Armenian
History (In
brief)
Contemporary
scholarship suggests that the Armenians are
descendants of various indigenous people who
meld (10th through 7th century BC) with the
Urarteans (Ararateans); while classical historians
and geographers cite the tradition that the
Armenians migrated into their homeland from
Thrace and Phrygia (Herodotus, Strabo), or even
Thessaly (Strabo). These views are not necessarily
contradictory, since present-day Armenians are
undoubtedly an amalgam of several peoples, autochthonous
(Hayasa-Azzi, Nairi, Hurrians, etc.) and immigrant,
who emerged as one linguistic family around
600 BC.
Armenian
tradition has preserved several legends concerning
the origin of the Armenian nation. The most
important of these tells of Hayk (Hayg
or Haig), the eponymous hero of the Armenians
who called them-selves Hay (Hye) and
their country Hayk' or Hayastan.
The historian of the 5th century, Movses
Khorenatsi, also relates at some length
the valiant deeds of Aram whose fame
extended far beyond the limits of his country.
Consequently, the neighboring nations called
the people Armens or Armenians.
Archeology
has extended the prehistory of Armenia to the
Acheulian age (500,000 years ago), when hunting
and gathering peoples crossed the lands in pursuit
of migrating herds. The first period of prosperity
was enjoyed by inhabitants of the Armenian upland
in the third millennium B.C. These people were
among the first to forge bronze, invent the
wheel, and cultivate grapes. The first written
records to mention the inhabitants of Armenia
come from hieroglyphs of the Hittite Kingdom,
inscribed from 1388 to 1347 B.C., in Asia Minor.
The earliest inscription to be found directly
upon Armenian lands, carved in 1114 B.C. by
the Assyrians, describes a coalition of kings
of the central Armenian region referring to
them as "the people of Nairi."
By
the 9th century B.C., a confederation of local
tribes flourished as the unified state of Urartu.
It grew to become one of the strongest kingdoms
in the Near East and constituted a formidable
rival to Assyria for supremacy in the region.
The Urartians produced and exported wares
of ceramic, stone and metal, building fortresses,
temples, palaces and other large public works.
One of their irrigation canals is still used
today in Yerevan, Armenia's capital - a city
which stands upon the ancient Urartian fortress
of Erebuni. In the 6th century Urartu
fell to the Medes, but not long after, the Persian
conquest of the Medes, led by Cyrus the Great,
displaced them. Persia ruled over Armenia from
the 6th century until the 4th century B.C. Its
culture and Zoroastrian religion greatly influenced
the spiritual life of the Armenian people who
absorbed features of Zoroastrianism into their
polytheistic and animistic indigenous beliefs.
As
part of the Persian Empire, Armenia was divided
into provinces called satrapies, each
with a local governing satrap (viceroy) supervised
by a Persian. The Armenians paid heavy tribute
to the Persians, who continually requisitioned
silver, rugs, horses and military supplies.
The governing satraps of Armenia's royal Orontid
family (Ervanduni Dynasty) governed
the country for some 200 years, while Asia became
acquainted with invading Greeks from the west.
With the fall of the Persian Empire to Alexander
the Great of Macedonia in 331 B.C., the Greeks
appointed a new satrap, an Orontid named Mithranes,
to govern Armenia. The Greek Empire, which stretched
across Asia and Europe, was one in which cities
rapidly grew, spreading Hellenistic architecture,
religion and philosophies. Armenian culture
absorbed Greek influences as well. As centers
at the crossroads of trade routes connecting
China, India and Central Asia with the Mediterranean,
Armenian cities thrived on economic exchange.
The Greeks also infused Armenia's version of
Zoroastrianism with facets of their religious
beliefs. After Alexander's sudden death in 323
B.C., the partitioning of his empire and warring
among his generals led to the emergence of three
Greek kingdoms. Despite pressure from the Seleucid
monarchy, one of the Greek kingdoms, the Orontids,
continued to retain control over the largest
of three kingdoms into which Armenia itself
had been divided: Greater Armenia, Lesser Armenia
and Sophene.
Seleucid
influence over Armenia finally dissolved when,
in the second century B.C., a local general
named Artaxias (Artashes) declared himself
King of Greater Armenia and founded a new dynasty
- Artaxiads
Dynasty (Artashesian) - (The Artain
189 B.C. Artaxias expanded his territory by
defining the borders of his land and unifying
the Armenian people.
