Zahhak

{{Short description|Evil figure in Iranian mythology}}{{For|the Homestuck character|Equius Zahhak}}{{redirect|Zahak|the city in southeastern Iran|Zehak|the village in Hormozgan Province|Zahak-e Pain}}

{{More citations needed|date=June 2019}}

{{cleanup-lang|date=January 2024}}

{{Infobox person

| honorific_prefix = Shah

| name = Zahhak

| honorific_suffix = A king of Iranian myths and legends

| image = Mir Musavvir 002 (Zahhak).jpg

| image_upright =

| landscape =

| alt =

| caption = Zahhak in the Shahnameh

| native_name =

| native_name_lang =

| pronunciation =

| birth_name =

| birth_date =

| birth_place =

| baptised =

| disappeared_date =

| disappeared_place =

| disappeared_status =

| death_date =

| death_place =

| death_cause =

| body_discovered =

| resting_place =

| resting_place_coordinates =

| burial_place =

| burial_coordinates =

| monuments = Shahr-e Zahuk (modern-day Hazarajat)

| nationality =

| other_names = Azhi Dahāka{{-}}Bēvar Asp

| siglum =

| citizenship =

| education =

| alma_mater =

| occupation =

| years_active =

| era =

| employer =

| organization =

| agent =

| known_for =

| notable_works =

| style =

| net_worth =

| height =

| television =

| title =

| term =

| predecessor =

| successor =

| party =

| movement =

| opponents =

| boards =

| criminal_charges =

| criminal_penalty =

| criminal_status =

| spouse = Arnavaz{{-}}Shahrnaz

| partner =

| children =

| parents =

| mother =

| father = Mardas

| relatives =

| family =

| callsign =

| awards =

| website =

| module =

| module2 =

| module3 =

| module4 =

| module5 =

| module6 =

| signature =

| signature_size =

| signature_alt =

| footnotes =

}}

File:"Zahhak is Told His Fate", Folio 29v from the Shahnama (Book of Kings) of Shah Tahmasp MET DP107120.jpg.]]

Zahhāk or Zahāk{{cite web |url=https://www.academia.edu/2916523 |title=zahāk or wolflike serpent in the Persian and kurdish Mythology | khosro gholizadeh |publisher=Academia.edu |date=1970-01-01 |access-date=2015-12-23|last1=Gholizadeh |first1=Khosro }} ({{IPA|fa|zæhɒːk|pron}}{{cite web |author=loghatnaameh.com |url=http://www.loghatnaameh.org/dehkhodaworddetail-cd5088b4eaa749f8a25507f1a63b9fc7-fa.html |title=ضحاک بیوراسب | پارسی ویکی |publisher=Loghatnaameh.org |access-date=2015-12-23 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201182300/http://www.loghatnaameh.org/dehkhodaworddetail-cd5088b4eaa749f8a25507f1a63b9fc7-fa.html |archive-date=2014-02-01 }}) ({{langx|Prs|ضحّاک}}), also known as Zahhak the Snake Shoulder ({{langx|fa|ضحاک ماردوش|Zahhāk-e Mārdoush}}), is an evil figure in Persian mythology, evident in ancient Persian folklore as Azhi Dahāka ({{langx|fa|اژی دهاک}}), the name by which he also appears in the texts of the Avesta.{{cite book |last=Bane |first=Theresa |title=Encyclopedia of Demons in World Religions and Cultures |publisher=McFarland |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-7864-8894-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=njDRfG6YVb8C&pg=PA335 |access-date=1 October 2018 |page=335}} In Middle Persian he is called Dahāg ({{langx|fa|دهاگ}}) or Bēvar Asp ({{langx|fa|بیور اسپ}}) the latter meaning "he who has 10,000 horses".{{lang|fa|کجا بیوراسپش همی خواندند / چُنین نام بر پهلوی راندند
کجا بیور از پهلوانی شمار / بود بر زبان دری ده‌هزار}}{{cn|date=January 2024}}
{{cite web |title=Characters of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh |url=http://www.heritageinstitute.com/zoroastrianism/shahnameh/characters.htm |publisher=heritageinstitute.com |access-date=26 February 2016}} In Zoroastrianism, Zahhak (going under the name Aži Dahāka) is considered the son of Ahriman, the foe of Ahura Mazda.{{cite web |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/iran-iv-myths-and-legends |title=Persia: iv. Myths an Legends |publisher=Encyclopaedia Iranica |access-date=2015-12-23}} In the Shāhnāmeh of Ferdowsi, Zahhāk is the son of a ruler named Merdās.

