Aniran (in Middle-Persian انيران pronounced An-Iran meaning region non-Iran). The terms used in the pre-Islamic era, refering to people living on the fringes of the Iranian plateau. The term is the equivalent to Greco-Roman term of the Barbarian Land.
History
The earliest reference to this word in an
Iranian context, however, predates prophet
Zoroaster (1800 BC) and is attested in non-Gathic
Avesta; it appears as
airya, meaning noble; as
airya dainhava (Yt.8.36, 52) meaning the land of the Aryans; and as
airyana vaejah, the original land of the Aryans. This term, it seems, was adopted in remote antiquity by Iranians as their national identity
*; hence other peoples were called
Anairya and later
Aniranian, meaning non-Aryan, probably a derogatory racial designation.
The Sasanian Adoption of the name
We meet this word again in
Pahlavi literature, and in many
Sasanian inscriptions, coins, seals and other documents; it is attested in
Pahlavi as
Ēr, meaning noble or hero; as Iran, Iran; as
Ērān-Shahr, meaning the Iranian Empire; as
Ērān-vēz, meaning the mythical original land of the
Aryans; as
Anēr, meaning non-Aryan, barbarian; and as
Aniran, i.e., barbarity and ignobility.
The term was first appeared on the coins of the Ardashir I, the founder of Sasanian Empire. Ardeshir’s successors retained the designation thus emphasizing their claim to world dominion and over non-Iranian race.
Some scholars believe that the term was mainly referring to non-Persians as well as non- Zoroastrians, living in the Empire.
Aniran in Shahnameh
In
Ferdowsi's epic,
Shahnameh, the function and suage of the word changes and becomes homeland of Iranian nomadic tribes known as
Turanians and the
Oxus river is the border between Iran and
Turan. The other name for this region described by Ferdowsi is
Transoxiana.
History of Iran | Ancient Iranian provinces