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- Zoroastrianism - Wikipedia
Middle Persian and Pahlavi works created in the 9th and 10th century contain many religious Zoroastrian books, as most of the writers and copyists were part of the Zoroastrian clergy
- Zoroastrianism | Definition, Beliefs, Founder, Holy Book, Facts . . .
Zoroastrianism, ancient pre-Islamic religion of Iran with both monotheistic and dualistic elements that likely influenced the other major religions, including in angelology and eschatology Zoroastrian communities still exist in Iran and in India, where they are known as Parsis
- Zoroastrianism - HISTORY
Zoroastrianism was the state religion of three Persian dynasties, until the Muslim conquest of Persia in the seventh century A D Zoroastrian refugees, called Parsis, escaped Muslim persecution
- Zoroastrianism for Beginners - Learn Religions
Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian Supreme Creator, is the only god worshiped, although the existence of lesser spiritual beings is also recognized The overriding ethical principle of Zoroastrianism is Humata, Hukhta, Huveshta: “to think good, to speak good, to act good ”
- Smarthistory – Zoroastrianism, an introduction
In the Zoroastrian calendar, each of the thirty days of the month is dedicated to one particular deity whose name it bears and whose hymn, or Yasht, is recited on that day The individual deities are also invoked for particular tasks
- Zoroastrianism: Religion of the Persian Empire
The idea of a cosmic struggle between good and evil, of human beings as moral agents, of a savior figure at the end of time—all of these can be traced back to Zoroastrian roots Even the imagery of light as good and darkness as evil has its deepest resonance in Zarathustra’s hymns
- Zoroastrianism - WorldAtlas
Zoroastrianism still exists in isolated regions in Iran and, more prominently, in India, where descendants of Zoroastrian Persian immigrants are called Parsis or Parsees
- A History of Zoroastrianism from Zarathushtra to Darius . . .
In Greece, Zoroastrian ideas, including Gathic concepts, would heavily influence the philosophical movement, most notable in Plato’s dialogue of Timaeus
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