Rostam

Rostam or Rustam (Persian: رستم [rosˈtæm]) is a legendary hero in Persian mythology, the son of Zāl and Rudaba, whose life and work was immortalized by the 10th-century Persian poet Ferdowsi in the Shahnameh, or Epic of Kings, which contains pre-Islamic Iranian folklore and history. However, the roots of the narrative date much earlier.


Rostam

A heroic of Iranian myths and legends
رستم
Rostam and Rakhsh killing dragon
Born
Died
Cause of deathWith the conspiracy of his half-brother Shaghad, he fell into a well full of poisoned spears and was killed in Kabulistan.
NationalityIranian
Other namesRustam
Rustem
Known forSeven Labours
Battle with Sohrab
Battle with Esfandiyār
kill Demons
Spouse(s)Tahmina
ChildrenSohrab
Faramarz
Siyâvash (adopted son)
Jahangir (In Jahangirnama)
Banu Goshasp (In Banu Goshasp Nama)
Parents
FamilySām (grandfather)
Zavara (brother)
Shaghad (half brother) Borzu (grandson, in Borzu Nama)
Rostam mourning Sohrab. Persian miniature.
Sohrab and Rostam fighting:from "The Shahnama of Shah Tahmasp" (circa 1522)

In the Shahnameh, Rostam and his predecessors are Marzbans of Sistan (present-day Iran and Afghanistan). Rostam is best known for his tragic fight with Esfandiyār, the other legendary Iranian hero; for his expedition to Mazandaran (not to be confused with the modern Mazandaran Province); and for tragically fighting and killing his son, Sohrab, without knowing who his opponent was. He is also known for the story of Seven Labours. Rostam was eventually killed by Shaghad, his half-brother.

Rostam was always represented as the mightiest of Iranian paladins (holy warriors), and the atmosphere of the episodes in which he features is strongly reminiscent of the Parthian Empire. He rode the legendary stallion Rakhsh and wore a special suit named Babr-e Bayan in battles.

Rustam was a devout Zoroastrian and believed in monotheism. After all his victories, he thanked Ahura Mazda.He also had no physical relationship with Tahmineh before his marriage.

Origins

While the narrative of the Shahname is the definitive work on Rostam, Ferdowsi did not invent the character; Rostam stories were popular date back to the seventh century in Pars and originated much earlier, likely in Eastern Iranian-speaking territories. He famously wears the zīn-i palang or "panther-skin garment":

The material surveyed so far proves that the Rustam legend was fully formed and well known in Western Iran by the seventh century AD at the latest and in the Eastern Iranian lands by the early eighth century. In some recent publications Frantz Grenet has attempted to find pictorial allusions several centuries earlier, in the “sīmurgh” depicted on the buckle of Shapur I (AD 240–272) on the Rag-i Bībī rock relief in northern Afghanistan, and in the scene of a prince breaking in a foal depicted on an Eastern Sasanian silver dish attributed to the first half of the fourth century. Nicholas Sims-Williams has referred to the personal name Purlang-zin, spelt πορλαγγοζινο in Greek script, in a Bactrian document which was almost certainly written in the fourth century under Sasanian rule, claiming that this may be translated as “the man with the panther’s skin” and that it represents “a clear reference to the zīn-i palang of Rustam.” [...] the first element of this name, is the Bactrian word for “panther” or “leopard”.[1]

Rustam's background

Rostam in the murals of Panjikent, 7-8th century CE. He is represented with an elongated skull, in the fashion of the Alchon Huns.[2][3][4][5]

In the Shahnameh, Rostam is a native of Zabulistan, a historical region roughly corresponding to today's Zabul Province, southern Afghanistan. His mother Rudaba was a princess of Kabul. Rostam is the champion of champions and is involved in numerous stories, constituting some of the most popular (and arguably some of most masterfully created) parts of the Shahnameh. In Shahnameh, Rostam—like his grandfather Sam—works as both a faithful military general as well as king-maker for the Kayanian dynasty of Persia.

As a young child, he slays the maddened white elephant of the king Manuchehr with just one blow of the mace owned by his grandfather Sam, son of Nariman. He then tames his legendary stallion, Rakhsh.

The etymology of Rostam's name is from Common Iranian "*rautas-taxma-, "'river-strong', i.e. 'as strong as a river',[6] Rostam's mother is Rūdāba "(she) of the River Water",[6] and his father is Zāl, who has white hair.

Birth and early life

The simurgh arrives to assist with the birth of Rustam (Mohammad Zaman, 1675-1676)

Rostam's mother Rudaba, the princess of Kabul, was known for her peerless beauty, and Rostam's father was Zāl. Zāl was one of Persia's most powerful warriors and a great general who conquered many rebellious tribes and ruled over Zabulistan. Zāl was known for his wisdom and was unparalleled in riding and fighting on horseback. He once demonstrated his skills to Emperor Manuchehr to seek his approval to marry his lover Rudaba.

In Persian mythology, Rudaba's labor of Rostam was prolonged due to the extraordinary size of her baby. Zāl, her lover and husband, was certain that his wife would die in labor. Rudaba was near death when Zāl decided to summon the Simurgh. The Simurgh appeared and instructed him upon how to perform a Rostamzad, a Caesarean section, thus saving both Rudaba and the child.

After Zāl's father, Sam came to know of his grandchild's birth, he rushed to see Rostam and was overjoyed. Rostam was brought up and trained by Zāl in warfare. When Rostam single-handedly slew a mad elephant, his father sent him on his first military assignment.

Rostam's task was to conquer the fortress on the summit of Mt Sipand where his great grandfather, Nariman, once besieged it and was slain in the battle. Rostam breached the fortress, defeated the enemy, ransacked its treasury and reported his success to his father, Zāl and grandfather, Sam.

