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Showing posts with label Atropatene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atropatene. Show all posts

Atropates – King Darius III’s Mysterious General in the Battle of Gaugamela

 by Mahir Khalifa-zadeh

 January 09, 2026

 Posted from:

Khalifa-zadeh M., "Atropates - Achaemenid King Darius III’s Mysterious General in the Battle of Gaugamela", Intersections, Canadian Historical Association, Ottawa, 2025, Vol 8, Issue 3, pp 20-22.

https://cha-shc.ca/publications/intersections/

Download PDF:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/399585201_ATROPATES_-_ACHAEMENID_KING_DARIUS_III'S_MYSTERIOUS_GENERAL_IN_THE_BATTLE_OF_GAUGAMELLA


ATROPATES (Old Persian: Ātrpātah and Pahlavi: Ātūrpāt; Ancient Greek: Ἀτροπάτης Atropátēs; (370 BC – 321 BC) was a Medes (Old Persian: 𐎶𐎠𐎭, Māda) and nobleman (possibly had very distant relation to the Achaemenid House) and satrap of Media (Ancient Greek: Μεγάλη) and general who served Darius III (Old Persian: 𐎭𐎠𐎼𐎹𐎺𐎢𐏁, Dārayavaʰuš; Greek: Δαρεῖος Dareios, 380-330 BC) and Alexander of Macedon. He was a founder of the independent kingdom Media - Atropatene (Ancient Greek: Ἀτροπατηνή or Lesser Media) and the dynasty that was named after him. Atropates’ descendants ruled the kingdom until the 2nd century CE. The kingdom was established in c. 323 BC and was the only Iranian region to remain under Zoroastrian authority from the Achaemenids to the Muslim Arabs' conquest.[1], [2]

The early life of Atropates is unknown, but his parents were certainly Zoroastrians. There is some evidence that he was a nobleman of the Medes[3] (Old Persian: 𐎶𐎠𐎭, Māda) and possibly had a very distant relation to the Achaemenid House.[4] It is known that Cyrus the Great (590 - 529 BC), who united the Iranian people of Medes and Persians and established a new Empire under his Achaemenid dynasty, was half Mede. His mother Princess Mandane of Medes (Old Persian: Mandánē, Greek: Μανδάνη) was a daughter of the last powerful Median King Astyages (Akkadian: Ištumegu, Greek: Astuágēs, (585 - 550 BC).[5]

Fig 1. Sculpture/reconstruction of Atropates (Pahlavi: Ātūrpāt), King of Media – Atropatena,

National Military Museum, Baku, Azerbaijan

General Atropates attracts the historians’ attention because a couple of hypotheses exist regarding the origins of the name Azerbaijan. According to the classic tradition, the name comes from the time of Alexander of Macedon’s conquest of the Achaemenid Empire.

Particularly, it presumably originates from general Atropates, who was a commander of troops stationed in the Darius III’s army’s right wing in the Battle of Gaugamela in 331 BC.

Atropates, as satrap (Median/Old Persian: xšaçapāvān, Parthian/Arsacid Pahlavi: šahrab) of Media, commanded Median, Arrānian (Latin: Albanian), Sacasenian, Cadusian, and Arminian (inhabitants of Achaemenid's province of Armina, Old Persian: 𐎠𐎼𐎷𐎡𐎴, Elamite: Harminuya, Ancient Greek: Arminyaya/ Armenia) troops. Ilya Dyakonov indicated that Arrānians (Albanians) and Cadusians participated in the battle as the allies of Atropates, not of the Persians and, thus, he believed that Atropates' political influence lasted far to the north of Aras/ Araxes River.[6]

On the eve of the Gaugamela battle, Atropates commanded the mounted reconnaissance squad that Darius III sent to reconnoiter the field.