The
"renaissance of Armenia" was accomplished during
the reign of Tigran the Great (94-54
B.C.), who proclaimed himself "King of Kings."
Under Tigran II, Armenia grew to a great
degree of military strength and political influence.
According to the Greek biographer Plutarch,
the Roman general Lucullos said of this king,
"In Armenia,
Tigran is seated surrounded with that power
which has wrested Asia from the Parthians, which
carries Greek colonies into Media, subdues Syria
and Palestine and cuts off the Seleucids."
And
Cicero, the Roman orator and politician, adds,
"He
made the Republic of Rome tremble before the
powers of his arms."
Armenia's
borders extended from the Caspian Sea to the
Mediterranean. Tigran's victories were, however,
destined to hasten his downfall, which occurred
in 66 B.C. His son, King Artavazd II, governed
Greater Armenia for 20 years until Anthony and
Cleopatra had him brought to Egypt in chains.
Artavazd refused to name Cleopatra as his queen
and was executed.
By
64 A.D. the new Arsacids
dynasty (Arshakuni Dynasty), a branch
of the Parthian Arsacids, came to power, and
the country as a whole soon became a buffer
zone over which the Romans and Parthians fought
for domination. In order that we may realize
the real implications of the history of Armenia
and grasp the soul of this people, we must turn
our gaze upon the beginning of the 4th century,
which was momentous in its consequences for
the growth of the nation. King Tiridates
III (Trdat), having been converted by Gregory
the Illuminator, proclaimed
Christianity as the religion of the state in
301 A.D. Thus, Armenia became the first nation
to embrace Christianity officially.
This was 12 years before the Emperor Constantine's
Edict of Milan which declared tolerance of Christians
in the Roman Empire. Gregory the Illuminator,
later canonized, was elected Catholicos of the
new Armenian national Church, the first in a
long line of such clergy to be elected supreme
head of the Armenian Church.
The
conversion to Christianity was inevitably to
bring in its wake complications of a political
nature and to arouse grave anxieties in neighboring
Persia. The Sassanian Persians took advantage
of Armenia's inner weakness and launched a campaign
to stamp out Christianity there and replace
it with Mazdaism. Under this common threat,
the princes, nobility and the people of Armenia
rallied, and in 451 under the leadership of
the Commander-in-Chief Vartan Mamikonian,
the Armenians heroically faced the Persians
at Avarair
in defense of their faith and national heritage.
Heavily outnumbered, they were defeated; Vartan
Mamikonian and many valiant men fell fighting.
But guerrilla warfare continued in the mountainous
regions. Vahan Mamikonian, a nephew of
Vardan, continued the struggle. This time the
Persians, realizing the futility of their policy,
were obliged to come to terms with the Armenians.
Freedom of religious worship was restored with
the Treaty of Nvarsag.
In
the 7th century, the mighty Arabs stormed into
Armenia and conquered the country. Beginning
in the 9th century, Armenia enjoyed a brilliant
period of independence when the powerful Bagratids
Dynasty (Bagratuni Dynasty) asserted
political authority. Resumption of international
trade brought prosperity and the revival of
artistic and literary pursuits. The capital
of Ani grew to a population of about 100,000,
more than any urban center in Europe. Religious
life flourished and Ani became known as the
"city of one thousand
and one churches." In the middle
of the 11th century, most of Armenia had been
annexed by Byzantium. The destruction of the
Bagratid Kingdom was completed by raids of new
invaders, the Seljuk Turks from Central Asia.
With little resistance from weakened Byzantium,
the Seljuk Turks spread into Asia Minor as well
as the Armenian highlands.
The
Seljuk Turks invasion compelled a large number
of Armenians to move south, toward the Taurus
Mountains close to the Mediterranean Sea,
where in 1080 they founded, under the leadership
of Ruben
(Rubenian Dynasty), the Kingdom of Cilicia
or Lesser Armenia. Close contacts with the
Crusaders and with Europe led to absorbing Western
European ideas, including its feudal class structure.
Cilician Armenia became a country of barons,
knights and serfs. The court at Sis
adopted European clothes. Latin and French were
used alongside Armenian. The Cilician period
is regarded as the Golden Age of Armenian Illumination,
noted for the lavishness of its decoration and
the frequent influence of contemporary western
manuscript painting. Their location on the Mediterranean
coast soon involved Cilician Armenians in international
trade between the interior of Western Asia and
Europe. For nearly 300 years, the Cilician Kingdom
of Armenia prospered, but in 1375 it fell to
the Mamelukes of Egypt. The last monarch, King
Levon VI, died at Calais, France in 1393,
and his remains were laid to rest at St. Denis
(near Paris) among the kings of France.
