A luminous study of a faith at the edge of recorded memory. Ancient faith meets modern inquiry. James Hope Moulton's Early Zoroastrianism gathers a collection of Zoroastrianism lectures drawn from Oxford religious lectures and London addresses delivered between February and May 1912. Clear, unshowy and thoughtful, these lectures map the doctrinal contours of ancient Persian religion while placing those doctrines in conversation with comparative religion studies and the broader currents of early 20th century theology. Here Zoroastrian beliefs are explained with philological care and human sympathy: readers encounter historical context, interpretative argument and a steady concern for religious philosophy of the 1910s without scholarly opacity. The result reads as both a dependable academic reference book and an inviting introduction, equally suited to university course material, seminar discussion or a curious general reader exploring pre-Islamic Iran history and the roots of world religions scholarship. Moulton balances close textual attention with wide-angle comparison, a method that speaks to students of Cambridge Oriental Studies and to anyone interested in how comparative methodologies took shape. Pedagogically, these lectures supply sharp prompts for seminar debate and reliable citations for research. Moulton's style remains brisk and persuasive, a model of the Oxford religious lectures tradition, and his approach resonates with collectors of classic scholarship as well as with modern readers who prize clarity, context and intellectual restraint. Historically the volume matters for what it reveals about early modern engagement with non-Western traditions and for its place within the evolving study of Zoroastrian thought, an artefact of scholarship that helps explain how Western academia first framed the study of these ancient beliefs and their lasting legacy. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.