Intriguingly, during the Battle of Gaugamela, Atropates’ units pushed Alexander of Macedon’s army to stop the advance and implemented defensive measures. Only Alexander’s personal intervention with fresh troops allowed the Macedonians to stop their retreat and concentrate on a victorious advance in the center, facing troops under the direct command of Darius III.[7] 

Indeed, it was a unique moment in the battle. The Macedonian left wing had begun to retreat and, if King Darius III realized and utilized it, the battle’s outcome would have been completely different. However, as is well known, Darius III’s poor commanding and leadership skills resulted in the catastrophic defeat of the Achaemenid Army.

When Darius III lost the battle, he fled to the Median capital of Ekbātān - Achaemenids' summer capital (present-day Hamadan, Iran). Atropates, as satrap of Media, met Darius III with a great respect and helped him to get a new army.[8]

One month after Darius III’s death in June 330 BC, Atropates surrendered to Alexander. Later, in a personal meeting, Alexander mentioned Atropates’ military skills and esteemed him so highly that his daughter was married to Perdiccas - a close ally to Alexander and commander of the Macedonian cavalry. The marriage occurred at the famous mass wedding in Susa in February 324 BC.[9], [10]

It is notable that Atropates traveled to Susa together with Alexander and offered 100 Amazons (Fig 2), as Greeks called beautiful female archers from Media and Arrān[11] (Latin: Albania, present-day Azerbaijan), for the Macedonian and Greek military elite.[12] As Strabo mentioned, referring to Theophanes of Mitylene, who participated in Pompey’s campaign in Caucasus in 65 BC, Amazons lived in the Caucasian mountains above Albania: “In the mountains above Albania the Amazons are said to live" (Greek: ἐν δὲ τοῖς ὑπὲρ τῆς Ἀλβανίας ὄρεσι καὶ τὰς Ἀμαζόνας οἰκεῖν φασι)”.[13]

Fig 2. Greek fighting an Amazon. Detail from painted sarcophagus found in Italy, 350-325B.C.E., available at:  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Produzione_greca_o_magnogreca,_sarcofago_delle_amazzoni,_350-325_a.C._ca,_da_tarquinia_05.JPG

In 324 B.C. Atropates pacified unrest against the Greeks, and Alexander decided to keep him as a King of the land, which later became the independent (or semi-independent, vassal of Arsacid Parthia) kingdom of Atropatena (Parthian/Arsacid Pahlavi: Āturpātakān, Pahlavi: Ādurbādagān) with its capital at Ganzak/Gazaca (Ancient Greek: Γάζακα).

Atropates had a last interview with Alexander in Media in 324-323, who came to inspect the breeding of the ancient world-famous Nisaean horses for the Macedonian army (Alexander's Bucephalus was a Nisaean horse).[14]

Alexander acknowledged the geostrategic location of the Medes' Ecbatana for its approximately equal distance from Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis. In Ecbatana, Alexander left a huge treasure of 180,000 talents as a special reserve garrisoned by a force of 6000 Macedonians. By establishing the military base for Alexander's main army, Ecbatana became the most important military center of his empire. Ecbatana was the place where Bessus (Bactria's Viceroy and slaughterer of Darius III) was executed and his body was publicly exposed to the Macedonian soldiers.[15]

After Alexander's death in June 323 BC, Atropates did not participate in Alexander's satraps and generals meeting in Babylon. However, thanks to his diplomatic and political skills, he became one of only two non-Macedonians (along with Alexander's Bactrian father-in-law Oxyartes), who were listed as holding a satrapy of Media – Atropatene (Lesser Media) after the division of the empire between Alexander's successors.[16]

Atropates was a strong follower of Zarathustra (Zoroaster) and his name was neither Median nor Persian but Zoroastrian. The name Ātūrpāt originates from Avesta's word “Âtare-pâta”, (keeper of the fire), who was one of the sons of Zarathustra.[17] The transcription of the name Ātūrpāt from Pahlavi (Middle Persian) could be “protected by fire”.[18]

