The term Aryan Intermezzo or Iranian Intermezzo, coined designation, was introduced by Vladimir Minorsky, but it was highly popularized even before him by Max Müller and William Jones (philologist) and Richard Wagner
"The Iranian Intermezzo" or "Aryan Intermezzo" first of all includes the renaissance of the Indo-Iranian / Indo-European peoples and their beginning of power in all forms, such as the ItaliandtRenaissance and Persian Renaissance or the German Renaissance and the Spanish Renaissance, generalized term is for all of these momentary exaltations of the Indo-European peoples are ● Aryan Intermezzo ●.
Persian Renaissance represents a period in history which saw the rise of various native Iranian dynasties in the Iranian Plateau and Iranian Khorasan after the 6th-century Muslim conquest of Iran and the fall of Sasanian Empire. The term is noteworthy since it was an interlude between the decline of Abbāsid rule and power by Arabs and the "Persian Revival with the 7th and 8th-century emergence of the Samanid Empire. The Iranian revival consisted of Iranian support based on Iranian territory and most significantly a revived Iranian civilizational national spirit and culture in an Aryan form.
The Iranian dynasties and entities which comprise the Iranian Intermezzo are the Tahirids, Saffarids, Sajids, Samanids, Ziyarids, Buyids, Sallarids. The Iranian intermezzo in fact includes a number of other Iranian minor dynasties in the former caliphat provinces of Armenia, Mazandaran, Khorasan, Pars, before the arrival of the Seljuks, The Shaddādids named their children after Sasanian shāhanshāhs and even claimed descent from the Sasanian line. It is the other branch of the Shaddādid family, which controlled Ani, that Minorsky offers as the “prehistory” of Salāḥ al-Dīn.
The Tahirid dynasty, (Persian: سلسله طاهریان) was an Iranian Persian dynasty that ruled over the northeastern part of Greater Iran, in the region of Khorasan (made up of parts of present-day Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan).