Djamasp
Djamasp (also transcribed as
Jamasp or
Zamasp) was a
Sassanid king who ruled from
496-
498. He was a younger brother of king
Kavadh I and was installed on the Sassanid throne upon the deposition of the latter by members of the nobility.
Not much is known about Jamasp himself and his name occurs only in conjunction with his short interregnum. Byzantine accounts of the episode (
Jashua the Stylite and
Procopius) mention that Kavadh was deposed because of his determination to spread a new "religion" that preached redistribution of property. Following Kavadh's deposition and subsequent imprisonment, Jamasp was elected to succeed his brother.
Later Islamic sources such as
Tabari and
Dinawari inform us that Jamasp was a good and kind king and he reduced taxes in order to relieve the
peasants and the poor. He was also a proper adherent of the
Mazdean religion (
Zoroastrianism), diversions from which had cost Kavadh his throne and freedom.
The sources also tell us that upon the return of Kavadh at the head of a large army given to him by the
white Hun king, Jamasp loyally stepped down from his position and restored the throne to his brother. No further mention of Jamasp is made after the restoration of Jamasp and we do not have any reason to imagine anything but a favourable treatment of him at the court of his brother.