Etymology and derived words

Aži (nominative ažiš) is the Avestan word for "serpent" or "dragon".For Azi Dahaka as dragon see: Ingersoll, Ernest, et al., (2013). The Illustrated Book of Dragons and Dragon Lore. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books. ASIN B00D959PJ0 It is cognate to the Vedic Sanskrit word ahi, "snake", and without a sinister implication.

The original meaning of dahāka is uncertain. Among the meanings suggested are "stinging" (source uncertain), "burning" (cf. Sanskrit dahana), "man" or "manlike" (cf. Khotanese daha), "huge" or "foreign" (cf. the Dahae people and the Vedic dasas). In Persian mythology, Dahāka is treated as a proper noun, while the form Zahhāk, which appears in the Shāhnāme, was created through the influence of the unrelated Arabic word ḍaḥḥāk (ضَحَّاك) meaning "one who laughs".

The Avestan term Aži Dahāka and the Middle Persian aždahāg are the source of the Middle Persian Manichaean demon of greed ,Appears numerous time in, for example: D. N. MacKenzie, Mani’s Šābuhragān, pt. 1 (text and translation), BSOAS 42/3, 1979, pp. 500-34, pt. 2 (glossary and plates), BSOAS 43/2, 1980, pp. 288-310. Old Armenian mythological figure Aždahak, Modern Persian 'aždehâ/aždahâ', ({{lang|fa|اژدها}}) Tajik Persian 'aždaho', ({{lang|tg|аждаҳо}}) Urdu 'aždahā' ({{lang|ur|{{nq|اژدہا}}}}), as well as the Kurdish ejdîha ({{lang|ckb|ئەژدیها}}) which usually mean "dragon".

The name also migrated to Eastern Europe,Detelić, Mirjana. "St Paraskeve in the Balkan Context" In: Folklore 121, no. 1 (2010): 101 (footnote nr. 12). Accessed March 24, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/29534110. assumed the form "ažhdaja" and the meaning "dragon", "dragoness"Erben, Karel Jaromír; Strickland, Walter William. [https://archive.org/details/russianbulgarian00erbe/page/130/mode/2up Russian and Bulgarian folk-lore stories]. London: G. Standring. 1907. p. 130. or "water snake"Kropej, Monika. Supernatural beings from Slovenian myth and folktales. Ljubljana: Institute of Slovenian Ethnology at ZRC SAZU. 2012. p. 102. {{ISBN|978-961-254-428-7}} in Balkanic and Slavic languages.Kappler, Matthias. Turkish Language Contacts in Southeastern Europe. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2010. p. 256. https://doi.org/10.31826/9781463225612

Despite the negative aspect of Aži Dahāka in mythology, dragons have been used on some banners of war throughout the history of Iranian peoples.

The Ažhdarchid group of pterosaurs are named from a Persian word for "dragon" that ultimately comes from Aži Dahāka.

Aži Dahāka (Dahāg) in Zoroastrian literature

File:Bowl Depicting King Zahhak with Snakes Protruding from His Shoulders MET sf64-274-3c.jpg. Modified c. 1926, as many medieval pieces were to make them more attractive.{{Cite web |title=Bowl Depicting King Zahhak with Snakes Protruding from His Shoulders |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/451774 |access-date=2024-04-24 |website=The Metropolitan Museum of Art |language=en}}]]

Aži Dahāka is the most significant and long-lasting of the ažis of the Avesta, the earliest religious texts of Zoroastrianism. He is described as a monster with three mouths, six eyes, and three heads, cunning, strong, and demonic. In other respects Aži Dahāka has human qualities, and is never a mere animal.{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}

Aži Dahāka appears in several of the Avestan myths and is mentioned parenthetically in many more places in Zoroastrian literature.{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}

In a post-Avestan Zoroastrian text, the Dēnkard, Aži Dahāka is possessed of all possible sins and evil counsels, the opposite of the good king Jam (or Jamshid). The name Dahāg (Dahāka) is punningly interpreted as meaning "having ten (dah) sins".{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}} His mother is Wadag (or Ōdag), herself described as a great sinner, who committed incest with her son.{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}

In the Avesta, Aži Dahāka is said to have lived in the inaccessible fortress of Kuuirinta in the land of Baβri, where he worshipped the yazatas Arədvī Sūrā (Anāhitā), divinity of the rivers, and Vayu divinity of the storm-wind. Based on the similarity between Baβri and Old Persian Bābiru (Babylon), later Zoroastrians localized Aži Dahāka in Mesopotamia, though the identification is open to doubt. Aži Dahāka asked these two yazatas for power to depopulate the world. Being representatives of the Good, they refused.

