Afshin
Appearance
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Language(s) | Middle Persian |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Afšīn, Afşin, Afşın |
Afshin (Persian: افشین / Afšīn; Turkish: Afşın or Afşin) is a common Persian and Turkish given name, derived from the princely title of the rulers of Ošrūsana at the time of the Muslim conquest. The Afshins of Ošrūsana were an Iranian princedom in Central Asia of whom the later Abbasid general Afšin Ḵayḏar bin Kāvus is the most famous.
Etymology
Afšīn is the arabicized form of the Middle Persian Pišīn, which traces back to the Avestan Pisinah. In pre-Islamic Iranian tradition, it is the name of a grandson of Kayānid king Kavād (Yt. 13.132, 19.71). In the Islamic period, it is found as a proper name attested by Armenian historians in the form Ōšin (from Awšin).[1]
People
- Afshin (Caliphate General), Afšin Ḵayḏar bin Kāvus (died 841), Abbasid general
- Muhammad Ibn Abi'l-Saj, Muḥammad al-Afšin (died 901), Sājid ruler of Āzarbāijān
- Afshin Ghotbi (born 1964), Iranian football coach
- Afshin (singer), Afshin Jafari (born 1978), Iranian pop singer
- Afshin Norouzi (born 1985), Iranian table tennis player
- Arash Afshin (born 1989), Iranian footballer
Places
- Afşin, a town in the Kahramanmaraş Province in the Mediterranean region of Turkey
References
- ^ AFŠĪN in Encyclopedia Iranica. C.E. Bosworth. Online edition. 2010.