"The religion of the Vedi for the Indians and that of Homer and Hesiod for the Greeks was but the expression of the ideas of the people, often subject to change and contradict each other because they were never fixed or determined by any sacred book of the nature of the Bible or of the The Iranian religion is on the contrary the work of philosophers and priests, founded, he is true, over the popular idea of the continuous struggle between good and evil, but reduced in a system by elected and speculative minds and confirmed with a sacred code, immutable, which was said to be revealed by Ormuzd to his prophet Zarathustra or Zoroaster. (p 26)"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Italo_Pizzi
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Related Quotes
"It does not have you in the world the richest country of Persia in heroic legends."
"The Book of Kings can be divided into two parts, one of which is all heroic and legendary, while the other is histori…"
"His reign began on a day when the sun entered Aries, and lasted thirty years. To him were submissive not only all the…"
"Firdusi describes the miserable state of Iran under the scepter of Dahàk. Every guilt, every sad work, was lawful the…"
"With Yezdeghird the series of Persian monarchs closes, and the conquest of the Arabs marks the entering Iran of a new…"
"[...] was peculiar Persian doctrine that of Sufism, a doctrine more philosophical than religious, more mystical than …"
"It can be said that every elegy of Mimnermo is marked by the darkest pessimism. For him, what is life worth? It has v…"
"The '[Avestā|Avesta]]' is not an organic book, it is not the work of a single creative and thinking mind, yes well th…"
"He has few dogmas, but he brings to the faithful very high teachings; he admits the future life, he promises the comi…"
"Ingenuously made pomp of their native beauty, and it is told of Aisha (she was shei of Muslim time, of the first howe…"