In one Avestan text, Aži Dahāka has a brother named Spitiyura. Together they attack the hero Yima (Jamshid){{clarify|date=January 2019|reason=is this meant as a source?}} and cut him in half with a saw, but are then beaten back by the yazata Ātar, the divine spirit of fire.{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}

According to the post-Avestan texts, following the death of Jam ī Xšēd (Jamshid),{{clarify|date=January 2019|reason=is this meant as a source?}} Dahāg gained kingly rule. Another late Zoroastrian text, the Mēnog ī xrad, says this was ultimately good, because if Dahāg had not become king, the rule would have been taken by the immortal demon Xešm (Aēšma), and so evil would have ruled upon the earth until the end of the world.

Dahāg is said to have ruled for a thousand years, starting from 100 years after Jam lost his Khvarenah, his royal glory (see Jamshid). He is described as a sorcerer who ruled with the aid of demons, the daevas (divs).

The Avesta identifies the person who finally disposed of Aži Dahāka as Θraētaona son of Aθβiya, in Middle Persian called Frēdōn. The Avesta has little to say about the nature of Θraētaona's defeat of Aži Dahāka, other than that it enabled him to liberate Arənavāci and Savaŋhavāci, the two most beautiful women in the world. Later sources, especially the Dēnkard, provide more detail. Feyredon is said to have been endowed with the divine radiance of kings (Khvarenah, New Persian farr) for life, and was able to defeat Dahāg, striking him with a mace. However, when he did so, vermin (snakes, insects and the like) emerged from the wounds, and the god Ormazd told him not to kill Dahāg, lest the world become infected with these creatures. Instead, Frēdōn chained Dahāg up and imprisoned him on the mythical Mt. Damāvand{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}} (later identified with Damāvand).

The Middle Persian sources also prophesy that at the end of the world, Dahāg will at last burst his bonds and ravage the world, consuming one in three humans and livestock. Kirsāsp, the ancient hero who had killed the Az ī Srūwar, returns to life to kill Dahāg.{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}

Zahhak in the Shahname

In Ferdowsi's epic poem, the Shāhnāmah, written c. 1000 AD and part of Iranian folklore, the legend is retold with the main character given the name of Zahhāk and changed from a supernatural monster into an evil human being.

=Zahhak in Persia=

File:Zahhak enthroned.jpgn painting, depicting Zahhāk ascending on the royal throne.]]

According to Ferdowsi, Zahhāk was born as the son of a ruler named Merdās ({{langx|fa|مرداس}}). Because of his Arab lineage, he is sometimes called Zahhāk-e Tāzī ({{langx|fa|ضحاکِ تازی}}), meaning "Zahhāk the Tayyi". He is handsome and clever, but has no stability of character and is easily influenced by his counselors. Ahriman therefore chooses him as a tool to sow disorder and chaos. When Zahhāk is a young man, Ahriman first appears to him as a glib, flattering companion, and by degrees convinces him to kill his own father and inherit his kingdom, treasures and army. Zahhāk digs a deep pit covered over with leaves in a path to a garden where Merdās would pray each morning; Merdās falls in and is killed. Zahhāk thus ascends to the throne.

Ahriman then presents himself to Zahhāk as a marvelous cook. After he presents Zahhāk with many days of sumptuous feasts (introducing meat to the formerly vegetarian human cuisine), Zahhāk is willing to give Ahriman whatever he wants. Ahriman merely asks to kiss Zahhāk on his two shoulders, and Zahhāk permits this. Ahriman places his lips upon Zahhāk's shoulders and suddenly disappears. At once, two black snakes grow from Zahhāk's shoulders. They cannot be surgically removed, as another snake grows to replace one that has been severed. Ahriman appears to Zahhāk in the form of a skilled physician. He counsels Zahhāk that attempting to remove the snakes is fruitless, and that the only means of soothing the snakes and preventing them from killing him is to sate their hunger by supplying them with a stew made from two human brains every day.