Fig 3. King Atropates ((Ātūrpāt) meets Alexander of Macedon, painting 1956,

National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan

It is known that Atropates enjoyed support from Zoroastrian priests or Magi/Maguses (Old Persian: 𐎶𐎦𐏁 magoš; Pahlavi: magušAncient Greek μάγος magos) to minimize the Greeks’ impact on Zoroastrianism in Media-Atropatena.[19]

Indeed, the Achaemenids' favored Goddess Anāhītā[20] fire temple had been sacked and desecrated by Alexander of Macedon, who had burnt there the 12,000 ox-hides on which the original Avesta was written in golden lettering and which had been placed in the Fortress of Archives in the city of Istakhr in Pārs.[21]

However, Atropates was able to secure the fire temple of Ādur Gušnasp[22] in Šiz (now Azar Gushnasp in Takht-e Soleyman, Iranian Azerbaijan), where the other copy of the Holy Avesta was preserved and copied on calf skins.[23], [24]

Later, under the order of Sasanian King Shāpūr I (240-272), the fire of Ādur Gušnasp (the last survived Great Fire of State) was classified as the empire’s most sacred victorious (Pahlavi: pērōzgar) warriors’ (Pahlavi: artēštār) class fire of the highest grade, holding the rank of “cathedral”.

The fire of Ādur Gušnasp, as Ataš Bahrām (Parthian: Ātaš-i Wahrām or Pahlavi: Ādur Bahrām - “fires of Victory,” the Zoroastrian name of the God of War and Victory), was the most sacred or “cathedral” fire of the highest grade in Zoroastrianism, established in the late Achaemenid or Parthian era in Ādurbādagān in Media. Each new king, as Sasanian King Shāpūr I proclaimed, was obligated to make a pilgrimage after coronation to Ādur Gušnasp, providing royal gifts and celebrating Nowruz (Pahlavi: No Ruz).[25]

Finally, as one may assume, General Atropates (Āturpāt) occupies a significant place in the history of Azerbaijan and Iran. His name, possibly, is the key to understand the origin of the name Azerbaijan - a land of fire (Azerbaijani: odlar yurdu). Eventually, the Pahlavi name Ādurbādagān evolved into the Turkified form of Azarbaijan/Azerbaijan. This is where the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Iranian province of Azerbaijan get their name.

·       Khalifa-zadeh Mahir, research Professor, PhD, regular contributor to international outlets on history and global politics, member of the Canadian Historical Association and Canadian Political Science Association

Reference


[1] Chaumont M.L., (2011). "ATROPATES", Encyclopedia Iranica, Vol. III, Fasc. 1, pp. 17-18, available at: https://iranicaonline.org/articles/atropates-aturpat-lit 

[2] Diakonov I. Istoriya Midii ot drevneĭshikh vremen do kontsa 4 v. do n.e. (History of Media from ancient time till the end of 4th century), Moscow & Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo Akademii nauk SSSR, 1956, 453.

[3] Diakonov I. 1956, 453.

[4] Iran's Neighbor to the North West, ATROPATENE (Earlier Media Atropatene), available at  https://www.the-persians.co.uk/atropatene.htm

[5] Schmitt R., (2000), “MANDANE”, Encyclopedia Iranica, available at https://iranicaonline.org/articles/mandane

[6] Diakonov I. 1956, 453.

[7] Shifman I., “Aleksand Makedonskui” (Alexander of Macedon), Izdatelstvo Nauka, Moskva, 1988, 205. 

[8] “ATROPATES”, (2018), Livius.org, Articles on ancient history, available at  https://www.livius.org/articles/person/atropates/ 

[9] Dyakonov I., “Ocherk istorii drevnego Irana”, (History of Ancient Iran), in Russian, Izdatelstvo Vostochnoi Literaturi, Moskva, 1961, 444.

