One Person, Several Names: Median or Old Persian?

Amir Zamani

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Published on 02 December 2023

https://doi.org/10.22034/hunara.2023.183637

Abstract
  The Persepolis Fortification archive provides new insights into the study of Old Iranian, particularly regarding the debate over the "Median language". The archive contains numerous Iranian names in Elamite transcription, allowing for the identification of phonetic differences between Old Persian and ...  Read More

Causality or Correlation: the Decline of Rome Due to the Sasanians

Nathan Decety

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Published on 16 January 2024

https://doi.org/10.22034/hunara.2024.434876.1003

Abstract
  The existence of the Sasanian Kingdom is considered an important facet of the Roman Empire’s downfall because it is believed the Sasanians were more competent or powerful than their predecessors - the Parthian Kingdom. This paper compares the total power of the Parthian and Sasanian kingdoms and ...  Read More

Ancient Georgia and pre-Islamic Iran: Issues of Cultural Relations in the Light of Glyptic Data

Ketevan Ramishvili; Helen Giunashvili

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Published on 13 February 2024

https://doi.org/10.22034/hunara.2023.176111

Abstract
  In addition to the many realms of fine arts, the issues of Georgian-Iranian cultural interactions of pre-Islamic periods that merit our particular interest were adequately expressed in such a minor form of arts as glyptic, beginning from the Achaemenian days up to the Sasanian period. Glyptic artifacts, ...  Read More

Mesopotamian Astrology about Elam: An Introductory Overview

Enrique Quintana Cifuentes

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Published on 16 March 2024

https://doi.org/10.22034/hunara.2024.192214

Abstract
  In this paper, the focus is on examining astrological aspects related to Elam, particularly from the Mesopotamian perspective, emphasizing Assyrian and Babylonian texts from the 1st Millennium BC. This brief exploration encompasses a diverse array of texts, including oracles, prophecies, and astrological ...  Read More

The Language of the Parthians Living in the Roman Empire

Berta González Saavedra; Juan Antonio Álvarez-Pedrosa

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Published on 04 April 2024

https://doi.org/10.22034/hunara.2024.447407.1004

Abstract
  During the last years of the Republic, the image that the Romans had, regarding the Parthian population, was that of threat and hostility (Cicero’s Letters). However, the relationship between the two peoples changed over time, and in Tacitus and Suetonius’ texts, we find that the Parthian ...  Read More