Shushtar was well fortified due to the rivers and canals that surrounded it on almost all sides. One of them was known as Ardashiragan, named after the first Sasanian king
Ardashir I (r. 224–240). Another known as Shamiram, named after the legendary
Assyrian Queen
Semiramis. The last one mentioned was known as Darayagan, named after the
Achaemenid king
Darius I (r. 550–486 BCE). There are several versions of how the city got captured; according to
al-Tabari, during the siege, an
Iranian defector named Sina (or Sinah) went to al-Nu'man and pleaded for his life to be spared in return for helping him how to show a way into the city. Al-Nu'man agreed, and Sina told him the following thing: "attack via the outlet of the water, and then you will conquer the city." Al-Nu'man did as he told him, and with a small portion of his army, charged into Shushtar. These small units who infiltrate and opening the gate of Shushtar were led by
Al-Bara' ibn Malik. Hormuzan then retreated to the citadel and continued his resistance, but was eventually forced to surrender. According to another version written in the
Khuzestan Chronicle, similar to the version by al-Tabari, a defector from
Qatar, along with another person, asked the Arabs for some of their plunder in exchange of how to enter the city. The Arabs agreed, and after some time, they managed to enter the city. According to
al-Baladhuri, during the siege, the Arabs were reinforced with a group of professional Iranian elites under
Siyah al-Uswari, known as the
Asawira. The reason for their defection was to preserve their status and wealth. However, according to the Khuzestan Chronicle, the Asawira first defected to the Arabs after they entered Shushtar. The brother of Hormuzan, Shahriyar, is said to have been a part of the Asawira. == Aftermath==