[10] Schippmann K., (2014). “AZERBAIJAN iii. Pre-Islamic History”, Encyclopedia Iranica, Vol. III, Fasc. 2, pp. 221-224, available at https://iranicaonline.org/articles/azerbaijan-iii

[11] Bosworth C.E., (2012). "ARRĀN", Encyclopedia Iranica, II/5, pp. 520-522, available online at: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/arran-a-region

[12] Mayor A., (2017). "AMAZONS IN THE IRANIAN WORLD". Encyclopedia Iranica; available at https://iranicaonline.org/articles/amazons-ii 

[13] Giusto T., “Strabo and the Caucasian Albanians: some Preliminary Remarks”, Constructions identitaires en Asie Mineure (VIIIe siècle avant J.-C.–IIIe siècle après J.-C.), Année 2021, 199-211, available at:  https://www.persee.fr/doc/ista_0000-0000_2021_act_1522_1_3893 

[14] Sykes P.M. "A History of Persia", Vol 1, Taylor and Francis, Revised ed., 2011, 644.

[15] Sykes P.M. 2011.

[16] Hyland J., (2013). Alexander’s Satraps of Media, Journal of Ancient History, Vol. 1, Issue 2, https://doi.org/10.1515/jah-2013-0008

[17] “ATROPATES”, Livius.org 

[18] Chaumont M.L., (2011). Encyclopedia Iranica

[19] Dandamayev M., (2012). “MAGI”, Encyclopedia Iranica, available at: https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/magi

[20] Soudar A., “The Formation of Achaemenid Imperial Ideology and Its Impact on the Avesta”, The World of Ancient Persia, Ed by John Curtis and St John Simpson, Proceedings of a conference at the British Museum 29th September–1st October 2005, 111-138. 

[21] Kotwal F, and Kreyenbroek P. (2011). “ALEXANDER THE GREAT ii. In Zoroastrian Tradition”, Encyclopedia Iranica, available at http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/alexander-the-great-ii 

[22] Yamamoto Y., (1979). "The Zoroastrian Temple Cult of Fire in Archaeology and Literature (I)". Orient 15, 19-53.

[23] Gamsakhurdia K. (2020). Fire Priests and Magi in Iberia. Tbilisi State University. SPEKALI, Vol. 4. https://www.spekali.tsu.ge/index.php/en/article/viewArticle/14/230

[24] Ghodrat-Dizaji M., (2007). Administrative Geography of The Early Sasanian Period: Case of Ādurbādagān, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies. Vol.45, pp. 87-93. https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2007.11864720

[25] Khalifa-zadeh M., (2024). Sasanian Imperial Strategy and King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān’s Reform: The Case of Ādurbādagān and Arrān (Caucasian Albania), International Journal of History, Vol. 6, Issue 1, 111- 121. https://doi.org/10.22271/27069109.2024.v6.i1b.271

 

Figures 

Fig 1. Sculpture/reconstruction of Atropates (Ātūrpāt), King of Media – Atropatena,  National Military Museum, Baku, Azerbaijan, available at https://www.worldhistory.org/image/19311/sculpture-of-atropates/ 

Fig 2. Greek fighting an Amazon. Detail from painted sarcophagus found in Italy, 350-325B.C.E., available at:  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Produzione_greca_o_magnogreca,_sarcofago_delle_amazzoni,_350-325_a.C._ca,_da_tarquinia_05.JPG

Fig 3. King Atropates ((Ātūrpāt) meets Alexander of Macedon, painting, National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan, available at https://www.worldhistory.org/image/17373/king-atropates-meets-alexander/





Sculpture of Atropates (Aturpat), Darius III's General and Satrap of Media

by Mahir Khalifa-zadeh*

Created: August 03, 2024

Download PDF: 

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/383305094_ATURPAT_ATROPATES_-_DARIUS_III'S_GENERAL_AND_KING_OF_MEDIA_-ATROPATENE

ATROPATES (Avestan: Atərəpāta; Old Persian: Ātrpātah and Pahlavi: Ātūrpāt; Ancient Greek: Ἀτροπάτης Atropátēs; (370 BC – 321 BC) was a Medes (Old Persian: 𐎶𐎠𐎭Māda-a) and nobleman (possibly had very distant relation to the Achaemenid House) and satrap of Media (Ancient Greek: Μεγάλη) and general who served Darius III and Alexander of Macedon. He was a founder of the independent kingdom Media - Atropatene (Ancient Greek: Ἀτροπατηνή or Lesser Media) and the dynasty that was named after him. Atropates’ descendants ruled the kingdom until the 2nd century CE. The kingdom was established in c. 323 BC and was the only Iranian region to remain under Zoroastrian authority from the Achaemenids to the Muslim Arabs' conquest.

