It was. AFAIK Iran comes from Old Persian Aryanam xšarya (or something like that), 'Realm of the Aryas'. The whole unfortunate story about the misuse of 'Aryan' started in a quite harmless way: from a combination of confounding Sanskrit and PIE with mistaken assumptions of cognates in European languages (such as Old Irish Ériu 'Ireland'), some scholars concluded that the Proto-Indo-Europeans called themselves Aryas, and named the whole IE family 'Aryan'. And because 19th-century scholars liked to equate "races" and language families, the "Aryan race" was born. The rest is gory history.Richard W wrote: ↑Thu Nov 04, 2021 4:09 pmBut wasn't arya the Indo-Iranian ethnonym, even if Āryāvarta was restricted to the domain of the Brahmins, and ārya specialised to 'noble'?zompist wrote: ↑Mon Nov 01, 2021 9:51 pmWell, "Aryan" is pretty terrible as a word to distinguish Indic, as the Iranians called themselves Airya, and in fact the word is cognate to Iran.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon Nov 01, 2021 8:07 pm I would love to have I, A, and IA. But noooo, we can't have nice things. We have I, I, and II. Stupid.
At this point, I have to think of the letter to the Nazi Reichsschrifttumskammer Tolkien drafted in 1938, when they asked for an Ariernachweis in connection with a planned German translation of The Hobbit. In that letter, Tolkien wrote that he regrettably did not descend from "Indians, Persians or Gypsies" - the latter being the only Aryans that have been around in Germany for centuries! I don't know whether he actually sent that letter (AFAIK he did not), but the translation project did not take shape until well after the end of the Nazi régime.