Shapur’s grandson Bahram II had died in…
294 CE
Shapur’s grandson Bahram II had died in 293, and the enterprising Narseh, the youngest of Shapur’s sons passed over for the Sassanid succession and at that time viceroy of Armenia, had probably moved to eliminate Bahram III, a young man installed by a noble named Vahunam in the wake of his father’s death, and assumed the throne.
Narseh sends Diocletian the customary package of gifts in early 294, but within Persia he is destroying every trace of his immediate predecessors, erasing their names from public monuments.
He seeks to identify himself with the warlike reigns of Ardashir and Shapur, the same Shapur who had sacked Roman Antioch and reputedly skinned the captured Emperor Valerian to decorate his war temple.