
Pahlavi Texts, Part II (SBE18), E.W. West, tr. [1882], at sacred-texts.com
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INTRODUCTION. |
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1. |
General Remarks | |
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2. |
The Dâdistân-î Dînîk | |
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3. |
The Epistles of Mânûskîhar | |
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4. |
The Appendix | |
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Abbreviations used in this volume | |
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TRANSLATIONS. |
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DÂDISTÂN-Î DÎNÎK | |
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1. |
Introductory | |
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2. |
Why a righteous man is better than all creatures, spiritual or worldly | |
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3. |
Why a righteous man is created, and how he should act | |
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4. |
Why a righteous man is great | |
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5. |
How temporal distress is to be regarded | |
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6. |
Why the good suffer more than the bad in this world | |
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7. |
Why we are created, and what we ought to do | |
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8. |
Whether good works done for the dead differ in effect from those ordered or done by themselves | |
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9. |
How far they differ | |
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10. |
The growth of good works during life | |
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11. |
Whether the growth of a good work be as commendable as the original good work | |
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12. |
Whether it eradicates sin equally well | |
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13. |
Whether one is made responsible for all his sins and good works separately at the last account, or only for their balance | |
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14. |
The angels who take account of sin and good works, and how sinners are punished | |
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15. |
The exposure of a corpse does not occasion the final departure of life, and is meritorious | |
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16. |
Whether the soul be aware of, or disturbed by, the corpse being gnawed | |
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CHAP. |
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PAGE |
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17. |
Reasons for the exposure of corpses | |
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18. |
How the corpse and bones are to be disposed of | |
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19. |
Whether departed souls can see Aûharmazd and Aharman | |
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20. |
Where the souls of the righteous and wicked go | |
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21. |
The Dâîtih peak, the Kinvad bridge, and the two paths of departed souls | |
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22. |
Whether the spirits are distressed when a righteous man dies | |
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23. |
How the life departs from the body | |
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24. |
Where a righteous soul stays for the first three nights after death, and what it does next | |
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25. |
Where a wicked soul stays for the first three nights after death, and what it does next | |
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26. |
The nature of heaven and its pleasures | |
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27. |
The nature of hell and its punishments | |
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28. |
Why ceremonies in honour of Srôsh are performed for the three days after a death | |
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29. |
Why Srôsh must be reverenced separately from other angels | |
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30. |
Why three sacred cakes are consecrated at dawn after the third night from a death | |
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31. |
How a righteous soul goes to heaven, and what it finds and does there | |
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32. |
How a wicked soul goes to hell, and what it finds and suffers there | |
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33. |
The position and subdivisions of hell | |
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The two ways from the Dâîtih peak; that of the righteous to heaven, and that of the wicked to hell | |
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35. |
The continuance of mankind in the world till the resurrection | |
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36. |
The preparers of the renovation of the universe | |
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37. |
The contest of the good and evil spirits from the creation till the resurrection, and the condition of creation after the resurrection | |
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38. |
The effect of doing more good works than are necessary for attaining to the supreme heaven | |
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39. |
Reasons for wearing the sacred thread-girdle | |
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40. |
On the sacred shirt and thread-girdle, grace before and after eating, and cleansing the mouth before the after-'grace | |
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41. |
The sin of apostasy, and how to atone for it | |
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42. |
The good works of him who saves others from apostasy | |
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CHAP. |
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43. |
The distance at which the fire can be addressed, the use of a lamp, and the proper order of the propitiatory dedications, when consecrating a sacred cake | |
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44. |
Whether a skilful priest who is employed to perform ceremonies, but is not officially the priest of the district, should be paid a regular stipend | |
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45. |
The separate duties of priests and disciples | |
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46. |
When a priest can abandon the priesthood to obtain a livelihood | |
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47. |
Whether a priest who knows the Avesta, or one who understands the commentary, be more entitled to the foremost place at a sacred feast | |
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48. |
The advantage and proper mode of celebrating the ceremonial | |
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49. |
Whether it be lawful to buy corn and keep it long, so as to raise the price for the sake of profit | |
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50. |
Whether it be lawful to sell wine to foreigners and infidels | |
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51. |
The sin of drunkenness, and what constitutes immoderate drinking | |
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52. |
Whether a man who bargains to deliver wheat in a month, and takes a deposit, is bound to deliver the wheat if its market-price has risen enormously | |
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53. |
Whether it be lawful to sell cattle to those of a different religion | |
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54. |
Whether a man without a son can give away his property to one daughter on his death-bed; the laws of inheritance, and when an adopted son must be appointed, in such a case | |
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55. |
Whose duty it is to order the ceremonies after a death | |
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56. |
The laws of adoption and family-guardianship | |
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57. |
Those who are fit, or unfit, for adoption | |
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58. |
The three kinds of adoption | |
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59. |
The least amount of property that requires the appointment of an adopted son | |
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60. |
The sin of not appointing an adopted son, or of appointing a dishonest one | |
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61. |
The merit and demerit of family-guardianship | |
