Gāthā

Zoroastrian literature

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development of Avestan language

  • In Avestan language

    …older being that of the Gāthās, which reflects a linguistic stage (dating from c. 600 bc) close to that of Vedic Sanskrit in India. The greater part of the Avesta is written in a more recent form of the language and shows gradual simplification and variation in grammatical forms. When…

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guide to Zoroaster’s ideas

    occurrence of eschatological themes

    • Last Judgment tympanum
      In eschatology: Zoroastrianism

      Moreover, Zarathustra’s own writings, the Gathas, express many eschatological themes, including a radically egalitarian ethic and morality, respect for manual labour (e.g., the life of the herdsman), and disdain for the violence and self-aggrandizement of the powerful. As time passed and the Endtime did not materialize, Zoroastrianism developed into a…

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    Persian literature

    • wine bottle
      In Persian literature: Ancient Iran

      The oldest texts are the Gāthās, 16 (or perhaps 17) short hymns written in an archaic form of an Old Iranian language called Avestan, named for the Avesta, the holy book of Zoroastrianism. The Gāthās have been handed down as a part of the Avesta along with several more recent…

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    religious core of Avesta

    • In Avesta

      …of songs or hymns, the Gāthās, thought to be in the main the very words of Zarathushtra. They form a middle section of the chief liturgical part of the canon, the Yasna, which contains the rite of the preparation and sacrifice of haoma. The Visp-rat is a lesser liturgical scripture,…

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    • religious sites of ancient Indo-Iranian peoples
      In ancient Iranian religion: Sources of knowledge

      …great antiquity, of which the Gāthās (“Songs”) of the Prophet Zarathustra (also known by his Greek name, Zoroaster) and much of the Yashts are among the oldest. The Gāthās contain expressions of Zarathustra’s religious vision which, in many ways, is a complicated reinterpretation of inherited Iranian religious ideas. The Yashts…

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    scripture of Zoroastrianism

    • Zoroastrian Fire Temple of Yazd, Iran
      In Zoroastrianism: The reformation of Zarathushtra

      …to place Zarathushtra’s hymns, the Gāthās, in their historical context. Not a single place or person mentioned in them is known from any other source. Vishtāspa, the prophet’s protector, can only be the namesake of the father of Darius, the Achaemenid king. All that may safely be said is that…

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    • Zoroastrian Fire Temple of Yazd, Iran
      In Zoroastrianism: Sources

      Only the hymns, or Gāthās, are attributable to Zarathushtra. They are written in various metres and in a dialect different from the rest of the Avesta, except for seven chapters, chiefly in prose, that appear to have been composed shortly after the prophet’s demise. All these texts are embedded…

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