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The Zoroastrian World: Routledge Worlds

Editat de Jenny Rose, Albert de Jong, Sarah Stewart
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 apr 2026
Although Zoroastrians in the contemporary world are numerically few – estimated recently at less than 150,000 across the globe – their ancient Iranian ancestors ruled vast areas of the Near East for over a millennium. From the mid‑sixth century BCE to the mid‑seventh century CE, the historical contribution of the ‘Mazda-worshipping’ religion to the intellectual, cultural, and political development of the region was momentous. The migration of some Zoroastrians to north-western India also had a significant social and economic impact on early modern and modern India. From the mid-seventeenth century until the present, Zoroastrianism has also played an important role in European discourse.
Written by a distinguished team of international contributors, including many Zoroastrians, The Zoroastrian World presents a global guide to Zoroastrianism from the earliest period to the modern day, offering original perspectives through substantial thematic contributions on the lived experience of Zoroastrian communities across the world. This volume is organised into five distinct sections:
  • Imagining Zoroastrianism
  • The Developing Zoroastrian World
  • Living Realities: Zoroastrian Narrative and Symbol in the Modern World
  • Contemporary Challenges in the Zoroastrian World
  • Creative Contributions from the Zoroastrian World
The Zoroastrian World provides an authoritative and accessible source of information on topics relating to the Zoroastrian religion, with a particular focus on interdisciplinary connections. The volume is essential reading for students engaged in studies of Religion, Philosophy and Ethics; Ancient and Modern Iran; the Near and Middle East; Central Asia; South Asian Religions; and Cultural History. The Zoroastrian World is intended for all curious readers, who seek to know more about this ancient, enduring religion.
The editors are excited to showcase the original artwork 'The Garden of the Universe' by Hormazd Narielwalla as the cover of this book.
The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780367769093
ISBN-10: 0367769093
Pagini: 614
Ilustrații: 32
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 1.3 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Worlds

