"Peroz" is a Middle Persian name, meaning "victorious". Peroz I Kushanshah was notably the first ruler from the Sasanian family to use this name. Centuries later, the name would be used again by the imperial line of the Sasanians, commencing with Peroz I.
Reign
"Kushano-Sasanian" is a historiographic term used by modern scholars when referring to a dynasty of monarchs who supplanted the Kushan Empire in the Tukharistan region, and ultimately in both Kabulistan and Gandhara as well. According to the historian Khodadad Rezakhani, the dynasty was seemingly a young branch of the House of Sasan, and perhaps an offspring of one of the SasanianKing of Kings. It was founded by Ardashir I Kushanshah after his appointment by the first Sasanian King of Kings, Ardashir I. The Kushano-Sasanians, in the same manner as the Kushans, used the title of Kushanshah, thus demonstrating a continuum with their predecessors. Peroz became Kushanshah in 245.
Sasanian-style coinage
Like his predecessor Ardashir I Kushanshah, Peroz is called the "Great Kushan King" and "Mazdean lord" on his coins. In some of the rare coins of Peroz, the "Investiture issue", minted at Herat, the obverse legend reads mzdztn bgy pylwcy rb’ kwš’n mdw’ in Pahlavi, "The Mazda-worshipping lord Peroz the Great Kushan Shah". On the reverse, Peroz is seen standing on the left, facing Anahita rising from her throne. Peroz is holding an investiture wreath over an altar and raising the left hand in gesture of benediction. Anahita also holds an investiture wreath and a scepter.
Kushan-style coinage
Peroz's reign marked a shift in Kushano-Sasanian coinage, which came to closely resemble the coinage of the Kushan emperors. He was the first Kushano-Sasanian ruler to issue coins on the Kushan model. The gold coins of Peroz tended to be scyphate and to imitate the design of Kushan ruler Vasudeva I. They were often minted at Balkh, in Bactria, north of the Hindu-Kush. The visual aspect of this new coin type was almost identical to those of the Kushans, albeit with specific adjustments. The front of Peroz's coins portrays him standing in Kushan armour making an offering at an altar, at the same time holding a spear in his right hand. Several symbols are included in the coin: a trident over the altar, what is often described as a Nandipada symbol behind the king, and a swastika between the legs. A Brahmi letter Pi has also been introduced to the right of the ruler, near the ground. The obverse has a legend in Bactrian script all around : Πιρωςο οοςορκο Κοϸανο ϸαηο "Peroz the Great Kushan King" In this, like his predecessor Ardashir I Kushanshah, Peroz called himself the "Great Kushan King". The reverse has a Kushan-style representation of the Kushan god Oesho, which uses the attributes of the Indian God Shiva, stading in front of the bull Nandi, and holding a trident and a diadem. This new reverse deity replaced the previous depictions of the Zoroastrian deities Mithra or Anahita in Kushano-Sasanian coinage. In the Kushan-style coinage of Peroz, although the depiction of the deity is visually similar to that on the Kushan coins, the legend is not the Kushan word Oesho anymore, but has been replaced by the Bactrian legend οορςοανδο ιαςοδο or BΟPZAΟANΔΟ IAZAΔΟ "The exalted God". Apart from minting coins in the Kushano-Sasanian main base of Tukharistan, Peroz also had coins minted in Gandhara and Begram, and most likely in Peshawar as well. It was around this time that the Kushano-Sasanians began to expel the Kushans from Gandhara, pushing them to Mathura in North India, where their power was diminished from that of kings to local princes. Peroz was thus the first Kushano-Sasanian ruler to issue coins south of the Hindu-Kush, and he is known for several overstrikes over coins of the Kushan ruler Kanishka II.
It was during Peroz's reign—in c. 262—that the Sasanian King of Kings Shapur I carved the Ka'ba-ye Zartosht inscription. On the inscription, Shapur I proclaimed himself as the suzerain of several regions, including that of the Kushano-Sasanians: Nevertheless, according to Rezakhani, the Kushano-Sasanians appear to have been too strong to have been plainly Sasanian governors, and their existence "may well reflect an early Sasanian continuation of the Arsacid imperial setting, acting as an allied, but autonomous, cadet branch of the Sasanian royal house". According to the historian Richard Payne, "the Kushano–Sasanian sub-kingdom ruled from Balkh on behalf of the Sasanian kings of kings". In 275, Peroz was succeeded by Hormizd I Kushanshah, a son of the King of Kings Bahram I.