Nahāvand marked the near dissolution of the Sasanian Imperial army, with the fall of the last of the grand marshals of the army and the rise of
warlordism among the Persians. The Emperor Yazdegerd III attempted to raise troops by appealing to other neighbouring areas such as the princes of Tukharistan and
Sogdia and eventually sent his son
Peroz III to the
Tang court, but without any success. Yazdegerd hurriedly fled towards the east where he was ill-received by several Marzban (provincial governors) in the north; as well as in
Merv, where the governor Mahoye openly showed his hostility to the Emperor. According to non-Muslim sources, Yazdegerd failed to rally enough support in Eastern Persia where the Sasanians were unpopular with the local population. Muslim sources, such as Tabari, reported that the province of
Khorasan revolted against Sasanian rule, just as it had years earlier when the population had sided with
Khosrau II's uncle
Vistahm. When Yazdegerd was crowned in
Estakhr, Persia had in fact three Kings ruling in different regions and Khorasan had not initially given support to Yazdegerd. Before Yazdegerd had a chance to receive help from the
Hepthalites and
Turkish tribes, he was assassinated by a local miller in Merv in 651. Thereafter, Yazdegerd's son Peroz attempted to re-establish the Sasanian empire against the Rashidun Caliphate and its successor, the
Umayyad Caliphate, though the plan did not develop, as Peroz ultimately died in
China. ==Notes==