Haft Khan

Rostam kills Esfandiyār. Medieval Persian miniature

He passes through a hero's journey to save his sovereign, Kay Kāvus who is captured by the Divs of Mazandaran. This journey is called "Rostam's Seven Quests".

There are some similarities between the legends of Rostam and those pertaining to the great Irish hero Cú Chulainn. They both defeat a ferocious beast as a very young man, slay their sons in combat ("Rostam and Sohrab", a motif also found in the Hildebrandslied), are virtually invincible in combat, and are murdered by treachery while killing their murderer on their last breath.[7]

Two Persian heroes, Rostam and Esfandiyār, share stories with the Labours of Hercules.[8]

Alternate views

It is written by the Royal Central Asian Society in the Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society that the struggle between Rostam and the Div-e Sepid "White Demon" represents a struggle between Persians and invaders from the northern Caspian provinces.[9]

Death

Rustam Shoots His Half-brother Shaghad through a Plane Tree

In Shahnameh, the life span of the heroes who are from the generation of Sam Yale (Rostam's grandfather) is mentioned very long, and in the same way, the life span of Rostam was about six hundred years, but he did not die a natural death. His half brother Shaghad killed him, with throwing him in a well full of poisonous spears.In this incident, another of Rostam's brothers named Zavareh and Rakhsh were also killed.

Descent and other relations

Rostam and Kay Kavus in castle

With Tahmineh, princess of Samangan, Rostam had a son called Sohrab, who was killed accidentally by his father in the time of Kay Kavus.Rostam had a grandson name Borzu, son of Sohrab in Borzu Nama. In addition to Sohrab, Rostam had a son named Faramarz, who is mostly present in Faramarznameh. In Banu Goshasp Nama Rostam later had a daughter called Banu Goshasp, who had a full brother called Faramarz, and both became renowned heroes in Turan and India. Goshasp, through her marriage with Giv had a son, Bijan. He had a son name Jahangir in Jahangirnameh.

Rostam had also a half brother called Shaghad, who was always jealous of him and provoked his death.He had also another brother name Zavara.

Just as famous as Rostam was his horse Rakhsh, which had an incredibly long life like Rostam, due to divine protection, and died at the same time as Rostam.

Historical basis

Ernst Herzfeld maintained that the dynasty of Gondophares represented the House of Suren, highest of the five premier families of Parthian Empire, invested with the hereditary right of commanding the royal armies, and placing the crown on the king's head at the coronation. Probably when around 129 BCE, nomad peoples, especially the Indo-Scythians (Sacaraucae, Old Persian Sakaravaka "nomadic Saka” or Saraucae) and the Tocharians attacked the eastern frontier of Parthia, defense was entrusted by the Parthian emperors to the Surens; and the latter eventually not only repelled the Indo-Scythians, but pursued them into Arachosia and the Punjab, this event probably representing interitus Saraucarum ( the perishing of the Sacaraucae) of Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus (Prologue 42).

Echoes of these events are preserved in the legends of the Sistān cycle, partly incorporated in the Shahnameh, but once also surviving as independent epics, such as the Garšāspnāma mentioned in the Tārikh-e Sistān, and the Ketāb al-Sakisarān cited by al-Masudi. These related the deeds of the hero Garshasp and his descendants, Narimān, Sām, Zāl or Dastān, and above all of the latter's son Rostam. It is difficult to relate the Indo-Parthian names known from coins and history to those of the epic, which are possibly honorific titles, since a recently reported silver coin describes Gondophares (spelt in Greek script Hyndopharres) as surnamed Sām. A single ruler may of course have received more than one such title, and the historical names may be repeated in succeeding generations.[10]

Family tree

GarshaspMardas
NarimanZahhak
SāmMehrab KaboliSindukht
ZālRudaabeh
ShaghadRostamTahmineh
FaramarzSohrab

Mughal era manuscripts depicting Rostam's seven labours and other feats:

See also

References

  1. Sims-Williams, Nicholas; Sims-Williams, Ursula (Summer 2014). "Rustam and his zīn-i palang". Iran Nameh. 29 (2): 252–3. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  2. Rezakhani, Khodadad. ReOrienting the Sasanians: East Iran in Late Antiquity. Edinburgh University Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-1-4744-0030-5.
  3. "A Silk Road Renaissance - Archaeology Magazine". www.archaeology.org.
  4. "It is possible that the Sogdian aristocratic culture of that time preserved some memory of the glorious days of Khingila, the first Hephthalite conqueror of India. The profile of Rustam, shown on different paintings at Pendzhikent, is very distinct from the other depictions in the Sogdian art, and resembles the Hephthalite prototypes. The portraits feature narrow skulls, V-shaped eyebrows, hooked noses and heavy jaws, and thus closely resemble some portraits of Khingila on the coins(Grenet 2002, 218-219)." Kurbanov, Aydogdy (2014). "THE HEPHTHALITES: ICONOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS" (PDF). Tyragetia: 317–334.
  5. Grenet, Frantz. Regional interaction in Central Asia and Northwest India in the Kidarite and Hephthalite periods. p. 218.
  6. Sims-Williams, Nicholas; Sims-Williams, Ursula (Summer 2014). "Rustam and his zīn-i palang". Iran Nameh. 29 (2): 250–1. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  7. Connell Monette, The Medieval Hero: Christian and Muslim Traditions. (Saarsbruck: 2008).
  8. Connell Monette, The Medieval Hero: Christian and Muslim Traditions. (Saarsbruck: 2008), pp. 227-28.
  9. Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society By Royal Central Asian Society
  10. Rostam at Encyclopædia Iranica

Sources

Persian sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.