While
in the 13th century the Armenians prospered
in the Cilician Kingdom, those living in Greater
Armenia witnessed the invasion of the Mongols.
Later, in the 16th and 17th centuries, Armenia
was divided between the Ottoman Empire and Safavid
Iran. With the annexation of the Armenian plateau,
the Armenians lost all vestiges of an independent
political life. The Persian leader Shah Abbas
I inaugurated a policy of moving populations
of entire Armenian regions to his country to
create a noman's land in the path of the Ottoman
advance, and to bring a skilled merchant and
artisan class to his new capital, Isfahan.
The Armenian community of New Julfa,
a suburb of Isfahan, was held by Shah Abbas
I in great esteem and became one of the economic
bases of the Safavid state.
Persians
ruled Eastern Armenia until 1828, when it was
annexed by Russia. However, it was the Ottoman
Turks who governed most of the Armenian land
and population (Western Armenia). During
the 19th century, Armenians under Turkish rule
suffered from discrimination, heavy taxation
and armed attacks. As Christians,
Armenians lacked legal recourse for injustices.
They were taxed beyond their means, forbidden
to bear arms in a country where murdering a
non-Muslim often went unpunished, and were without
the right to testify in court on their own behalf.
During the late l9th century, the increasingly
reactionary politics of the declining Ottoman
Empire and the awakening of the Armenians culminated
in a series of Turkish massacres throughout
the Armenian provinces in 1894-96. Any illusion
the Armenians had cherished to the effect that
the acquisition of power in 1908 by the Young
Turks might bring better days was soon dispelled.
For in the spring of 1909, yet another orgy
of bloodshed took place in Adana, where
30,000 Armenians lost their lives after a desperate
resistance. World War I offered a good opportunity
for Turks to "solve the issue." In
1915, a secret military directive ordered the
arrest and prompt execution of Armenian community
leaders. Armenian males serving
in the Ottoman army were separated from the
rest and slaughtered. The Istanbul government
decided to deport the entire Armenian population.
Armenians in towns and villages were marched
into deserts of Syria, Mesopotamia and Arabia.
During the "relocation"
many were flogged to death, bayoneted, buried
alive in pits, drowned in rivers, beheaded,
raped or abducted into harems.
Many simply expired from heat exhaustion and
starvation. 1.5 million people perished in
this first genocide of the 20th century.
Another wave of massacres occurred in Baku
(1918), Shushi (1920) and elsewhere.
The
defeat of the Ottoman Turks in World War I and
the disintegration of the Russian Empire gave
the Armenians a chance to declare their independence.
On May 28, 1918, the independent Republic
of Armenia was established, after the Armenians
forced the Turkish troops to withdraw in the
battles of Sardarapat, Karakilisse and Bashabaran.
Overwhelming difficulties confronted the infant
republic, but amid these conditions the Armenians
devoted all their energies to the pressing task
of reconstructing their country. But due to
pressure exerted simultaneously by the Turks
and Communists, the republic collapsed in 1920.
Finally, the Soviet Red Army moved into the
territory (Eastern Armenia) and on November
29, 1920, declared it a Soviet republic. Armenia
was made part of the Transcaucasian Soviet
Federal Socialist Republic in 1922, and
in 1936, it became one of the Soviet Union's
constituent republics.
The
tumultuous changes occurring throughout the
Soviet Union beginning in the 1980's inevitably
had repercussions in Armenia. In 1988, a movement
of support began in Armenia for the constitutional
struggle of Nagorno Karabagh (Artsakh)
Armenians to exercise their right to self-determination.
(This predominantly Armenian populated autonomous
region had been placed under the jurisdiction
of Azerbaijan by an arbitrary decision of Stalin
in 1923.)
That
same year, in 1988, Armenia was rocked by severe
earthquakes that killed thousands, and supplies
from both the Soviet Union and the West were
blocked by the Azerbaijani Government fighting
the Armenians in Nagorno Karabagh. Both of these
issues have dominated Armenia's political arena
since the first democratic election held in
Armenia during the Soviet era. In 1990, the
Armenian National Movement won a majority of
seats in the parliament and formed a government.
On September 21, 1991, the Armenian people
overwhelmingly voted in favor of independence
in a national referendum, and an independent
Armenia came into being.