Garshasp I ibn Muhammad (Persian: گرشاسپ بن محمد), mostly known as Garshasp I, was the Kakuyid emir of Hamadan, including Nihawand, Borujerd and western Jibal. He was the youngest son of Muhammad ibn Rustam Dushmanziyar, and was the vassal king of his brother Faramurz. In 1047, the Seljuqs defeated his forces and seized Hamadan, which forced him to flee to Buyid territory, where he became governor of Khuzistan. In ca. 1050, Garshasp sent an army to aid the Ghaznavid ruler Maw'dud in his wars with the Seljuqs.[1] Garshasp later died in 1051/2 in Khuzestan.[2]
GarshaspI ibn Muhammad (Persian: گرشاسپ بن محمد), mostly known as GarshaspI, was the Kakuyid emir of Hamadan, including Nihawand, Borujerd and western...
GarshaspI (Persian: گرشاسپ, romanized: Garšāsp) was the Shirvanshah from post-1203 to 1233/34. He was the son and successor of Farrukhzad I (r. 1203 – before...
Garshāsp (Persian: گرشاسپ pronounced [gæɹ'ʃɒːsp]) was, in Persian mythology, the last Shah of the Pishdadian dynasty of Persia according to Shahnameh....
by his son Faramurz. While in Hamadan another Kakuyid, GarshaspI, took power. In 1095, Garshasp II became the new emir of the Kakuyid dynasty, and was...
Garshasp II (Persian: گرشاسپ), was the last Persian Kakuyid Emir of Yazd and Abarkuh. He was the son of Ali ibn Faramurz. After the death of Garshasp's...
to its ruling dynasty, the Maliks of Darband. In 1225, the Shirvanshah GarshaspI (r. after 1203 – 1233/34) was ordered by the Khwarazmshah Jalal al-Din...
In 1047, Ibrahim wrested Hamadan and Kangavar from the Kakuyid ruler GarshaspI. Ibrahim Yinal during his service to the Great Seljuk Empire was appointed...
with the aid of Böritigin and an army sent by the former Karkuyid ruler GarshaspI re-invaded Khorasan; Böritigin and his commander Qashgha invaded Khwarezm...
that Farrukhzad I did not rule beyond 1225. An inscription from a tower in Mardakan mentions both Farrukhzad I and his son GarshaspI, crediting the latter...
military force to Yazd where Garshasp was arrested and jailed in Jibal, while Yazd was granted to the royal cupbearer. Garshasp, however, escaped and returned...
succeeded his father, Muhammad, in Isfahan, while Muhammad's younger son GarshaspI took power in Hamadan as a vassal king of his brother. The third son of...
suggested that Fariburz III's father GarshaspI did not rule after 1225. However, new evidence suggests that GarshaspI's reign was longer. The numismatist...
al-adwīa. He later went to Nakhjavan and completed his seminal work, the Garshāsp-nama (dedicated to Abu Dolaf, ruler of Nakhjavan), in 1065–1066. Asadi...
possibly derived from the Avestan name Sāma, the father of the Avestan hero Garshasp, which would indicate some sort of custom of Iranian religious or epic...
Krishna vs. Kāliyā (Indian) Θraētaona vs. Aži Dahāka (Zoroastrianism) Garshasp vs. Zahhak (Iranian) Saint George vs. the Dragon (Christian) Saint Michael...
Mirza and his brother Tahmuras Mirza, and her brothers Dawar Bakhsh, and Garshasp Mirza. As a widow, Hoshmand Banu Begum lived into Shah Jahan's reign. Journal...
awwal 26, 1037 AH (23 January 1628) on his orders, Dawar, his brother Garshásp, Shahryar, and Tahmuras and Hoshang, sons of the deceased Prince Daniyal...
Those put to death included his brother Shahryar; his nephews Dawar and Garshasp, sons of Shah Jahan's previously executed brother Prince Khusrau; and his...
Ketāb al-Sakisarān cited by al-Masudi. These related the deeds of the hero Garshasp and his descendants, Narimān, Sām, Zāl or Dastān, and above all of the...
On Jumada-l awwal 26, 1037 AH (January 23, 1628), Dawar, his brother Garshasp, uncle Shahryar Mirza, as well as Tahmuras and Hoshang, sons of the deceased...