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Zarathustra / Zoroaster

2021
The name Zarathustra refers to a prophet or religious reformer of ancient Iran. He is believed to be the author of the Gathas, the linguistically oldest part of the Avestan corpus. Information relating to his life is extremely scarce: mentions in the sources are contradictory and there is no agreement among the scholars on the time in which he lived or
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Maguses, Their Religion and Ethnicity (Median or Persian, Zoroaster or Anti-Zoroaster)?

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2012
Like many other issues of Iran history, the issue of the Maguses has also been distorted. The distortion which is rooted in the deviation of historical truths caused by the ruling system of the Achaemenid Empire is also sealed as the science of history by the father of the historians. The presentation of any views on the religious struggle of the early
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Zoroaster und Europa

Orientalistische Literaturzeitung, 1999
exaly   +2 more sources

Zoroaster’s Legend in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages

Narrating Power and Authority in Late Antique and Medieval Hagiography from East to West, 2021
C. Cereti
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The “Era of Zoroaster”

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1947
It is well known that the time of Zoroaster and the date of his birth or that of the announcement of his mission have not so far been indisputably established. In spite of very numerous writings published during more than two centuries, in which the question has been studied by many scholars, no unanimous conclusion has been reached.
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Approaches to Zoroaster's Gathas

Iran, 1995
L'intervention de l'auteur lors d'un colloque international sur l'interpretation des hymnes Gāthās attribues a Zoroastre (628-551 av. J.-C.) (New approaches on the interpretation of the Gathas), qui s'est tenu en novembre 1993 a Croydon a l'initiative de la World Zoroastrian Organization, avait ete publiee sans les notes, releguees dans trois ...
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The Armenian Parable "Zoroaster's Laughter" and the Plot of Zoroaster's Birth in the Literary Traditions

Iran and the Caucasus, 2001
In the "Collections of Vardan's Parables" by the Annenian fabulist Vardan Aygelcc'i published by Nicolas Marr in St. Petersburg, 1894-1899. we found a parable titled "Zoroaster's laughter". It turned out to be one of the most uncommon allusions to the Ancient iranian Prophet Zoroaster in the Armenian literature (apart from the writings by Movses ...
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Dughda and Zoroaster (Zarathushtra)

1998
Abstract Mother, Dughda, dreams, in the sixth month of her pregnancy, that the wicked and the good spirits are fighting for the embryonic Zoroaster; a monster tears the future Zoroaster from the mother’s womb; but a light god fights the monster with his horn of light, re-encloses the embryo in the mother’s womb, blows upon Dughda, and
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Zoroaster.

The Philosophical Review, 1895
F. C. S. S., Adolf Brodbeck
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