Mehr
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mehr or Mihr or Meher (Middle- and New Persian: مﮩر), meaning sun, love, friendship, affection, kindness or mercy, may refer to:
- Mers / Mair, Mihir, Mehr, Maher is a Hindu warrior caste.
- The Persian language equivalent of Avestan Mithra, meaning "covenant" and the Zoroastrian divinity from whom kindness and mercy is requested and who is also associated with the sun and friendship.
- The seventh month of the year and the sixteenth day of the month of the Zoroastrian calendar are dedicated to Mehr and named after him. This practice is also evident in the Iranian calendar, which derives its month names from the Zoroastrian ones.
- The Zoroastrian/Iranian festival of Mehregan (Mehr's day) that is celebrated in honor of Mehr/Mithra.
- The association with the sun survives in Islamic Iran as an epithet of the sun during the month of Ramadan.
As a theophoric name, Mehr, Mihr or Meher may also refer to:
- several historical figures:
- a first name, for both males and females:
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- Meher Baba (Merwan Sheriar Irani), an Indian spiritual leader.
- Mehr Jesia, an Indian supermodel.
- a surname or title:
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- Farhang Mehr, former deputy prime minster of Iran.
- names of places or localities:
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- Mehrabad, a suburb of Tehran.
- the Iranian village Mihr, said to have once been the site of Adur Burzen-Mihr, one of the legendary Great Fires of Zoroastrianism.
- Darb-e Mehr, Mithra's court, an alternate name for a Zoroastrian fire temple.