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Hormizd (Ormazd) IV, King of Sasanian Empire

Hormizd (Ormazd) IV, King of Sasanian Empire

Male - 590


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  • Name Hormizd (Ormazd) IV  
    Suffix King of Sasanian Empire 
    Gender Male 
    Death 590 
    Cause: murdered 
    Notes 
    • «b»http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps31/ps31_265.htm«/b»

      Hormizd IV . War with Rome (Byzantium) continued. The Persians were defeated by Maurice at Constantia (581). In 589 the Romans took Martyropolis, while the Romans won an important victory near Nisibis. The war continued indecisively, weakening both sides.

      Persia was invaded by Arabs. The advance of the Turks constituted a real danger, but they were defeated by the Persian general Bahram . Bahram was ordered to invade Lazica but was met and defeated by the Romans on the Araxes. Superseded and insulted by the king, he rebelled. Hormizd was deposed and murdered; he was succeeded by his son, Khusrau.



      «b»http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hormizd_IV



      Hormizd IV«/b», son of «u»Khosrau I «/u», reigned as the twenty-first «u»King of Persia «/u» from 579 to 590.

      He seems to have been imperious and violent, but not without some kindness of heart. Some very characteristic stories are told of him by «u»Tabari «/u» («u»Theodor Nöldeke «/u», «i»Geschichte d. Perser und Araber unter den Sasaniden«/i», 264 ff.). His father's sympathies had been with the nobles and the priests. Hormizd IV protected the common people and introduced a severe discipline in his army and court. When the priests demanded a persecution of the Christians, he declined on the ground that the throne and the government could only be safe if it gained the goodwill of both concurring religions. The consequence was that Hormizd IV raised a strong opposition in the ruling classes, which led to many executions and confiscations.

      When Hormizd IV came to the throne in 579, he killed his brothers. From his father he had inherited a war against the «u»Byzantine Empire «/u» and against the «u»Turks «/u» in the east, and negotiations of peace had just begun with the Emperor «u»Tiberius II «/u», but Hormizd IV haughtily declined to cede anything of the conquests of his father. Therefore the accounts given of him by the Byzantine authors, «u»Theophylact Simocatta «/u»(iii.16 ff), «u»Menander Protector «/u» and «u»John of Ephesus «/u» (vi.22), who give a full account of these negotiations, are far from favourable.

      Determined to teach the haughty prince a lesson, the Roman General «u»Maurice «/u» crossed the frontier and invaded Kurdistan. The next year, he even planned to penetrate into Media and Southern «u»Mesopotamia «/u» but the «u»Ghassanid «/u» sheikh al-Mundhir allegedly betrayed the Roman cause by informing Hormizd IV of the Roman Emperor's plans. Maurice was forced to retreat in a hurry but during the course his retreat to the Roman frontier, he drew the Persian general Adarman into an engagement and defeated him.

      In 582, the Persian general Tamchosro crossed the Perso-Roman frontier and attacked Constantia but was defeated and killed. However, the deteriorating physical condition of the Roman Emperor Tiberius forced Maurice to return to Constantiople immediately. Meanwhile John Mystacon, who had replaced Maurice, attacked the Persians at the junction of the Nymphius and the Tigris but was defeated and forced to withdraw. Another defeat brought about his replacement by «u»Philippicus «/u».

      Philippicus spent the years 584 and 585 making deep incursions into Persian territory.«u»[1]«/u» The Persians retaliated by attacking Monocartium and «u»Martyropolis «/u» in 585. Philippicus defeated them at Solachon in 586 and besieged the fortress of Chlomoron. After an unsuccessful siege, Philippicus retreated and made a stand at Amida. Soon, however, he relinquished command to Heraclius in 587.

      In the year 588, the Roman troops mutinied and taking advantage of this mutiny, Persian troops once again attacked Constantia but were repulsed. The Romans retaliated with an equally unsuccessful invasion of Arzanene, but defeated another Persian offensive at Martyropolis.

      In 589, the Persians attacked Martyropolis and captured it after defeating Philippicus twice. Philippicus was recalled and was replaced by Comentiolus under whose command the Romans defeated the Persians at Sisauranon. The Romans now laid siege to Martyropolis but at the height of the siege news circulated in Persia about a Turkish invasion.

      The Turks had occupied Balkh and Herat and were penetrating into the heart of Persia when Hormizd IV finally dispatched a contingent under the general «u»Bahram Chobin «/u» to fight them back. Bahram marched upon Balkh and defeated the Turks killing their Khan and capturing his son.

      Soon after the threat from the north was exterminated, Bahram was sent to fight the Romans on the western frontier. He was initially successful, warding off an Iberian offensive against Azerbaijan, raiding in Svaneti and defeating a Roman attack on Albania, but was defeated by the Roman general Romanus in a subsequent battle on the river Araxes. Hormizd, jealous of the rising fame of Bahram, wished to humiliate him and sent him a complete set of women's garments to wear. Bahram responded by writing him an extremely offensive letter. Enraged, Hormizd sent Persian soldiers to arrest Bahram but they moved over to Bahram's side. Now Bahram moved to Persia with a large army to depose the haughty monarch and place himself on the throne.

      Besides, Hormizd's behavior had now turned so unbearable that his son, Khusrau broke into open revolt. With a civil war brewing in Persia, Hormizd did not survive on the Persian throne for long. The magnates deposed and blinded Hormizd IV and proclaimed his son «u»Khosrau II «/u» King. The sources do not agree on how Hormizd was killed: Theophylact states (iv.7) that Khosrau killed him a few days after his father was blinded; the Armenian historian «u»Sebeos «/u» («i»History«/i», Ch.10.75) states that Hormizd's own courtiers killed him.

      «b»References

      «u»1. ^«/u»«/b» Edwards, Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen (1970). «u»The Cambridge Ancient History «/u» Cambridge University Press. pp. 102. «u»ISBN 0521325919 «/u».
    Person ID I60521  Glenn Cook Family
    Last Modified 19 Jun 2013 

    Father Khusrau (Xosrov) I, King of Sasanian Empire   d. 579 
    Mother Kayen of the T'etalats'ik'   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Family ID F551616964  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family   
    Children 
     1. Khusrau II Sassanid, King of Sasanian Empire,   b. Abt 560, Ctesiphon Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 628 (Age ~ 68 years)
    Family ID F551616963  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 19 Jun 2013 

  • Photos
    Hormizd (Ormazd) IV King of Sasanian Empire
    Hormizd (Ormazd) IV King of Sasanian Empire
    Hormizd IV
    Hormizd IV
    Coin of Hormizd IV, found at Karakhodja, Chinese Central Asia.