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core

Cuprins

Introduction  Part 1.  Imagining Zoroastrianism  1. How Zoroastrianism imagined itself  2. Recasting Zoroastrian dualism within the Greek philosophical imagination  3. Imagining Zoroastrianism in the light of the Maga Brahmanas and the Kambojas  4. Zoroastrianism in the Chinese imagination  5. Zoroastrianism/Persian religion in the Hebrew Bible  6. Zoroastrianism in the Babylonian Talmud  7. Manichaean, Christian, and Mandaean views of Zoroastrianism  8. Zoroastrianism in early Arabic sources  9. The European ‘rediscovery’ of the Ancient Persians and their worldview  10. The history of the study of Zoroastrianism  11. Zoroastrianism and Freemasonry in colonial‑era India and Britain: imagining Zoroastrianism and re‑imagining Freemasonry  12. A ‘Persian history’? Achaemenid history and Zoroastrian reception in Gore Vidal’s Creation  13. The fascination of the flame: Zoroastrianism and tourism  Part 2. The Developing Zoroastrian World  HISTORY  14. Imagining Ahura Mazda: the earliest form of Zoroastrianism  15. Persian religion in the Achaemenid Empire  16. Zoroastrianism in the religious context of the Arsacid Empire  17. Zoroastrianism in the Sasanian Empire  18. Zoroastrianism in Iran from the Arab conquests to the mid‑nineteenth century  19. Zoroastrianism in India: from the migrations of the Parsis to the late eighteenth century  SOURCES  20. The developing Zoroastrian world and orality  21. The oldest sources for Zoroastrianism: Avestan and Old Persian  22. “A jewel of wisdom literature in the Pahlavi tradition of Zoroastrianism”  23. The meaning of Persian Zoroastrian literature  24. A historical overview of Parsi writing in Gujarati  25. Zoroastrian literature in English from the nineteenth to early twentieth centuries  MATERIAL EVIDENCE  26. Central Asian expressions of Zoroastrianism  27. Central Asian Zoroastrianism: can a case be made for Sogdiana?  28. Zoroastrianism in Anatolia and the Caucasus  29. The ‘fire worshippers’ of Georgia  Part 3. Living Realities: Zoroastrian Narrative and Symbol in the Modern World  30. The role of Parsi Zoroastrians in the evolution of British colonial India  31. Zoroastrian politics in the era of the Constitutional Revolution in Iran (1905–1911)  32. Reconciling Persianate and Western forms of knowledge: esotericism as Zoroastrian hermeneutics in colonial India  33. Calling on divine help: Parsi religious expressions in Mumbai, Navsari, and Surat  ZOROASTRIAN COMMUNITIES IN DISAPORA  34. Zoroastrian communities outside India and Iran  35. A personal account of migrating to North America  36. Teach your children well: Zoroastrian religious education  DIGITAL APPROACHES TO ZOROASTRIANISM  37. The use of digital resources in studying the Zoroastrian religion  38. Digital projects in Zoroastrianism  39. The impact of the digital world on internal Zoroastrian discourse  Part 4. Contemporary Challenges in the Zoroastrian World  INTERNAL CHALLENGES  40. Demographic issues and identity in twenty‑first‑century India: Jiyo Parsi  41. The reverberations of the dokhmenashini debate in Mumbai and Zoroastrian death rituals practised in India  PERSPECTIVES ON THE ZOROASTRIAN PRIESTHOOD  42. Perspectives on the Parsi priesthood in India  43. Perspectives on the Zoroastrian priesthood in Iran  44. Perspectives on the Parsi priesthood from the UK: an interview with Ervad Yazad T. Bhadha  45. Perspectives on the Parsi priesthood from the United States: an interview with Ervad Zerkxis Bhandara  46. Who speaks for Zoroastrianism today?  THE CHANGING ROLES OF MEN AND WOMEN  47. The changing roles of men and women within the Iranian Zoroastrian community  48. The changing roles of Parsi men and women in India  CARING FOR THE ELDERLY  49. Care for the Zoroastrian elderly in India  50. A caring model for the elderly in the UK  EXTERNAL CHALLENGES  51. Zoroastrianism and human rights  52. Zoroastrianism and the environment: reviving the forests of Doongerwadi in Mumbai, India  53. Zoroastrian approaches to business ethics and sustainable development in contemporary times  Part 5. Creative Contributions from the Zoroastrian World  54. ‘First Darling of the Morning’: an interview with Parsi novelist, Thrity Umrigar  55. A larger laughter: the unique legacy of Parsi theatre  56. The house of song  57. Devotional poetry and songs of the Zoroastrians of Iran  58. “I yam what I yam”: a conversation with screenwriter, director, and photographer, Sooni Taraporevala  59. The Garden of the Universe: an interview with artist Hormazd Narielwalla  60. Identity and silk: the emergence and re‑emergence of Sino‑Parsi trade textiles  61 “You have to crack a few eggs to make a Parsi omelette”: an interview with chef and culinary author, Farokh Talati  62 Memories of growing up in Iran, Persian food, Zoroastrian festivals, and life as an author and cookery writer: an interview with Shirin Simmons  63 How Parsis helped make India a cricketing nation

Notă biografică

Jenny Rose is a Research Fellow at Claremont Graduate University, where she taught classes in Zoroastrian Studies before relocating to the UK in 2023. Her books relating to the Zoroastrian world include Zoroastrianism: An Introduction (2011), Zoroastrianism: A Guide for the Perplexed (2011), and Between Boston and Bombay: Cultural and Commercial Connections of Yankees and Parsis, 1771–1865 (2019).
Albert de Jong is Professor of the Study of Religion at the University of Leiden, the Netherlands. He mainly works on Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism, the Mandaeans, and the Roman cult of Mithras.
Sarah Stewart is a Reader Emeritus at SOAS, University of London. She studied at ANU and SOAS before going on to teach in the Department of History, Religions and Philosophies at SOAS. She was a Curator of the exhibition The Everlasting Flame, Zoroastrianism in History and Imagination (Brunei Gallery, London 2013; National Museum, Delhi 2016) and Co-Founder of the SOAS Shapoorji Pallonji Institute for Zoroastrian Studies (SSPIZS) in 2017. Her publications include Voices from Zoroastrian Iran, Vols. 1 and 2 (2018, 2020).

Descriere

Written by a distinguished team of international contributors, including many Zoroastrians, The Zoroastrian World presents a global guide to Zoroastrianism from the earliest period to the modern day, offering original perspectives through substantial thematic contributions on the lived experience of Zoroastrian communities globally.