Atropatene Ātṛpātakāna | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
c. 323 BC–226 AD | |||||||||
Status | Autonomous state, frequently a vassal of the Parthian Empire (148/7 BC–226 AD) | ||||||||
Capital | Ganzak | ||||||||
Religion | Zoroastrianism[1] | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
King | |||||||||
Historical era | Antiquity | ||||||||
• Established | c. 323 BC | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 226 AD | ||||||||
|
History of Iran |
---|
Timeline Iran portal |
Atropatene (Old Persian: Ātṛpātakāna; Pahlavi: Ādurbādagān Ancient Greek: Ἀτροπατηνή), also known as Media Atropatene, was an ancient Iranian kingdom established in c. 323 BC by the Persian satrap Atropates. The kingdom, centered in present-day northern Iran, was ruled by Atropates' descendants until the early 1st-century AD, when the Parthian Arsacid dynasty supplanted them.[2] It was conquered by the Sasanians in 226, and turned into a province governed by a marzban ("margrave").[3] Atropatene was the only Iranian region to remain under Zoroastrian authority from the Achaemenids to the Arab conquest without interruption, aside from being briefly ruled by the Macedonian king Alexander the Great (r. 336–323 BC).
The name of Atropatene was also the nominal ancestor of the name of the historic Azerbaijan region in Iran.[4]
Atropatene see Azarbaijan