Timeline of the Sasanian Empire

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Sasanian Empire timeline including important events and territorial evolution.

The Sassanid Empire or Sassanian Dynasty is the name used for the Persian dynasty which lasted from 224 to 651 AD.

Coin of Ardashir I.
Cameo of Shapur I humiliating Emperor Valerian.
  • 224 - Ardashir I introduces the title Šāhanšāh (king of kings); the Sasanid reign is founded.
  • c. 224-240 – Zoroastrianism belief experiences an era of recovery under the reign of Ardashir I.
  • 230 - The Sassanian army assaults the Roman-controlled fraction of Upper Mesopotamia and lay hands on Nisibis, but fails to catch it.
  • 237-238 - Ardashir I begins another rushes on the Eastern Roman Provinces and occupies Harran and Nisibis.
  • 241 - Coronation of Shapur I.
  • c. 242-273 - Mani makes a journey in Persia.
  • 252-256 - Shapur I moves forward to the Eastern Roman Provinces.
  • c. 259 - Defeat and capture of Valerian by Shapur I.
  • c. 260 - 2nd foray of the Eastern Roman Provinces by Shapur I.
  • c. 261 - Odaenathus, the ruler of Palmyra, stops the triumphant Persian troops coming back home following the looting of Antioch, scores a notable conquest against Shapur I and drives the Persians back across the Euphrates.
  • 271 - Coronation of Hormizd I.
  • 273 - Coronation of Bahram I.
  • 274 or 277 - The execution of Mani by influential Zoroastrian high priest Kartir.
  • 276 - Coronation of Bahram II.
An inscription of Kartir, with a relief of him holding the text
A small fragment of the Paikuli inscription; Middle Persian version
  • c. 294 - Narseh’s Paikuli inscription in Iraq next to the Persian frontier.
  • 296 - Narseh raids Armenia, expels Tiridates, and quells the Romans.
  • 297- Roman Emperor Galerius undoes Narseh. The Treaty of Nisibis compels Narseh to abandon Armenia and Mesopotamia.
  • c. 301 - The realm of Armenia is the first nation to accept Christianity as the state religion.
  • 302 - Resignation of Narseh; Coronation of Hormizd II.
  • 309 - Coronation of Shapur II.
  • 325 - Shapur II falls upon Arab people and makes impregnable the empire’s frontiers.
  • 338 - Shapur II retrieves the five regions gave in by Narseh to Rome.
  • 348 - Shapur II seizes Mesopotamia.
  • c. 360 - Fondation of the Kidarite kingdom.
  • 363 - War between Julian and Persian troops follows his back off and demise; the surrendered territories and Nisibis are brought back to Persia.
  • 376 - The armistice signed by Rome and Persia.
  • 379 - Death of Shapur II and the accession of Ardashir II.
  • 383 - Coronation of Shapur III.
  • 399 - Coronation of Yazdegerd I, titled “the Sinner” owing to his efforts to control the influence of Zoroastrian clergy and his leniency towards other believes.
  • 409 - Christian are allowed to publicly worship and to construct churches.[1]
Coin of Bahram V.
Khosrow I seated on a throne.
  • 531 - Coronation of Khosrow I.
  • c. 531 - Slaughter and crackdown of the Mazdak's followers.
  • c. 531 - Farming, governmental, military, communal reforms.
  • c. 531 - Conversion of Panchatantra, a Sanskrit-written book-story to Middle Persian.
  • 533 - End of conflict between Persia and Byzantine Empire (the one that started in 524).
  • 541 - Lazic War commences between the Byzantines and the Sassanids for control over Lazica.
  • c. 554 - Procopius, Byzantine expert and observer to the battles between Khosrow I and Justinian I, which he writes in his De bello Persico (Latin tr., 1833), dies.
Scenes of the Abyssinian–Persian wars
Coin of Yazdegerd III.

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