'GarshÄsp' (گرشاسپ) is the name of a monster-slaying hero in
Persian mythology. The Avestan form of his name is 'KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa' and in
Middle Persian his name is 'KirsÄsp'.
KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa / KirsÄsp in Zoroastrian literature
In the
Zoroastrian religious text of the
Avesta, KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa appears as the slayer of ferocious monsters, including the 'Gandarəβa' and the 'Aži Sruvara'. In later Zoroastrian texts KirsÄsp is revived at the end of the world to defeat the monster '
DahÄg.
KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa is the son of Θrita and belongs to the SÄma family. Θrita is originally the name of a deity; cf. the Vedic
Trita.
KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa and the Aži Sruvara
According to the Avesta, KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa once stopped on a hill to cook his midday meal. Unknown to KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa, the hill was actually the back of a dragon -- the Aži Sruvara. As the heat from KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa's fire woke the dragon, it woke up, overturning KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa's kettle. KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa fled, but returned to slay the dragon.
Later texts, the ''Persian Rivayat'' and ''Pahlavi Rivayat'', add more details. According to them, the Az Ä« SrÅ«war was a dragon with horns, with huge eyes and ears, and teeth upon which the men it had eaten could be seen impaled. It was so long that KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa ran along its back for half a day before he reached its head, struck it with his mace, and killed it.
KÉ™rÉ™sÄspa and the Gandarəβa
Another monster that KirsÄsp fought was the ''Gandarəβa'', Middle Persian ''Gandarw''. (This name is cognate to the Indic
gandharva, but the exact way by which the word attained its specialized meanings in Indic and Iranian cultures is uncertain.) The Gandarw lived in the sea. It was also enormous, big enough to swallow twelve provinces in a single gulp, and tall enough that when it stood up the deep sea only came up to its knee, and its head was as high as the sun. The Gandarw pulled KirsÄsp into the ocean, and they fought for nine days. At last, KirsÄsp flayed the Gandarw and bound him with his own skin. KirsÄsp, weary from the combat, had his companion AxrÅ«rag guard the Gandarw while he slept, but it proved too much for him – the Gandarw dragged AxrÅ«rag and KirsÄsp's family into the sea. When KirsÄsp awakened, he rushed to the sea, freed the captives, and killed the Gandarw.
KirsÄsp and DahÄg
The Zoroastrian text called the ''Sūdgar'' tells that when the monster
DahÄg, who is now bound in chains on Mount DamÄvand, bursts free of his fetters at the end of the world, KirsÄsp will wake from death (his corpse having been guarded from corruption) to destroy DahÄg and save the two thirds of the world that DahÄg has not devoured.
GarshÄsp in Persian literature
GarshÄsp in the ShÄhnÄma
GarshÄsp is only tangentially mentioned in the
ShÄhnÄma. There he appears as a distant ancestor of the hero
Rostam, who lived about the same time as King
Fereydun. GarshÄsp is the father of
NarÄ“mÄn, who is the father of
SÄm, father of
ZÄl, who is in turn Rostam's father.
GarshÄsp in the GarshÄspnÄma
GarshÄsp received his own poetic treatment at the hands of
Asadi Tusi, who wrote a ''GarshÄspnÄma'' about this hero.
In the GarshÄspnÄma, GarshÄsp is the son of Esret (اثرط), the equivalent of the Avestan Θrita, and grandson of Sham (Avestan SÄma). His genealogy goes back through other characters not mentioned in the Avesta: Sham is the son of Tovorg (طورگ), son of Å Ä“dasp, son of Tur, who was an illegitimate son of
Jamshid by the daughter of Kurang, king of ZÄbolestÄn, begotten at the time that Jamshid had been deposed was fleeing from the forces of
ZahhÄk.
ZahhÄk reigned for 1000 years, and so was still king at the time that GarshÄsp was born. On one occasion when ZahhÄk was traveling in ZÄbolestÄn, he saw GarshÄsp and encourages him to slay a dragon that had emerged from the sea and settled on Mt. Å ekÄvand. Equipped with a special antidote against dragon-poison, and armed with special weapons, GarshÄsp succeeds in killing the monster. Impressed by the child's prowess, ZahhÄk now orders GarshÄsp to India, where the king – a vassal of ZahhÄk's – has been replaced by a rebel prince, Bahu, who does not acknowledge ZahhÄk's rule. GarshÄsp defeats the rebel and then stays in India for a while to observe its marvels and engage in philosophical discourse.
After returning from India, GarshÄsp woos a princess of
Rum, restores his father Esret to his throne in ZÄbol after the king of KÄbol defeats him, and builds the city of
SistÄn. He has further anachronistic adventures in the Mediterranean, fighting in
Kairouan and
Córdoba.
When he returns to Iran, his father dies, and GarshÄsp becomes king of ZÄbolestÄn. Although he has no son of his own, he adopts
NarÄ“mÄn as his heir, who would become
Rostam's great-grandfather. The poem ends with another battle and dragon-slaying, followed by GarshÄsp's death.