Religion in theAchaemenid Empire (Persian: دین در دوران هخامنشی ), continues to be a source of debate among academics. The available knowledge about the religious orientation of many of the early Achaemenid kings is incomplete, and the issue ofZoroastrianism of the Achaemenids has been a very controversial issue.[1]
In thePersepolis fortification archive, Humban appears more commonly than any other Elamite or Persian deity, with a total of twenty six mentions (for comparison, Auramazdā, an early form ofAhura Mazda, appears only ten times).[2] It has been argued that in this period, he should be regarded as a Persian god, rather than a strictly Elamite one.[3] Overall he received the most offerings of all deities attested in textual sources.[4] The amount of grain offered to him by the Achaemenid administration was more than thrice as big as that offered to Auramazdā.[5] Offerings to him are designated asbakadaušiyam in multiple cases.[6] This term, while Elamite, is a loan fromOld Persian, and can be translated as "(feast) of the offering to (a) god".[7] It accordingly likely designated a public feast.[8] Similar celebrations are attested only for a small number of other deities.[9] Wouter Henkelman suggests that the references to bakadaušiyam of Humban are therefore likely to reflect his popularity and status as a royal god.[10] most locations where Humban was worshiped in the Achemenid period were towns located close to the royal road network.[3]
Humban could be calledrišar nappipir, "greatest of the gods" or "great among the gods", though this epithet was also applied toInshushinak.[11] An inscription of Hanni of Ayapir calls himrišar nappirra, "greatest god".[12] Another of his epithets might have beenelume, possibly a loan fromAkkadianelû ("high", "exalted"), but it is unclear if a passage in which it is attested should be interpreted as referring to the god as "Humban the Exalted", or if it instead denotes the location of his temple.[13]
Humban's supremacy over other gods could be acknowledged in temples not dedicated to him, for example it is presumed that the Ayapir sanctuary from which therišar nappirra epithet is known was most likely dedicated to the local god Tirutur, rather tha Humban.[12]
Mary Boyce went as far as suggesting that the prominence of Humban in the Neo-Elamite period influenced the position ofAhura Mazda in later religious traditions of the Persians.[14]
So many people often thought that the dominant religion of the Achaemenid Empire was Zoroastrianism, but scholars believe that this was not true. For example, 20th-century French linguistÉmile Benveniste points out thatAhura Mazda is a very old god and the Zoroastrians used this name to designate the Zoroastrian god. Even the main role assigned to this god inMazdasim is not a Zoroastrian innovation. The epithet Mazdasene (Mazda worshipper) found in Aramaic papyri from the Achaemenid era cannot be evidence that the Achaemenids were Zoroastrians, and the mention of the name Ahura Mazda in stone inscriptions is not evidence of this either. In the Achaemenid inscriptions, not only is Zoroastrianism not mentioned, but also nothing else is mentioned that could give these inscriptions a Zoroastrian color.[15]
Long beforeZoroaster, the Iranians had specific religious beliefs and worshippedAhura Mazda as a great god.[16] In theBehistun Inscription, Darius only mentions Ahura Mazda as "the greatest of the gods." Ahura Mazda's name appears 69 times in Behistun, and Darius claims to be under Ahura Mazda's protection 34 times. Darius did not claim that Ahura Mazda was the only existing god. Darius also did not mention Ahura Mazda's great rival Angremenu.[17]
Mithra[18] was worshipped;[19][20] his temples and symbols were the most widespread,[21] most people bore names related to him[22] and most festivals were dedicated to him.[23][24]
Weshparkar, was theSogdian god of the Atmosphere and the Wind.[25] He corresponds to theAvestan godVayu.[26] In Central Asia, Weshparkar has also been associated to the Indian godShiva.[27]
Since the reign ofArtaxerxes II the name of the goddessAnahita is mentioned in inscriptions alongside Ahura Mazda andMitra, and it is mentioned that the palace of Apadana was built at the request of Ahura Mazda, Nahed and Mitra. In this regard, Roman Ghershman writes that Anahita was worshipped by the Achaemenid Ardashir II and by his order, the figure of Anahita was worshipped in the temples ofShush, Iran, Takht-e Jamshid, Hegmatane,Babylon (Dawlatshahr), Damascus and Balkh.[28]
The earliest textual evidence of the worship of Oxus, dated to theAchaemenid period, are personal names attested inAramaic texts fromBactria from the fourth century BCE, such as Vaxšu-bandaka ("slave of Oxus" or "servant of Oxus"), Vaxšu-data ("created by Oxus")[29] and Vaxšu-abra-data ("given by the clouds of Oxus").[30] Further examples occur inHellenistic sources, for example Oxybazos ("strong through Oxus"),Oxydates ("given by Oxus"), Mithroaxos ("[given by] Mithra and Oxus") and possiblyOxyartes (if the translation "protected by Oxus" is accepted).[31]
InTakht-i Sangin a temple dedicated to Oxus has been discovered.[32] According to a number ofMuslim geographers from the ninth and tenth centuries, this area was customarily considered the beginning of Jayhun (Oxus), which might constitute a survival of an originally Bactrian tradition responsible for the selection of this location as a cult center of the related river god.[33] Excavations indicate that the temple was originally founded in the earlySeleucid period, and remained in use until the reign of theKushan kingHuvishka.[34] One of the objects from this site is a stone altar following Greek artistic conventions inscribed with a dedication of a certain Atrosokes to Oxus.[29] His name isBactrian and can be translated as "burning with sacred fire", and it is possible that he was a priest.[32] Further excavations revealed three more similar Greek inscriptions, seemingly left behind by Bactrian worshipers of Oxus.[35]
