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Bavand dynasty : ウィキペディア英語版
Bavand dynasty

|conventional_long_name = Bavand dynasty
|common_name = Tabaristan
|continent = Asia
|region =
|country = Iran
|era = Middle Ages
|status =
|government_type = Monarchy
|year_start = 651
|year_end = 1349
|event_start =
|date_start =
|event1 =
|date_event1 =
|event2 =
|date_event2 =
|event_end = Afrasiyabid conquest
|date_end =
|p1 = Sasanian Empire
|flag_p1 = Derafsh Kaviani.png
|s1 = Afrasiyab dynasty
|image_flag =
|flag_type =
|flag =
|image_coat =
|symbol_type =
|symbol =
|image_map = BavandDynastyIranian.png
|image_map_caption = Map of the Bavand dynasty at its greatest extent
|capital = Perim
(651–1074)
Sari
(1074–1210)
Amol
(1238–1349)
|common_languages = Persian
Caspian languages
|religion = Zoroastrianism
(651-842)
Sunni Islam
(842-964)
Twelver Shia Islam
(964-1349)
|currency =
|title_leader = Ispahbadh
|leader1 = Farrukhzad (first)
|year_leader1 = 651-665
|leader2 = Hasan II (last)
|year_leader2 = 1334–1349
}}
The Bavand dynasty (also spelled Bavend), or simply the Bavandids, was an Iranian dynasty that ruled in parts of Tabaristan (Mazandaran) in what is now northern Iran from 651 until 1349, alternating between outright independence and submission as vassals to more powerful regional rulers.
== Origins ==
The dynasty itself traced its descent back to Bav, who was alleged to be a grandson of the Sasanian prince Kawus, brother of Khosrau I,〔''The Political and Dynastic History of the Iranian World (AD 1000-1217)'', C.E. Bosworth, The Cambridge History of Iran:The Saljuq and Mongol Periods, Vol. 5, ed. J.A. Boyle, (Cambridge University Press, 1968), 27-28.〕 and son of the shah Kavadh I (ruled 488–531), who supposedly fled to Tabaristan from the Muslim conquest of Persia. He rallied the locals around him, repelled the first Arab attacks, and reigned for fifteen years until he was murdered by a certain Valash, who ruled the country for eight years. Bav's son, Sohrab or Sorkab (Surkhab I), established himself at Perim on the eastern mountain ranges of Tabaristan, which thereafter became the family's domain. The scholar J. Marquart, however, proposed an alternative identification of the legendary Bav with a late-6th-century Zoroastrian priest ("magian") from Ray. P. Pourshariati, in her re-examination of late Sasanian history, asserts that this Bav is a conflation of several members of the powerful House of Ispahbudhan: Bawi, his grandson Vistahm and his great-nephew Farrukhzad. She also reconstructs the events of the middle 7th century as a civil war between two rival clans, the Ispahbudhan and Valash's House of Karen, before the Dabuyid Farrukhan the Great conquered Tabaristan and subdued the various local leaders to vassalage. The Dabuyid house then ruled Tabaristan until the Abbasids subdued the region in 760.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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