Last King of Kings
In the year of 632, a young Emperor was crowned at an age of eight. He was crowned with a crown of a dying Empire, plagued by enemies, internal strife and plague. This was the Sassanid Empire, and he was Yazdegerd III, the last Sassanid Emperor. He was meant to guide the Empire out of these dark times and he was meant to revive the fallen giant.But it was not to be. After continuous defeats of the Sassanids, the Empire eventually succumbed to the pressure, both external and internal.But what if?Table of Contents:This story contains numerous points of view - you will be told the story and its parts through the eyes of more than one person.There will be romance - at least I hope so. I am not sure how I'll develop the relationship between the main couple, but I plan to have a bit of romance there.This story isn't Self-Insert.There will be many characters, some more important than others.Although this is a fiction, most of the characters and events occuring are real and this book works with historical events.And last but not least, you may find this book offensive. After all, it rewrites history completely. And if you do, just don't read it.Enjoy! Dear readers! Without any ads, maybe you will prefer .
- C.76: What future holds for us
- C.75: To brave the unknown
- C.74: New worries arise
- C.73: The End of the War
- C.72: The final nail in the Arab coffin
- C.71: The offensive begins
- C.70: Remember the human
- C.69: Meeting with destiny
- C.68: In the Palace of the Black Sea
- C.67: The Royal Journey
- C.66: When negotiations fail
- C.65: To reclaim the jewel
- C.64: The storm has perished
- C.63: The battle of Al-Quadissiyah
- C.62: The brewing storm
- C.61: To foresee the future
- C.60: The greatest challenge
- C.59: What victory manages
- C.58: Battle of the Bridge
- C.57: The exchange
- C.56: Prelude to the battle
- C.55: With power comes responsibility
- C.54: To trust or not trust
- C.53: The deal to change the world
- C.52: Unexpected ally
- C.51: To betray your home
- C.50: The hardest decision
- C.49: To be worthy enough
- C.48: In preparation for war
- C.47: The boy of a divine descent
- C.46: Ruler for people, father for family
- C.45: The coincidence to change one’s fate
- C.44: The boundary between life and death
- C.43: To discuss and to decieve
- C.42: The battle that never happened
- C.41: To act like adult
- C.40: The worries of unknown
- C.39: Gears are in motion
- C.38: Does he rule better?
- C.37: Rulers opinion
- C.36: The city of ghosts
- C.35: The idea without a plan
- C.34: Let the city fall
- C.33: One battle to end the civil war
- C.32: The aftermath of an onslaught
- C.31: The return of the King of kings
- C.30: The massacre at Walaja
- C.29: The worries he thought he didn’t have
- C.28: The hero at the Battle of Chains
- C.27: What could go wrong
- C.26: Crucial differences
- C.25: On last minute
- C.24: The great conspiracy
- C.23: Reforming the empire
- C.22: The price for peace
- C.21: Bringing the good news
- C.20: Home sweet home
- C.19: A chance encounter
- C.18: Life-changing proposal
- C.17: A deal to remember
- C.16: Victors write history
- C.15: Battle of Merv
- C.14: The weight of life
- C.13: To be a ruler
- C.12: Amol, city of commerce and problems
- C.11: Promise based on a lie
- C.10: What plagues the Empire
- C.9: Duality of armies
- C.8: Divine opportunity
- C.7: Turmoil, both inner and outer
- C.6: Khazars, those damned Khazars
- C.5: Abu Bakr, Caliph of Arabs
- C.4: Heraclius, Emperor of Romans
- C.3: Shahanshah first, child second
- C.2: Spahbed, Hazarbed and Wuzurg Framadar
- C.1: The King of kings