Atropates (Ātūrpāt), King of Media – Atropatene,

Military History Museum, sculpture 2006, Baku, Azerbaijan 

General Atropates attracts the attention of historians because a couple of hypotheses exist regarding the origins of the name Azerbaijan. According to the classic tradition, the name comes from the time of Alexander of Macedon’s conquest of the Achaemenid Empire. 

In particular, it presumably originates from General Atropates, a commander of the Achaemenid King Darius III's army's right wing in the Battle of Gaugamela (Ancient Greek: Γαυγάμηλα, also known as the Battle of Arbela) in 331 BC. 

Atropates, as satrap (Median/Old Persian: xšaçapāvān, Parthian/Arsacid Pahlavi: šahrabof Media, commanded Median, Arrānian (Latin: Albanian), Sacasenian, Cadusian, and Arminian (inhabitants of the Achaemenid's province of Armin/a, Old Persian: 𐎠𐎼𐎷𐎡𐎴Elamite: Harminuya, Ancient Greek: Arminyaya, Latin: Armenia) troops. 

Ilya Dyakonov indicated that Arrānians (Albanians) and Cadusians participated in the battle as allies of Atropates, not the Persians. Thus, he believed that Atropates' political influence extended far to the north of the Aras/Araxes River.

On the eve of the Gaugamela battle, Atropates commanded the mounted reconnaissance squad that Darius III sent to reconnoiter the field.

Intriguingly, during the Battle of Gaugamela, Atropates’ units pushed Alexander of Macedon’s army to halt its advance and implemented defensive measures. Only Alexander’s personal intervention with fresh troops allowed the Macedonians to stop their retreat and concentrate on a victorious advance in the center, facing troops under the direct command of Darius III. 

Indeed, it was a unique moment in the battle. The Macedonian left wing had begun to retreat, and if King Darius III had realized and utilized it, the battle’s outcome would have been completely different. However, as is well known, Darius III’s poor commanding and leadership skills resulted in the catastrophic defeat of the Achaemenid Army. 

When Darius lost the battle, he flew to the Medes' capital of Ecbatana (Achaemenids' summer capital), where Atropates tried to help him to get a new army.

One month after Darius III’s death in June 330 BC, Atropates surrendered to Alexander. Later, in a personal meeting, Alexander mentioned Atropates’ military skills and esteemed him so highly that his daughter was married to Perdiccas - a close ally of Alexander and commander of the Macedonian cavalry. The marriage occurred at the famous mass wedding in Susa in February 324 BC. Atropates traveled to Susa with Alexander and offered 100 Amazons, as Greeks called beautiful female archers from Media and Arrān (Latin: Albania, present-day Azerbaijan), for the Macedonian military elite.

In 324 B.C. Atropates pacified unrest against the Greeks, and Alexander decided to keep him as a King of the land, which later became the independent (or semi-independent, vassal of Arsacid Parthia) kingdom of Atropatene (Parthian/Arsacid Pahlavi: Āturpātakān, Pahlavi: Ādurbādagān) with its capital at Ganzak/Gazaca (Ancient Greek: Γάζακα). 

Atropates had a last interview with Alexander in Media in 324-323, who came to inspect the breeding of the ancient world-famous Nisaean horses for the Macedonian army (Alexander's Bucephalus was a Nisaean horse). 