=Zahhāk the Emperor=

File:Armenian Princess Tigranuhi before wedding with Ajdahak.jpgn Princess Tigranuhi, daughter of Orontes I Sakavakyats, before wedding with Ajdahak. Azhdahak is identified as Astyages in Armenian sources.]]

At this time, Jamshid, the ruler of the world, becomes arrogant and loses his divine right to rule. Zahhāk presents himself as a savior to discontented Iranians seeking a new ruler. Collecting a great army, Zahhāk hunts Jamshid for many years before finally capturing him. Zahhāk executes Jamshid by sawing him in half and ascends to Jamshid's prior throne. Among his slaves are two of Jamshid's daughters, Arnavāz and Shahrnāz (the Avestan Arənavāci and Savaŋhavāci). Each day, Zahhāk's agents seize two men and execute them so that their brains can feed Zahhāk's snakes. Two men, called Armayel and Garmayel, seek to rescue people from being killed from the snakes by learning cookery and becoming Zahhāk's royal chefs. Each day, Armayel and Garmayel save one of the two men by sending him off to the mountains and faraway plains, and substitute the man's brain with that of a sheep. The saved men are the mythological progenitors of the Kurds.Masudi. Les Prairies d’Or. Trans. Barbier de Meynard and Pavet de Courteille, 9 vols. Paris: La Société Asiatique, 1861.Özoglu, H. (2004). Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State: Evolving Identities, Competing Loyalties, and Shifting Boundaries. Albany: State University of New York Press, pp. 30.

File:Ajdahak Dream.jpg

Zahhāk's tyranny over the world lasts for centuries. One night, Zahhāk dreams of three warriors attacking him. The youngest warrior knocks Zahhāk down with his mace, ties him up, and drags him off toward Mount Damāvand as a large crowd follows. Zahhāk wakes and shouts so loudly that the pillars of the palace shake. Following Arnavāz's counsel, Zahhāk summons wise men and scholars to interpret his dream. His hesitant counsellors remain silent until the most fearless of the men reports that the dream is a vision of the end of Zahhāk's reign at the hands of Fereydun, the young man with the mace. Zahhāk is thrilled to learn the identity of his enemy, and orders his agents to search the entire country for Fereydun and capture him. The agents learn that Fereydun is a boy being nourished on the milk of the marvelous cow Barmāyeh. The spies trace Barmāyeh to the highland meadows where it grazes, but Fereydun and his mother have already fled before them. The agents kill the cow, but are forced to return to Zahhāk with their mission unfulfilled.

=Revolution against Zahhāk=

File:Faridun defeats Zahhak.jpg

{{main|Kāve}}

Zahhāk lives the next few years in fear and anxiety of Fereydun, and thus writes a document testifying to the virtue and righteousness of his kingdom that would be certified by the kingdom's elders and social elite, in the hope that his enemy would be convinced against exacting vengeance. Much of the summoned assembly indulge the testimony out of fear for their lives. However, a blacksmith named Kāva (Kaveh) speaks out in anger for his children having been murdered to feed Zahhāk's snakes, and for his final remaining son being sentenced to the same fate. Zahhāk orders for Kāva's son to be released in a bid to coerce Kāva into certifying the document, but Kāva tears up the document, leaves the court, and creates a flag out of his blacksmith's apron as a standard of rebellion – the Kāviyāni Banner, derafsh-e Kāviyānī (درفش کاویانی). Kāva proclaims himself in support of Fereydun as ruler, and rallies a crowd to follow him to the Alborz mountains, where Fereydun is now living as a young man. Fereydun agrees to lead the people against Zahhāk and has a mace made for him with a head like that of an ox.

Fereydun goes forth to fight against Zahhāk, who has already left his capital, which falls to Fereydun with small resistance. Fereydun frees all of Zahhāk's prisoners, including Arnavāz and Shahrnāz. Kondrow, Zahhāk's treasurer, pretends to submit to Fereydun, but discreetly escapes to Zahhāk and reports to him what has happened. Zahhāk initially dismisses the matter, but he is incensed to learn that Fereydun has seated Jamshid's daughters on thrones beside him like his queens, and immediately hastens back to his city to attack Fereydun. Zahhāk finds his capital held strongly against him, and his army is in peril from the defense of the city. Seeing that he cannot reduce the city, he sneaks into his own palace as a spy and attempts to assassinate Arnavāz and Shahrnāz. Fereydun strikes Zahhāk down with his ox-headed mace, but does not kill him; on the advice of an angel, he binds Zahhāk and imprisons him in a cave underneath Mount Damāvand. Fereydun binds Zahhāk with a lion's pelt tied to great nails fixed into the walls of the cavern, where Zahhāk will remain until the end of the world.