A seal with a human-headed bull from theOxus Treasure is inscribed with Oxus' name written in the Aramaic script.[29] It has been pointed out that the objects found in the temple of Oxus in Takht-i Sangin have close parallels among these belonging to the Oxus Treasure, which might indicate the latter was originally found in the same location.[36] It has been suggested that priests of Oxus hid a number of objects out of fear of looting during a period of increased activity of theYuezhi in the second half of the second century BCE, but failed to recover them, leaving the Oxus Treasure to only be discovered some two thousand years later.[37]
The Persepolis tablets indicate that the royal palace was dedicated in the heart of Persia to the worship of various deities, some of which may have been identified as Iranian (Nariasanga, perhaps Zurvan) and others asElamite deities still venerated in the same places where they had been for centuries before the arrival of the Persians (Humban,Napirisha).[38][39]
Xerxes' retaliation against the clergy of Uruk resulted in the collapse of Eanna as the center of Uruk's religious life and economy, and made the creation of a new system centered on the worship of Anu and his spouse ofAntu, rather than Ishtar and Nanaya, possible.[40]
A change in Antu's status in Uruk occurred over the course of theAchaemenid andSeleucid periods, when she was elevated to the position of one of the lead deities of the city alongside Anu.[41] She came to be worshiped alongside him in a newly builttemple, Bīt Rēš.[40] Its ceremonial name can be translated as "foremost temple".[42] Antu's cella in it was known as Egašananna, "house of the lady of heaven". One of its chambers was also designated as her bedroom, and was referred to with the ceremonial name Enir, possibly to be understood as Eanir (Akkadianbīt tānēḫi), "house ofweariness".[42] According toAndrew R. George and Paul-Alain Beaulieu, Bīt Rēš might have developed from the É.SAG, a sanctuary ofLugalbanda attested in earlier periods whose name was written with the same signs, but this remains hypothetical.[42][41] Its establishment marked the first time in the history of Uruk when Eanna was not its main temple.[41]This development was a result of the rise of new priestly families in the aftermath of failed revolts which took place in 484 BCE andXerxes I's retaliation against the participants.[40] The status of the city's former tutelary deity,Ishtar, declined, and some of her attributes were absorbed by Antu.[43] For example, in the text MLC 1890Ninsianna, the personification of the planetVenus, who in earlier periods could be treated as a form of Ishtar, is instead treated as an epithet of Antu.[44] Thekalû clergy of Uruk, responsible forEmesal prayers[40] and formerly associated with Ishtar, came to be linked to the cult of Anu and Antu instead in Seleucid times.[41] In some cases, the change makes it possible to date individual texts with no other direct indication of their age than their authors being a kalû in service of one of these deities.[41] It is not certain if Seleucid kings were involved in the worship of Antu and other deities of Uruk, though it has been argued that the attested building and renovation projects required royal support.[40]
After the reorganization of the pantheon of Uruk around Anu andAntu in the Achaemenid and Seleucid periods, Nanaya continued to be worshipped and she is attested as one of the deities whose statues were paraded in Uruk in a ritual procession accompanying Ishtar (rather than Antu) during a New Year celebration.[43] The scale of her popular cult in Uruk grew considerably throughSeleucid times.[45]
SwedishIranologistHenrik Samuel Nyberg believes that none of the essential characteristics of the Zoroastrian religion can be seen in the basic constructions of the Achaemenid religion.[46] Nyberg writes that there is no clear evidence as to when Zoroastrianism began to spread in Ray, the central base of Mughan. He believes that the latest time for this event was when the Achaemenid state was founded. He considered discussions and opinions on Achaemenid Zoroastrianism to be full of partisan prejudice and superstition among scholars of his time.[46]: 374
And add that in the basic structures of the Achaemenid religion, there is no specific term for the Zoroastrian community, no specific ideas of the type of gutas, and no specific belief or practice of the Zoroastrian religion.[47]
Jacques Duchesne-Guillemin wrote: “It seems easier to believe that the Achaemenids had never heard of Zoroaster, nor of his religious reforms".[17]Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob wrote: "In the Achaemenid era, theMagis did not have a Zoroastrian religion, nor did they have a royal family, considering the role that the Mongols played in performing Persian religious ceremonies, and considering that the Achaemenid and dynastic religion could not conflict with the beliefs of the common classes of the Persian clans. It is clear that the Zoroastrian religion had not yet had an influence among the Persians during these periods".[48]
Dr. and historian Akram Diaa Al-Omari says that Zoroastrianism became the official religion in thethird century AD during the era of theSassanid Empire.[49]