- Persian: اهورا مزدا, romanized: Ahurâ Mazdâ), also
known as Oromasdes,
Ohrmazd, Ormazd, Ormusd, ****mazd, Harzoo, Hormazd,
Hormaz and Hurmuz, is the creator...
-
inscription from ****polis (Xph). As the
definition of the God of Iranians,
Ohrmazd, in the
Elamite version of the
Bistun Inscription. In the Dna and Dse,...
-
better known by his
dynastic name of
Hormizd I (also
spelled Hormozd I or
Ohrmazd I;
Middle Persian: 𐭠𐭥𐭧𐭥𐭬𐭦𐭣), was the
third Sasanian King of Kings...
-
speaking figuratively. That
Ohrmazd and Ahriman's
brotherhood was
later considered an
abominable heresy is a
different matter;
Ohrmazd had by then
replaced the...
-
primeval undifferentiated Chaos."
Ahura Mazda, also
known as Oromasdes,
Ohrmazd, Ormazd, Ormusd, ****mazd, Harzoo, Hormazd,
Hormaz and Hurmz, is the creator...
- is a
description of the
Chamrosh in the
Persian Rivayats: "The
Creator Ohrmazd has
produced on the s****s of the sea
Vourukasha a tree and two
birds who...
- or 12th century CE,
Ohrmazd and
Ahriman already co-exist at the
beginning of time, but
Ahriman is not
immediately aware of
Ohrmazd.
During the
first 3000 years...
-
those "worthy of worship" is Mithra, who "is
second only in
dignity to
Ohrmazd (i.e.
Ahura Mazda) himself."
Outside of the
traditional yazatas, local...
-
Videvdat (i, 15),
Rhages is
mentioned as the 12th
sacred place created by
Ohrmazd. In Old
Persian inscriptions,
Rhages appears as a
province (Bistun 2, 10–18)...
-
Ohrmazd, who
became king,
still allowed for
Manichaeism in the empire, but he also
greatly trusted the
Zoroastrian priest, Kirdir.
After Ohrmazd's short...