Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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YAGHNOBI
Roland Bielmeier
term for a people and their language, derived from the name of the Yaghnob valley and the Yaghnob river in Tajikistan.
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YĀḤAQQI, Ḥosayn
Morteżā Ḥoseyni Dehkordi
(1903-1968) renowned composer and performer of the violin and the kamānča (spiked fiddle) and instructor of music.
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YAHYA TEPE
Cross-Reference
archeological site in the Soḡun valley, Kerman province, ca. 220 km south of Kerman and 130 km north of the Straits of Hormuz. See TEPE YAHYA.
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YAʿQUB b. LAYṮ b. MOʿADDAL
C. Edmund Bosworth
(r. 247-65/861-79), founder of what may be distinguished as the Laythids, or the “first line” within the Saffarid dynasty.
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YARKAND
Pavel Lurje
a town in Chinese Turkestan, at the southwestern end of the Tarim Basin (38°27' N, 77°16' E; alt. 1,190 m).
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YASNA
William W. Malandra
the name for the central ritual in Zoroastrianism and for the long liturgical text recited during the daily performance of the ritual.
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YAXARTES
Cross-Reference
river in Central Asia. See SYR DARYA, forthcoming online.
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YAZD iv. THE JEWISH DIALECT OF YAZD
Thamar E. Gindin
The name “Judeo-Yazdi” is applied to a Central dialect spoken by some Jews of Yazd. The Jewish community of Yazd is one of the oldest in Persia. Although it had never been large, it was divided into two neighborhoods, referred to as ma:le (NPers. maḥalla).
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YAZDEGERD I
A. Shapur Shahbazi
Sasanian King of kings (r. 399-420) called “the Sinner.” Sasanian-based sources judge Yazdegerd as a tyrant.
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YAZICI, Tahsin
Osman G. Özgüdenlı
(1922-2002), Turkish scholar of Persian language, literature, and culture. During fifty-five years of scholarship, Yazıcı wrote, translated, and edited many books and articles. His translations from Persian into Turkish include Aflāki’s Manāqeb al-ʿārefin, the Persian version of Abu’l-Qāsem Qošayri’s Resāla, and the Aḥwāl-e Mawlānā of Faridun b. Aḥmad Sepahsālār.