Alexander acknowledged the geostrategic location of the Medes' Ecbatana for its approximately equal distance from Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis. In Ecbatana, Alexander left a huge treasure of 180,000 talents as a special reserve garrisoned by a force of 6000 Macedonians. By establishing the military base for Alexander's main army, Ecbatana became the most important military center of his empire. Ecbatana was the place where Bessus (Bactria's Viceroy and the slayer of Darius III) was executed and his body was publicly exposed to the Macedonian soldiers.

After Alexander's death in June 323 BC, Atropates did not participate in Alexander's satraps and generals meeting in Babylon. However, thanks to his diplomatic and political skills, he became one of only two non-Macedonians (along with Alexander's Bactrian father-in-law Oxyartes, Old Persian: 𐎢𐎺𐎧𐏁𐎫𐎼, Median: Huvaxštrah, Greek: Ὀξυάρτης) who were listed as holding a satrapy after the division of the empire between Alexander's successors.

It should be highlighted that Atropates was a strong follower of Zarathustra (Zoroaster) and his name was neither Median nor Persian but Zoroastrian. The name Ātūrpāt originates from Avesta's word “Âtare-pâta”, (keeper of the fire) was one of the sons of Zarathustra. The transcription of the name Ātūrpāt from Pahlavi (Middle Persian) could be “protected by fire”.

Atropates enjoyed full support from Zoroastrian priests or Magi/Magus (Old Persian: 𐎶𐎦𐏁 magušPahlavi: maguš; Ancient Greek μάγος magos) to minimize the Greeks’ impact on Zoroastrianism in Media-Atropatene. Truly, as some sources indicate, Atropates and his successors in Atropatene were zealous adherents of Zoroastrianism from Achaemenian times.

Indeed, the Achaemenids favored Goddess Anāhītā fire temple had been sacked and desecrated by Alexander the Great, who had burnt there the 12,000 ox-hides on which the original Avesta was written in golden lettering and which had been placed in the Fortress of Archives in the city of Istakhr in Pārs. 

However, Atropates was able to secure the fire temple of Ādur Gušnasp in Šiz (now Azar Gushnasp in Takht-e Soleyman, Iranian Azerbaijan), where the other copy of the Holy Avesta was preserved and copied on calf skins.

Atropates (Ātūrpāt) meets Alexander of Macedon, painting 1956,
National Museum of History, Baku, Azerbaijan

Later, under the order of Sasanian King Shāpūr I (r. 240-272), the fire of Ādur Gušnasp (the last survived Great Fire of State) was classified as the empire’s most sacred victorious (Pahlavi: pērōzgar) warriors’ (Pahlavi: artēštār) class fire of the highest grade, holding the rank of “cathedral”.

The fire of Ādur Gušnasp, as Ataš Bahrām (Parthian: Ātaš-i Wahrām or Pahlavi: Ādur Bahrām - “fires of Victory,” the Zoroastrian name of the God of War and Victory), was the most sacred or “cathedral” fire of the highest grade in Zoroastrianism, established in the late Achaemenid or Parthian era in Ādurbādagān in Media. Each new king, as Sasanian King Shāpūr I proclaimed, was obligated to make a pilgrimage on foot after coronation to Ādur Gušnasp, providing royal gifts and celebrating Nowruz (Pahlavi: No Ruz).

Next, following the administrative and military reforms of the Sasanian kings Kawād I (r. 473-531) and his oldest son Xusrō I Anōšīrvān (r. 531- 579), the name Ādurbādagān [Azerbaijan] was extended toward Caucasia, covering Arrān (Latin: Albania) and Armin (Greek: Arminyaya, Latin: Armenia). 

Particularly, King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān established the kust-ī Ādurbādagān (region of Ādurbādagān) military command holding Ādurbādagān’s general (Pahlavi: spāhbed), who was at the time the famous Iranian hero - Prince and General Rostam Farrokhzād of Ādurbādagān.

