“…Ever since the pioneering discovery of the p-block element phosphorus by the alchemist Hennig Brand 350 years ago ( 1 ), phosphorus allotropes such as white, red, and black phosphorus along with phosphorous heterocycles such as the diphosphatriazolate anion (P 2 N 3 − , 1 ) ( 2 ) and cyclotriphosphazene (P 3 N 3 , 2 ; Fig. 1 ) ( 3 , 4 ) have captivated the interest of the theoretical, physical (in)organic, preparative, and organometallic chemistry communities ( 1 ) from the fundamental viewpoints of electronic structure ( 5 , 6 ) and chemical bonding ( 7 , 8 ), with both heterocycles representing benchmarks of a class of exotic inorganic (4 n + 2)π aromatic molecules. Whereas 1 is isovalent to the cyclopentadienyl anion ( 3 ), 2 can be linked to the prototype 6π-Hückel aromatic ( 9 ) benzene molecule (C 6 H 6 , 4 ) by formally replacing the C─H moieties alternatingly by isovalent phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) atoms.…”