connection with the wife of a Persian cobbler and
astrologer, a certain Babek or Papak, an inhabitant
of the Cadusian country and a man of the lowest class.
Papak, knowing by his art that the soldier’s
son would attain a lofty position, voluntarily ceded
his rights as husband to the favorite of fortune, and
bred up as his own the issue of this illegitimate
commerce, who, when he attained to manhood, justified
Papak’s foresight by successfully revolting from
Artabanus and establishing the new Persian monarchy.
Others said that the founder of the new kingdom was
a Parthian satrap, the son of a noble, and that, having
long meditated revolt, he took the final plunge in
consequence of a prophecy uttered by Artabanus, who
was well skilled in magical arts, and saw in the stars
that the Parthian empire was threatened with destruction.
Artabanus, on a certain occasion, when he communicated
this prophetic knowledge to his wife, was overheard
by one of her attendants, a noble damsel named Artaducta,
already affianced to Artaxerxes and a sharer in his
secret counsels. At her instigation he hastened
his plans, raised the standard of revolt, and upon
the successful issue of his enterprise made her his
queen. Miraculous circumstances were freely interwoven
with these narratives, and a result was produced which
staggered the faith even of such a writer as Moses
of Chorene, who, desiring to confine himself to what
was strictly true and certain, could find no more
to say of Artaxerxes’s birth and origin than
that he was the son of a certain Sasan, and a native
of Istakr, or Persepolis.
Even, however, the two facts thus selected as beyond
criticism by Moses are far from being entitled to
implicit credence. Artaxerxes, the son of Sasan
according to Agathangelus and Moses, is the same as
Papak (or Babek) in his own and his son’s inscriptions.
The Persian writers generally take the same view,
and declare that Sasan was a remoter ancestor of Artaxerxes,
the acknowledged founder of the family, and not Artaxerxes’
father. In the extant records of the new Persian
Kingdom, the coins and the inscriptions, neither Sasan
nor the gentilitial term derived from it, Sasanidae,
has any place; and though it would perhaps be rash
to question on this account the employment of the term
Sasanidae by the dynasty, yet we may regard it as
really “certain” that the father of Artaxerxes
was named, not Sasan, but Papak; and that, if the term
Sasanian was in reality a patronymic, it was derived,
like the term “Achaemenian,” from some
remote progenitor whom the royal family of the new
empire believed to have been their founder.