot, H.M. Consul-General in Tabriz (Iranian Azerbaijan), sent a cable to the Foreign Office stating the following: “The country which is known to the Persians as Azerbaijan is divided between them and Russia… This area includes the following territorials: …Mohammedian countries of Erivan, Nakhchevan, Karabagh, Ghenja, Shirwan, Sheky, Shamachy, Bakou, Koobeh, Salian, and a portion of Talish” (present-day Azerbaijan). In the same cable, he also states the following: “The population of Russian Azerbaijan consists of mixed races, Mohammedan and Christians, amounting probably to 700,000 to 800,000 souls. Persian Azerbaijan extends southward to the range of mountains known as the Kaflan Kooh. The country included in these boundaries, and perhaps, a large part, if not all, of Russian Azerbaijan, is generally recognized as the Media Atropatena of ancient geography” (Abbott, 1863-1864) .

Moreover, Imperial Russia referred to the local population on both sides of the Araz River Aderbeijanskiye (Azerbaijani) Tatari (Tatars of Aderbeijan or Azerbaijan) because they spoke, as Russians believed, in the same or similar language as Russia’s Tatars in Kazan (Velichko, 1904) .

As a result of the above-mentioned historical developments, the phenomenon of two Azerbaijans—South (Iranian) Azerbaijan and North (Russian) Azerbaijan emerged, creating a new geopolitical landscape in Caucasia and on both banks of the Araxes in the beginning of the 19th century.

After the Russian Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the national Musavat government in Ganja proclaimed the independence of northern Azerbaijan from Imperial Russia on May 28, 1918. Thus, the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (ADR) emerged as the first Western-style state in the Muslim world. The ADR political system was based on Western secular values established by the National Parliament (Milli Majlis), which granted equal voting rights to women and switched from Arabic to the Latin alphabet.

Finally, as a result of the Soviet collapse in 1991, northern or Soviet (Russian) Azerbaijan proclaimed its return to independence as the Republic of Azerbaijan—a political and historical descent of the ADR of 1918. On December 25, 1991, Iran recognized the independence of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

7. Conclusion

As we have seen, the name Azerbaijan is deeply rooted in the Achaemenids era and possibly originates from Avestan Adur or Atash. In the Sassanids period, Azerbaijan (Adurbadagan, in Pahlavi) became the principal Zoroastrian center of the empire, housing the sacred cathedral fire of Adur Gushnasp.

In the 5th-6th century, the Sassanids implemented reforms designed to strengthen the empire’s structure and military capabilities during the war with the Byzantines and Turks. They pushed forward the gravity of Adurbadagan, the empire’s Zoroastrian core, into the defense and consolidation of the Sasanian power in military and politically sensitive Caucasia to address direct threats from the Byzantium, Khazars and Turks.

The Sassanids reorganized the empire’s architecture, expanding Adurbadagan’s military and administrative functions to Darband in Caucasia under the Adurbadagan shahr or kust umbrella. The newly discovered Sasanian (kust-i Adurbadagan spahbed) military seals in Takht-e Soleyman (Iranian Azerbaijan) and Pahlavi writings on Caucasia’s Derbent walls confirm that Arran and Adurbadagan were interchangeable names on the north bank of the Araxes since late Antiquity.

After the disintegration of the Arranshahr (Caucasus Albania) and Shirvanshahs, paralleling the large-scale Turkification process in the central and northern parts of the Oghuz Turk dynasties’ Iran, the entities like Arran and Shirvan lost their political essence and were replaced by Azerbaijan, the Turkified form of Adurbadagan. However, the historical and geographical functioning of Arran and Shirvan has survived until modern times.

Historically, as we have seen, the names Arran and Azerbaijan were interchangeably used to refer to the northern bank of the Araxes. Thus, Azerbaijan applied for the larger area combining both the south and north sides of the Araxes. The term Arran, however, was used for a narrower area implying not for the whole territory of the Araxes’ north bank.

Finally, the Turkification process gave birth to the Azerbaijani Turks' identity, holding the Azerbaijani Turkish language as a key element as well as cementing the whole of Azerbaijan on both sides of the Araz River. The population on the river’s both banks became the same ethnic group sharing the common language and religion. However, the historical and geographical partitioning of Azerbaijan by the Araxes into southern and northern parts culminated in the present-day geopolitical reality of modern Azerbaijan, representing the combination of Southern (or Iranian) Azerbaijan, and Northern—the independent Republic of Azerbaijan. The existence of two Azerbaijans shapes history and geopolitics between and around Iran and the independent Republic of Azerbaijan.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

References:

[1]

Abbott, K. E. (1863-1864). Extracts from a Memorandum on the Country of Azerbaijan. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society
https://archive.org/details/jstor-1799149/page/n1/mode/2up

[2]

Alstadt (1992). The Azerbaijani Turks: Power and Identity under Russian Rule (p. 334). Hoover Institution Press.
https://www.academia.edu

[3]

Aray (2010). Ethnic Origins of the Turks, Turkization of Anatolia and the Formation of Turkish National Identity (pp. 1-28).
https://www.academia.edu/37797192/Ethnic_origins_of_the_Turks_Turkization_of_Anatolia_
and_the_formation_of_Turkish_national_identity

[4]

ARRAN (n.d.). Academic Kids.
https://academickids.com/encyclopedia/index.php/Arran_%28Azerbaijan%29

[5]

Bosworth, C. (n.d.). Arran Province (New Republic of Azerbaijan). Iranian Chamber Society.
https://www.iranchamber.com/geography/articles/arran.php

[6]

Boyce, M. (2012). Ganzak. Encyclopedia Iranica.
https://www.iranicaonlone.org

[7]

