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Hōromazēs (-ae), sive Ahura Mazda[1] est Avestanum nomen summi dei, creatoris mundi, secundum religionem veterem Avestanam vel Zoroastream. Haec fuit religio Iraniae ante Islamicae adventum.
Horomazes dicitur summum animum cultus Zoroastrianismi una cum essenti primum et saepe invocatum animum in operibus Yasna.
Notae
↑Graece Ὡρομάζης, -ου, ut apud Platon. Alcib. I, 122a; Plutarch. De Iside, 47. Alii "Ahura Mazda" scribunt (lingua Persica antiqua 𐏈 𐏉 Auramazdâ,lingua Persica اهورامزدا), h.e. fere "magna sapientia" vel "dominus sapientiae".
Boyce, Mary; Frantz Grenet; Roger Beck. 1975-1991. A History of Zoroastrianism. Lugduni Batavorum: E. J. Brill. (Handbuch der Orientalistik: Der Nahe und der Mittlere Osten)
Boyce, Mary (1984/2011), "Ahura Mazdā", Encyclopaedia Iranica, 1, Novi Eboraci: Routledge & Kegan Paul, pp. 684–687Textus interretialis recensus
Boyce, Mary (2001), "Mithra the King and Varuna the Master", Festschrift für Helmut Humbach zum 80. Geburtstag am 4. Dezember 2001, Treveris: WWT, pp. 239–257
Maneck, Susan Stiles (1997), The Death of Ahriman: Culture, Identity and Theological Change Among the Parsis of India, Bombayae: K. R. Cama Oriental Institute
Dhalla, Maneckji Nusservanji. 1922. Zoroastrian civilization from the earliest times to the downfall of the last Zoroastrian empire, 651 A.D. Novi Eboraci: Oxford University Press. Textus apud Internet Archive
Dhalla, Maneckji Nusservanji (1938), History of Zoroastrianism, Novi Eboraci: OUP, ISBN0-404-12806-8
Frye, Richard Nelson (1996), The heritage of Central Asia from antiquity to the Turkish expansion, Markus Wiener Publishers, ISBN978-1-55876-111-7
Humbach, Helmut (1991), The Gathas of Zarathushtra and the other Old Avestan texts, Heidelbergae: Winter, ISBN3-533-04473-4