Background When Hormizd's father
Narseh ascended the throne in 293, he had an investiture relief made in
Naqsh-e Rostam, where he is depicted as receiving the ring of kingship from a female figure that is frequently assumed to be the goddess
Anahita. However, some scholars have suggested that this may be his wife and Hormizd's mother,
Shapurdukhtak. The figure standing behind Narseh is most likely Hormizd, due to his cap being the form of that of an animal
protome, which was typically worn by Sasanian heirs. Hormizd most likely did not take part in his father's war against the
Roman Empire, which
ended disastrously for the Sasanians, with Narseh's wife and some of his offspring being captured,
forcing him to surrender a handful provinces in
Armenia and
Mesopotamia in order to have his family members handed back to him. Hormizd may have been same person as
Hormizd II Kushanshah, a Sasanian prince who briefly ruled the
Kushano-Sasanian Kingdom from 300 to 303. They both minted coins where they were depicted with a winged crown, whilst on the reverse, which usually shows the traditional
fire altar flanked by two attendants, also shows a head emerging from the fire, a typical Kushano-Sasanian design which first appears on Sasanian coins during the reign of Hormizd II.
Reign In 303, Hormizd II ascended the throne, assuming a crown whose features resembled that of the same used by the early Sasanian rulers, such as
Bahram II (). Not much is known about the reign of Hormizd; he supposedly started out as a cruel ruler but then became benevolent. This change of behaviour is described by
al-Tabari; However, he persecuted the
Manicheans, who had lived peacefully in the reign of his father; Hormizd reportedly founded the rural district of Kurang (or Wahisht-Hormozd) near
Izeh in the
Khuzistan province. He gave his daughter Hormizddukht in marriage to a
Mamikonian prince named Vahan as part of an effort to improve Sasanian relations with
Armenia, which had recently under
Tiridates III of Armenia declared
Christianity as its state religion. Hormizd's rock relief at
Naqsh-e Rostam in the
Pars province (present-day
Fars) indicates that there was internal turmoil during his reign. He is depicted on horseback, impaling an enemy whose helmet bears the family signature of Papak, a high-ranking nobleman who served as the (viceroy) of
Albania during the reign of Bahram II and Narseh. During his last years Hormizd pursued hostilities against the
Ghassanid king, demanding tribute and raiding Ghassanid domains in
Syria. The Ghassanid king requested reinforcements from the Roman emperor, but was killed before they arrived. Hormizd died in 309, reportedly ambushed by Ghassanid troops whilst he was hunting in the desert. He was more likely killed in a secluded place by the Iranian nobility, who afterwards sought to get rid of his sons as well. According to the 11th-century
Chronicle of Seert, Hormizd declared war against the Romans in order to avenge the defeat of his father, whilst the
Chronicle of Arbela states that when the Roman emperor started persecuting his Christian subjects, Hormizd raised a great army, invaded the Roman domains and raided many cities. The credibility of the two sources are doubtful, with the events not being reported in other sources. According to the
Iranologist Alireza Shapour Shahbazi, "one may only surmise that it is probably a reflection of Hormozd's alleged raid into Syria." ==Succession==