Boyce, M. (2014). Ādur Gušnasp. Encyclopedia Iranica.
https://www.iranicaonline.org

[8]

Chaumont, M. (1987). Atropates. Encyclopedia Iranica.
https://www.iranicaonline.org

[9]

Dubrovin, N. (1871). The History of the War and Domination of the Russians in the Caucasus. St. Petersburg.
https://www.prlib.ru/en/item/734496

[10]

Farrokh, K. (2021). Military Architecture and the Four-Spāhbed System for Defense of the Sasanian Empire (224-651 CE). Historia i Swiat, 10, 117-151
https://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.desklight-7bd79d60-8146-4e17-8581-b574653c3a37
https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2021.10.05

[11]

Farrokh, K., Karamian, H., & Maksymiuk, K. (2018). A Synopsis of Sasanian Military Organization and Combat Units. Publishing House of Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities.
https://www.recearchgate.net

[12]

Farrokh, K., Sancez Grasia, J., & Maksymiuk, K. (2019). Caucasian Albanian Warriors in the Armies of Pre-Islamic Iran. Historia i Swat, 8, 21-36.
https://extension://elhekieabhbkpmcefcoobjddigjcaadp/
https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2019.08.02
https://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.desklight-e552ea6e-cac3-42d0-9b2f-841b02eacf15/c/C_KAV_JA.pdf

[13]

Gadjiev, M., & Kasumova, S. (2006). Middle Persian Inscriptions of Derbent, the 6th c. AD. Vastochnaya Literatura.
https://www.academia.edu

[14]

Gadjiyev, M. (2003). A Seal of āhzwahēn, King of Caucasian Albania. Journal of Ancient History, No. 1, 102-119.
https://www.academia.edu

[15]

Gezalov, P. (n.d.).
https://prlib.ru/en/item/734496

[16]

Ghodrat-Dizaji, M. (2007). Administrative Geography of the Early Sasanian Period: The Case of ādurbādagān, Iran. Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 45, 87-96.
https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2007.11864720
https://www.academia.edu/3291018/_Administrative_Geography_of_the_Early_Sasanian_Period_
The_Case_of_%C4%80durb%C4%81dag%C4%81n_Iran_Journal_of_the_British_Institute_of_Persian_Studies_vol_45_2007_pp_87_96

[17]

Ghodrat-Dizaji, M. (2010). ādurbādagān during the Late Sasanian Period: A Study in Administrative Geography. Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 48, 69-80.
https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2010.11864774

[18]

Ghodrat-Dizaji, M. (2011). Disintegration of Sasanian Hegemony over Northern Iran (AD 623-643). Iranica Antiqua, 46, 315-329.

[19]

Gylesen, R. (2001). The Four Generals of the Sasanian Empire: Some Sigillographic Evidence. Istituto italiano per l’Africa e l’Oriente.

[20]

Hoyland, R. (2020). From Albania to Arrān: The East Caucasus between the Ancient and Islamic Worlds (ca. 330 BCE-1000 CE) (Vol. 25). New York University.
https://doi.org/10.31826/9781463239893

[21]

Ismailov, D. (2017). History of Azerbaijan (p. 352). Azerbaijan Architecture and Construction University.

[22]

Kasravi, A. (1993). Azari or the Ancient Language of Azerbaijan (p. 124). Iranbooks.

[23]

Kasumova, S. (1988). New Findings Middle Persian Inscriptions in Derbent. Vestnik Istorii, 1, 88-95.
https://elib.gsu.by/handle/123456789/16850

[24]

Khalifa-Zadeh, M. (2017). History of Azerbaijan: Timeline and Facts.
http://www.azglobalcontext.org/2017/02/history-of-azerbaijan-timeline-and-facts.html

[25]

Maksymiuk, K. (2015). The Pahlav-Mihrani Family Faithful Allies of Xusto I Anoshirvan. Metamorvozi Istorii, 6, 163-179.
https://www.academia.edu

[26]

Maksymiuk, K. (2017). Destruction of the Ādur Gušnasp Temple in Ādurbādagān as a Revenge for Abduction of the Holy Cross from Jerusalem in the Context of the Letters of Heraclius. Metamorfozi Istorii, 9, 109-125.
https://www.academia.edu

[27]

Mayor, A. (2017) Amazons. Encyclopedia Iranica.
https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/amazons-ii

[28]

Peacock, A. (2000). SALJUQS. Encyclopedia Iranica.
https://www.iranicaonline.org

[29]

Rapp Jr., S. H. (2012). Caucasia and the First Byzantine Commonwealth: Christianization in the Context of Regional Coherence (p. 34). National Council for Eurasian and East European Research.
https://www.nceeer.org

[30]

Shifman, I. (1988). Aleksandr Makedonski (p. 205). Nauka. (In Russian)

[31]

Toumanoff, C. (1961). Review of C.J.F. Dowsett’s The History of Caucasian Albanians by Movses Dasxuranci. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 25, 364-366.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0041977X00064004

[32]

Uzun Hasan, Turkmen Ruler (n.d.). Encyclopedia Britannica.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Uzun-Hasan

[33]

Velichko, V. (1904). Kavkaz: Russkoe delo i mejduplemennie voprosi. St. Petersburg.
https://rusneb.ru/catalog/000199_000009_003975539/

[34]

Yamamoto, Y. (1979). The Zoroastrian Temple Cult of Fire in Archaeology and Literature. Tokyo University.
https://doi.org/10.5356/orient1960.15.19

[35]

Zardabli, I. (2014). The History of Azerbaijan: From Ancient Times to the Present Day (p. 600). Lulu Press Inc.

 

Copyright © 2023 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.