- Jamasp Namag
The Jamasp Nameh (var: "Jāmāsp Nāmag", "Jāmāsp Nāmeh", "Story of Jamasp") is a
Middle Persian book of revelations. In an extended sense, it is also aprimary source onZoroastrian doctrine and legend. The work is also known as the "Ayādgār ī Jāmāspīg" or "Ayātkār-ī Jāmāspīk", meaning " [In] Memoriam of Jamasp".The text takes the form of a series of questions and answers between Vishtasp and Jamasp, both of whom were amongst Zoroaster's immediate and closest disciples. Vishtasp was the princely protector and patron of Zoroaster while Jamasp was a nobleman at Vishtasp's court. Both are figures mentioned in the
Gathas , the oldest hymns of Zoroastrianism and believed to have been composed by Zoroaster himself.The question-answer series is a common literary technique in . In the past, and among Zoroastrians themselves, this technique was frequently misunderstood to be an indication of a first hand account. The text has survived in three forms:
* aPahlavi manuscript, that is, a rendering of the Middle Persian language using an Aramaic-derived script and accompanied by Aramaic ideograms. The Pahlavi manuscript is damaged and fragmented.
* a transmission inPazand , that is, a rendering of the Middle Persian language using Avestan script (also an Aramaic derivative) but without any non-Iranian vocabulary. The Pazend version has survived in its entirety.
* a Modern Persian translation in Arabic script has also survived. It is slightly younger than the other two manuscripts.ee also
* The Dēnkard, a 10th century compendium of the Zoroastrian beliefs and customs.
* TheBundahishn , a Zoroastrian account of Mazdaencosmogony andcosmology .Bibliography
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