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Gabr (; also geuber, geubre, gabrak, gawr, gaur, gyaur, gabre) is a term originally used to denote a .

Historically, gabr was a technical term synonymous with mōg, "", denoting a follower of , and it is with this meaning that the term is attested in very early New Persian texts such as the . In time, gabr came to have a implication and was superseded in literature by the respectable Zardoshti, "Zoroastrian".

By the 13th century, the word had come to be applied to a follower of any religion other than , and it has "also been used by the , , and some other ethnic groups in modified forms to denote various religious communities other than Zoroastrians, sometimes even in the sense of ." As a consequence of the curtailment of social rights, non-Muslims were compelled to live in restricted areas, which the Muslim populace referred to as Gabristans.

In the , the Turkish version gâvur, borrowed into English via French as "", was used to refer to . It is sometimes still used today in former Ottoman territories and carries a strong pejorative meaning.

(2013). 9789004250765, BRILL. .

The etymology of the term is uncertain. "In all likelihood," gabr derives from the Aramaic gabrā, spelt GBRʼ, which. in written Middle Iranian languages. serves as an ideogram that would be read as an word meaning "man." (for the use of ideograms in Middle Iranian languages, see ). During the (226–651), the ideogram signified a free (i.e. non-slave) peasant of . After the collapse of the empire and the subsequent rise of Islam, it "seems likely that gabr used already in Sassanian times in reference to a section of Zoroastrian community in Mesopotamia, had been employed by the converted in the Islamic period to indicate their Zoroastrian compatriots, a practice that later spread throughout the country."

It has also been suggested that gabr might be a mispronunciation of Arabic "unbeliever," but that theory has been rejected on linguistic grounds both phonetic and semantic: "there is no unusual sound in kafir that would require phonetic modification", and kafir as a generic word probably would not refer to a specific revealed religion such as Zoroastrianism.


See also
  • , the Arabic word for a Zoroastrian.
  • Gabrōni, a name for Zoroastrian Dari language, a northwestern Iranian language used by Zoroastrians in and
  • Zoroastrians in Iran
  • , "illiterate", non-Arab, Iranian
  • People of the Book
  • , "protected"
  • Irani
  • Ateshgah of Baku


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