Zoroastrianism/External Links: Difference between revisions

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* [http://www.zoroastrians.info/ World Zoroastrian Directory]
* [http://www.zoroastrians.info/ World Zoroastrian Directory]
* [http://www.w-z-o.org/ World Zoroastrian Organisation]
* [http://www.w-z-o.org/ World Zoroastrian Organisation]
* [https://www.amazon.com/Heritage-Zarathushtra-Translation-Gathas-English/dp/3825302512/ The Heritage of Zarathushtra: A New Translation of His Gathas (English and German Edition)] by Helmut Humback and Pallan Ichaporia (authors), 1994 (unfortunately not readily available)
* [https://sacred-texts.com/zor/sbe31/index.htm The Zend Avesta, Part III] translated by L.H. Mills, 1887.  Includes the whole Yasna and more, but more than 100 years old.  Very "King James version" in style, even though the accompanying commentary is more modern.
* [https://sacred-texts.com/zor/index.htm The Zend Avesta] translated by James Darnesteter, 1880.  Also more than 100 years old.  Very "King James version" in style, even though the accompanying commentary is more modern.
* [https://www.zarathushtra.com/z/gatha/dji/The%20Gathas%20-%20DJI.pdf The Gathas] translated by D. J. Irani.  The Gathas are the hymns composed by Zarathushtra, who lived around 1300 BCE.  They are poetry in the metrical forms of ancient Indo-Iranian.  They constitute a small book with ~6000 workds, in ~1300 lines, set in 238 verses, which are organized in 17 chapters (Haiti or Ha).

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A hand-picked, annotated list of Web resources about Zoroastrianism.
Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner and consider archiving the URLs behind the links you provide. See also related web sources.
  • The Heritage of Zarathushtra: A New Translation of His Gathas (English and German Edition) by Helmut Humback and Pallan Ichaporia (authors), 1994 (unfortunately not readily available)
  • The Zend Avesta, Part III translated by L.H. Mills, 1887. Includes the whole Yasna and more, but more than 100 years old. Very "King James version" in style, even though the accompanying commentary is more modern.
  • The Zend Avesta translated by James Darnesteter, 1880. Also more than 100 years old. Very "King James version" in style, even though the accompanying commentary is more modern.
  • The Gathas translated by D. J. Irani. The Gathas are the hymns composed by Zarathushtra, who lived around 1300 BCE. They are poetry in the metrical forms of ancient Indo-Iranian. They constitute a small book with ~6000 workds, in ~1300 lines, set in 238 verses, which are organized in 17 chapters (Haiti or Ha).