Finally, as someone assumes, General Atropates (Āturpāt) occupies a significant place in the history of Azerbaijan. His name, possibly, is a key to understand the origin of the name Azerbaijan - a land of fire (Azerbaijani: odlar yurdu).

Eventually, the Pahlavi name Ādurbādagān evolved into the Turkified form of Azarbaijan/Azerbaijan. This is where the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Iranian province of Azerbaijan get their name.

* Khalifa-zadeh M., Research Professor, Ph.D, Canadian Historical Association, 130 Albert Street, Suite 1912, Ottawa, ON, K1P5G4, Canada

Sources:

"ADHARBAYDJAN (AZARBAYDJAN)", (i) Province of Persia, (ii) Soviet Socialist Republic The Encyclopedia of Islam: New Edition [Volume I A - B]GIBB, H. A. R.; KRAMERS, J. H., LEVI-PROVENCAL, E.; LEWIS, B.; PELLAT, CH.; & SCHACHT, J. (ed.) Published by E. J. Brill / Luzac & Co. 1986, 188-192.

“ATROPATES”, LIVIUS.org, https://www.livius.org/articles/person/atropates/

Bosworth C.E., "ARRĀN", Encyclopedia Iranica, 2017, Vol. II, Fasc. 5, pp 520-522, available online at: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/arran-a-region

Chaumont M.L., "ATROPATES", Encyclopedia Iranica, 2017, Vol. III, Fasc. 1, pp. 17-18, available online at: https://iranicaonline.org/articles/atropates-aturpat-lit

Dandamayev M., “MAGI”, Encyclopedia Iranica, available at: https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/magi

Dyakonov I., Очерк истории древнего Ирана", (History of Ancient Iran), in Russian, Izdatelstvo Vostochnoi Literaturi, Moskva, 1961, 444.

Dyakonov I., "История Мидии: От древнейших времен до конца IV в до н.э". (History of Medes: From Ancient times till the end of IV BC), in Russian,  Publisher, Moskva-Leningrad, Academy of Science of the USSR, 1956, 488.

Ghodrat Dizaji M., Disintegration of Sasanian hegemony over Northern Iran (AD 623-643), Iranica Antiqua, 2011, Vol. 46, 315-329, DOI:10.2143/IA.46.0.2084424

Ghodrat-Dizaji M., Administrative Geography of The Early Sasanian Period: Case of Ādurbādagān, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies. 2007, Vol.45, 87-93, https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.2007.11864720

Heckel W., "In the Path of Conquest", Oxford University Press, 2020, 336.

Khalifa-zadeh M., Sasanian Imperial Strategy and King Xusrō I Anōšīrvān’s Reform: The Case of Ādurbādagān and Arrān (Caucasian Albania), International Journal of History, 2024, Vol. 6, Issue 1, 111-121. https://doi.org/10.22271/27069109.2024.v6.i1b.271

Khalifa-zadeh M., From Sasanian Adurbadagan to Modern Azerbaijan: Historical Background and Developments, In book: Recent Trends in Arts and Social Studies, Edition: First, Chapter: 8, Publisher: B P International, London, Kolkata, 2023: 116-136. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/rtass/v9/7649A

Khalifa-zadeh M., Adurbadagan and Arran (Caucasian Albania) in the Late Sasanian Period, International Journal of History, 2023, Vol5, Issue 2, 15- 18, DOI: 10.22271/27069109.2023.v5.i2a.220

Khalifa-zadeh M., and Maksymiuk K., Reforms of Sasanian king Khusro I and the northern bank of the Araxes – Arrān (Caucasus Albania), Historia I Świat, Vol. 12, 167–182. https://doi.org/10.34739/his.2023.12.10

Mayor A., "AMAZONS IN THE IRANIAN WORLD". Encyclopedia Iranica; available at https://iranicaonline.org/articles/amazons-ii

Minorsky V., Roman and Byzantine Campaigns in Atropatene, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 1944, Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 243-265, Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of School of Oriental and African Studies, 2013, https://www.jstor.org/stable/609312

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