Place names

Shahr-e Zuhak is located in today's Bamyan, Hazarajat region in Afghanistan, which the local people of that region consider to be the main seat of Zahhak.{{Cite web |last= |first= |date= |title=قلعه‌ی باشکوه ضحاک در سرزمین بودای افغانستان + تصاویر |url=https://www.yjc.ir/fa/news/7895278/%D9%82%D9%84%D8%B9%D9%87%E2%80%8C%DB%8C-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B4%DA%A9%D9%88%D9%87-%D8%B6%D8%AD%D8%A7%DA%A9-%D8%AF%D8%B1-%D8%B3%D8%B1%D8%B2%D9%85%DB%8C%D9%86-%D8%A8%D9%88%D8%AF%D8%A7%DB%8C-%D8%A7%D9%81%D8%BA%D8%A7%D9%86%D8%B3%D8%AA%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%B5%D8%A7%D9%88%DB%8C%D8%B1 |access-date=2025-03-13 |website=fa |language=fa}}{{Cite web |date=2012-04-14 |title=با قلعه ضحاک مار دوش در قلب افغانستان بیشتر آشنا شوید + تصویر {{!}} آوا |url=https://www.avapress.com/fa/report/39807/%C3%99%C2%82%C3%99%C2%84%C3%98%C2%B9%C3%99%C2%87-%C3%98%C2%B6%C3%98%C2%AD%C3%98%C2%A7%C3%9A%C2%A9-%C3%99%C2%85%C3%98%C2%A7%C3%98%C2%B1-%C3%98%C2%AF%C3%99%C2%88%C3%98%C2%B4-%C3%99%C2%82%C3%99%C2%84%C3%98%C2%A8-%C3%98%C2%A7%C3%99%C2%81%C3%98%C2%BA%C3%98%C2%A7%C3%99%C2%86%C3%98%C2%B3%C3%98%C2%AA%C3%98%C2%A7%C3%99%C2%86-%C3%98%C2%A8%C3%9B%C2%8C%C3%98%C2%B4%C3%98%C2%AA%C3%98%C2%B1-%C3%98%C2%A2%C3%98%C2%B4%C3%99%C2%86%C3%98%C2%A7-%C3%98%C2%B4%C3%99%C2%88%C3%9B%C2%8C%C3%98%C2%AF-%C3%98%C2%AA%C3%98%C2%B5%C3%99%C2%88%C3%9B%C2%8C%C3%98%C2%B1 |access-date=2025-03-13 |website=خبرگزاری صدای افغان(آوا) {{!}} اخبار افغانستان و جهان {{!}} Afghan voice agency |language=fa}}

"Zahhak Castle" is the name of an ancient ruin in Hashtrud, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran which according to various experts, was inhabited from the second millennia BC until the Timurid-era. First excavated in the 19th century by British archeologists, Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization has been studying the structure in 6 phases.{{cite web |url=http://www.chn.ir/news/?section=2&id=31507 |script-title=fa:قلعه‌زهاك ‌30 قرن ‌مسكوني ‌بود |trans-title=Castle inhabited 30 centuries |publisher=Cultural Heritage News Agency |date=2007-03-04 |access-date=2006-05-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061001142816/http://www.chn.ir/news/?section=2&id=31507 |archive-date=2006-10-01 |language=fa}}

Legacy

Khamenei Zahak is a derogatory term used to nickname Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, was a main anti Iranian regime chant during 2019-2022 protests of Iranian women where thousands were imprisoned. Sepideh Qolian was put on a trial after crying "Khamenei Zahak we will take you in under the ground".{{cite web | url=https://ir.voanews.com/a/sepideh-gholian--two-more-years-in-prison/7079426.html | title=سپیده قلیان برای شعار «خامنه‌ای ضحاک، می‌کشیمت زیر خاک» به ۲ سال زندان محکوم شد }}{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.com/persian/iran-66243572 | title=دادگاه سپیده قلیان به دلیل «عدم رعایت حجاب» تشکیل نشد؛ «فضای محل برگزاری دادگاه متشنج بود» | work=BBC News فارسی }}

