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Asuristan (Assyria) was a province of the Sassanid Empire (226651). The Sassanid Empire or Sassanian Dynasty or Sassanian Dynasty (ساسانیان) is the name used for the third Iranian dynasty and the second Persian empire Events By Place Asia Cao Rui becomes emperor of the Kingdom of Wei of China. Events Europe Clovis II, king of Neustria and Burgundy, marries the future Saint Bathilde. The territory was taken during the fall of the Parthian Empire. The Sassanians renamed Babylon, to Asuristan. [1][2] It is nowadays known as Iraq. [3] The province for the most part streched from Mosul to Adiabene. For the village in Azerbaijan see Mosul Azerbaijan. Mosul (الموصل Al Mūṣul, Kurdish: Mosul/Ninawa, Musul Adiabene (from the Αδιαβηνή Adiabene, itself derived from Aramaic syr ܚܕܝܐܒ Ḥaḏy’aḇ or Ḥḏay’aḇ) was [4] While the official religion of the Sassanid empire was Zoroastrians during the third and fourth century, Jews and Christians outnumbered them in the Asuristan province. [5] Its inhabitants were mostly working as agricultural. Agriculture refers to the production of goods through the growing of plants and fungi and the raising of domesticated Animals The study of agriculture [6]

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References

  1. ^ http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0041-977X(1997)60%3A2%3C349%3ATEOTBT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-X
  2. ^ Iran: Sasanian Empire - Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  3. ^ History of Iran: Median Empire
  4. ^ The Decline of Iranshahr: Irrigation and Environments in the History of the Middle East, By Peter Christensen. "Aturia" redirects here For the Fossil Nautilus Genus, see Aturia (cephalopod. Assyria was one of three provinces (Armenia Mesopotamia and Assyria created by the Roman emperor Trajan in 116 C Sennacherib II, or more commonly Sanharib, was an Assyrian king of northern Asuristan in 372 AD. Page 291-292
  5. ^ The Fire, the Star and the Cross: Minority Religions in Medieval and Early Modern Iran, By Aptin Khanbaghi, page 6
  6. ^ The Cambridge History of Iran edited by W.B. Fischer, Ilya Gershevitch, Ehsan Yarshster

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