Asman Explained
Asman (Avestan: |translit=asman) is the Avestan and Middle Persian name of the Zoroastrian divinity that is the hypostasis of the sky. Asman is the "highest heaven," and is distinguished from the firmament, Avestan: , which lies nearer the earth. The 27th day of the Zoroastrian calendar is dedicated to him. In the Veda, Sanskrit: अश्मन means 'sky'. It also means "stone" so the specific sense in reference to the sky is as "stony firmament".
In the Avesta, specifically in the Vendidad, the word is mentioned as being the first thing created.[1] The word is also the origination of the word Persian: آسمان in modern Persian and numerous languages of South Asia.
Bibliography
- Book: Cambridge History of Iran . Gershevitch . Ilya . William Bayne . Fisher . 1985 . Cambridge University Press .
Further reading
- Bläsing, Uwe. ""Asme, Asmen, Astare": Nordwestiranisches Wortgut Im Türkeitürkischen." Iran & the Caucasus 1 (1997): 171–78. www.jstor.org/stable/4030750.
Notes and References
- Naudou, Jean. "Polymorphisme du divin et monothéisme en Inde". In: Les grandes figures religieuses: fonctionnement pratique et symbolique dans l'Antiquité. Actes du Colloque international (Besançon, 25-26 avril 1984). Besançon: Université de Franche-Comté, 1986. p. 17 (Annales littéraires de l'Université de Besançon, 329) [www.persee.fr/doc/ista_0000-0000_1986_act_329_1_1661]