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62. |
The laws of inheritance | |
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63. |
Whether it be lawful to seize property from foreigners and infidels | |
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CHAP. |
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64. |
The origin of Gâyômard, Mashyâîh, and Mashyayôîh | |
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65. |
The origin of next-of-kin marriage | |
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66. |
Regarding the cost of religious rites, and whether a priest's tot fees can be reduced when others will take less | |
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67. |
The cause of the rainbow | |
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68. |
The cause of the phases of the moon | |
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69. |
The cause of eclipses | |
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70. |
The causes of river-beds | |
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71. |
What things happen through destiny, and what through exertion | |
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72. |
The seven heinous sinners, and the necessity of avoiding him who commits unnatural intercourse | |
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73. |
Whether the stench of such intercourse reaches the sky | |
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74. |
Whether that stench disturbs the archangels | |
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75. |
Whether the angels raise such a sinner from the dead at the resurrection | |
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76. |
Whether it be a good work to kill such a sinner | |
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77. |
Why such intercourse is a heinous sin | |
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78. |
Why adultery is heinous, and how one can atone for it | |
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79. |
The sin of not repeating the full grace before drinking (when one is able to do so), and how one can atone for it | |
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80. |
Regarding him who does not order ceremonies | |
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81. |
About the ceremonies for the living soul | |
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82. |
About him who pays for ceremonies and him who takes the money without performing them | |
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83. |
Whether a priest must undertake all religious rites | |
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84. |
Whether gifts to the priesthood for ceremonies can be diminished or increased | |
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85. |
The advantages of increasing such gifts | |
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86. |
The harm of diminishing such gifts | |
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87. |
Why it is good to give such gifts | |
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88. |
About the cost of religious rites in Pârs | |
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89. |
Whether when a man has once resolved to go into Pârs, with gifts for the priesthood, it be lawful for him to send another man with the gifts | |
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90. |
The seven immortal rulers in the region of Khvanîras before the coming of the good religion | |
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91. |
The nature and material of the sky | |
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92. |
The course and benefit of the water of Arekdvisûr | |
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CHAP. |
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93. |
Tîstar's seizing of water from the ocean to rain it upon the earth, and his conflict with Apâôsh | |
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94. |
Conclusion | |
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EPISTLES OF MÂNÛSKÎHAR | |
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EPISTLE I. To the good people of Sîrkân. |
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1. |
Introductory compliments, acknowledging receipt of a complaining epistle | |
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2. |
Deploring the false opinions in circulation, owing to the fiend, about the purification ceremonies | |
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3. |
Excusing any defects in this epistle for various reasons detailed | |
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4. |
Deprecating the disuse of the Bareshnûm ceremony, as decreed by his brother; such disuse being contrary to scripture and the commentaries | |
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5. |
Alluding to the one-sided view of the opinions of the commentators adopted by the decree they had sent | |
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6. |
Discussing the different statements of the commentators as to the number of purifiers and washings | |
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7. |
Discussing the proper quantities of liquids to be used, and the 300 pebbles | |
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8. |
Regarding the stirring up of the bull's urine when fetid, as mentioned in the Sakâdûm Nask | |
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9. |
Deciding that the commentary which teaches the most efficient mode of purification is to be followed, when there are no special reasons for acting otherwise | |
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10. |
Reserving other matters for special instructions to the priests, but warning them not to obey the decree now denounced | |
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11. |
Arranging for the enforcement of his decision, until he can write further, or come himself; and concluding with benediction and date | |
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EPISTLE II. To his brother, Zâd-sparam. |
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1. |
Acknowledging receipt of a former epistle, and announcing the arrival of complaints about his brother's reprehensible decree | |
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2. |
Disapproving of the decree and its mode of dealing with the commentaries, whose exact agreement is as unlikely as the simultaneous occurrence of several particular conjunctions of the planets | |
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3. |
Exhorting him not to seek for new rules, but to adhere strictly to the old customs | |
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4. |
Reasserting his opinions, and protesting against the notion that the decree was in accordance with the practice of all the purifiers in Irân | |
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5. |
Commenting upon the secrecy with which the decree had been prepared, and the evil consequences resulting from it | |
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6. |
Persuading him to remain steadfast in the faith, and threatening him if he should not | |
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7. |
Explaining that he had previously written to Sîrkân, and would shortly come there himself; but ordering the appointment of proper purifiers | |
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8. |
Mentioning his general epistle to all of the good religion in Irân, and describing the evil consequences of continued disobedience, including the possibility of his own retreat to foreign lands | |
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9. |
Giving further instructions for satisfying the discontented, and opposing the heterodox; and concluding without date | |
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EPISTLE III. To all of the good religion in Irân. Forbidding the substitution of a fifteenfold washing for the Bareshnûm ceremony; and dated A.Y. 250 (A.D. 881) | |
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APPENDIX | |
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I. |
Legends relating to Keresâsp | |
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II. |
The Nîrang-i Kustî | |
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III. |
The meaning of Khvêtûk-das | |
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IV. |
The Bareshnûm ceremony | |
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V. |
Finding a corpse in the wilderness | |
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INDEX | |
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CORRECTIONS | |
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Transliteration of Oriental Alphabets adopted for the Translations of the Sacred Books of the East |
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