The paper focuses on the analysis of the term Yezdistan (ÄzdÄ«stÄn) attested in a Yezidi legend, having obvious parallels with the Shahnamehâs âTale of Zahhakâ. It is particularly interesting that this plot does not occur in any of the Kurmanji versions of the Shahnameh ever recorded in Armenia and represents, in fact, a separate legend out of the epic context.
Purchase
Buy instant access (PDF download and unlimited online access):
Institutional Login
Log in with Open Athens, Shibboleth, or your institutional credentials
Personal login
Log in with your brill.com account
| å ¨é¨æé´ | è¿å»ä¸å¹´ | è¿å»30天 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| æè¦æµè§æ¬¡æ° | 231 | 0 | 0 |
| å ¨ææµè§æ¬¡æ° | 542 | 63 | 7 |
| PDFä¸è½½æ¬¡æ° | 415 | 43 | 5 |
The paper focuses on the analysis of the term Yezdistan (ÄzdÄ«stÄn) attested in a Yezidi legend, having obvious parallels with the Shahnamehâs âTale of Zahhakâ. It is particularly interesting that this plot does not occur in any of the Kurmanji versions of the Shahnameh ever recorded in Armenia and represents, in fact, a separate legend out of the epic context.
| å ¨é¨æé´ | è¿å»ä¸å¹´ | è¿å»30天 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| æè¦æµè§æ¬¡æ° | 231 | 0 | 0 |
| å ¨ææµè§æ¬¡æ° | 542 | 63 | 7 |
| PDFä¸è½½æ¬¡æ° | 415 | 43 | 5 |