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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Azar_KayvanAzar Kayvan - Wikipedia

    Āzar Kayvān [a] ( b. between c. 1529 and 1533; d. between c. 1609 and 1618) was the Zoroastrian high priest of Istakhr and a gnostic philosopher, [2] who was a native of Fars, Iran and later emigrated to Patna in the Mughal Empire during the reign of Emperor Akbar.

    • Zu'l-`Olum (master of the sciences)
    • between 1609 and 1618, Patna
  2. Aug 18, 2011 · ĀẔAR (ĀḎAR) KAYVĀN (b. between 1529 and 1533; d. between 1609 and 1618), a Zoroastrian high priest and native of Fārs who emigrated to India and became the founder of the Zoroastrian Ešrāqī or Illuminative School. The literature produced by this school constitutes a Zoroastrian Ešrāqī literature.

  3. Takeshi AOKI* 1. Introduction This is a 392-page, extensive Persian book published in Tehran in November 2021. The biography, achievements, and ideologies of Azar Kayvan (1533–1618), who lived in Safavid Iran and Mughal India in the 16th and 17th centuries are covered, as the title of the book implies.

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  5. Oct 29, 2021 · Pažuhešgāh-e ʿolūm-e ensānī-o moṭāleʿāt-e farhangī, 1400 š [2021]. Āẕar-Kayvān (b. 1529 or 1533; d. 1609 or 1618) and his disciplines were founder of a sect in the 10th century which was known as “Āzarhušangiyān ”.

  6. Azar Kaivan. Azar Kaivan (d.1618), a native of Fars (Persia) province, remains a basically obscure figure. He hailed from Istakhr, north of Shiraz; Istakhr was an ancient Zoroastrian city then reduced to a village by Islamic oppression of the older religion. Persepolis.

  7. He is currently working on a third book project examining revisiting the life and afterlives of the Azar Kayvan movement of the sixteenth-seventeenth centuries, which culminated in the production of the first Persian-language encyclopedia of comparative religion, The School of Doctrines (Dabistān-i Maẕāhib, written by Mīrzā Ẕu’l ...

  8. Dec 15, 1994 · DASĀTĪR. DASĀTĪR, the most important tract of the Āḏar Kayvānī sect, almost certainly the work of its founder, Āḏar Kayvān (see ĀẔAR KAYVĀN ). The book, written in an invented language, is about supposedly ancient Iranian prophets and includes accounts of events that have no historical basis.

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