Other dragons in Iranian tradition

Besides Aži Dahāka, several other dragons and dragon-like creatures are mentioned in Zoroastrian scripture:

  • Aži Sruvara{{snd}}the 'horned dragon'
  • Aži Zairita{{snd}}the 'yellow dragon,' that is killed by the hero Kərəsāspa, Middle Persian Kirsāsp.{{Cite book|title=Zamyād Yasht, Yasht 19 of the Younger Avesta (Yasht 19.19)|publisher=Wiesbaden |translator1=Helmut Humbach |translator2=Pallan Ichaporia|year=1998}} (Yasna 9.1, 9.30; Yasht 19.19)
  • Aži Raoiδita{{snd}}the 'red dragon' conceived by Angra Mainyu's to bring about the 'daeva-induced winter' that is the reaction to Ahura Mazda's creation of the Airyanem Vaejah.{{Cite book|title=The Zend-Avesta, The Vendidad|publisher=Greenwood Publish Group|translator=James Darmesteter|year=1972|isbn=0837130700|series=The Sacred Books of the East Series|volume=1}} (Vendidad 1.2)
  • Aži Višāpa{{snd}}the 'dragon of poisonous slaver' that consumes offerings to Aban if they are made between sunset and sunrise (Nirangistan 48).
  • Gandarəβa{{snd}}the 'yellow-heeled' monster of the sea 'Vourukasha' that can swallow twelve provinces at once. On emerging to destroy the entire creation of Asha, it too is slain by the hero Kərəsāspa. (Yasht 5.38, 15.28, 19.41)

The Aži/Ahi in Indo-Iranian tradition

{{see also|Proto-Indo-European religion}}

Stories of monstrous serpents who are killed or imprisoned by heroes or divine beings may date back to prehistory and are found in the myths of many Indo-European peoples, including those of the Indo-Iranians, that is, the common ancestors of both the Iranians and Vedic Indians.

The most obvious point of comparison is that in Vedic Sanskrit ahi is a cognate of Avestan aži. However, In Vedic tradition, the only dragon of importance is Vrtra, but "there is no Iranian tradition of a dragon such as Indian Vrtra" (Boyce, 1975:91-92). Moreover, while Iranian tradition has numerous dragons, all of which are malevolent, Vedic tradition has only one other dragon besides {{IAST|Vṛtra}} - ahi budhnya, the benevolent "dragon of the deep". In the Vedas, gods battle dragons, but in Iranian tradition, this is a function of mortal heroes.

Thus, although it seems clear that dragon-slaying heroes (and gods in the case of the Vedas) "were a part of Indo-Iranian tradition and folklore, it is also apparent that Iran and India developed distinct myths early." (Skjaervø, 1989:192)

Adaptations

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book |year=1975 |author=Boyce, Mary |title=History of Zoroastrianism, Vol. I |location=Leiden |publisher=Brill}}
  • Ingersoll, Ernest, et al., (2013). The Illustrated Book of Dragons and Dragon Lore. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books. ASIN B00D959PJ0
  • {{cite encyclopedia |volume=3 |year=1989 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |location=New York |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |title=Aždahā: in Old and Middle Iranian |author=Skjærvø, P. O |pages=191–199 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azdaha-dragon-various-kinds#pt1}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia |volume=3 |year=1989 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |location=New York |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |title=Aždahā: in Persian Literature |author=Khaleghi-Motlagh, DJ |pages=199–203 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azdaha-dragon-various-kinds#pt2}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia |volume=3 |year=1989 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |location=New York |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |title=Aždahā: in Iranian Folktales |author=Omidsalar, M |pages=203–204 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azdaha-dragon-various-kinds#pt3}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia |volume=3 |year=1989 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |location=New York |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |title=Aždahā: Armenian Aždahak |author=Russell, J. R |pages=204–205 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azdaha-dragon-various-kinds#pt4}}

Further reading

  • Schwartz, Martin. "Transformations of the Indo-Iranian Snake-man: Myth, Language, Ethnoarcheology, and Iranian Identity." Iranian Studies 45, no. 2 (2012): 275-79. www.jstor.org/stable/44860985.