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Armenian History
By Levon Zekiyan
The Armenia of the
Bagratids (Bagratuni) and Artzruni
long
with its break-up in the ninth century, the compact Arab empire also saw
a weakening of its power in Armenia. Meanwhile, a very important change
had taken place in the ranks of the Armenian aristocracy. The house of
Mamikonian, which had played a leading role in the political life of Armenia,
actually governing as sovereigns without titles during certain periods,
disappeared from the scene towards the end of the eighth century. The Arabs
used harsh reprisals to crush the insurrection led by Mamikonian in 774,
and the whole family was wiped out.
Once
the Mamikonians had disappeared from the scene, the Bagratids began
their ascendancy. They had a more flexible approach to the Arabs. One of
the oldest and most influential dynasties of Armenia, never yet exposed
to the hazards of struggles for power, the Bagratids had, since the times
of Artashes I, by tradition and by acquired right, held the title of t'agatir,
that is, crowners (of the king) while the Mamikonians had held the title
of sparapet, commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Unlike the
feudal possessions of the Mamikonians, which occupied a practically continuous
strip starting from the regions of T'aron, west of the lake of Van, and
ending in the area around Mount Ararat and Mount Aragatz to the north east,
the fiefs of the Bagratids were spread a little everywhere throughout Armenia
and were later to extend even further into the Iberian kingdom (present-day
Georgia).
Another family of nakharar, one of
the few that survived the repression, were the Artzruni, whose dominions
lay to the east of the lake of Van. On account of their less drastic attitude
towards the Arabs, both the Bagratids and the Artzuni were able to profit
from the confiscation and dismemberment of the property of the Mamikonians
and other dynasties allied to them and enlarge their own possessions. The
Bagratids assumed the role of representatives and promotors of this new
conscience.
At practically the same time, in
888, a Bagratid branch of the Tayk' (Tao) lineage, near the borders between
Armenia and Georgia along the river Djorokh (Coruh), created the Iberian
kingdom of the Bagratids. This was to haae an extremely long life, lasting
more than 1,000 years, thanks to the geopolitical situation in Georgia,
which was more favourable than Armenia's. The new kingdom unfortunately
collapsed in 1045.
The
foundation of the Bagratid kingdom in Armenia emerged from the revolt of
Prince Smbat Bagratuni about halfway through the eighth century. Despite
the partial failure of the insurrection, at the end of which Smbat was
captured and sent off to Baghdad, the growth of Byzantine power under the
young dynasty of the Macedonians ( of Armenian origin) forced the Arabs
to adopt a more moderate policy, ensuring a certain equilibrium in Armenia
and, thus, greater guarantees of safety for Arab interests.
In 861, Ashot, son of Smbat,
was recognized by the court at Baghdad as prince of princes, a measure
that did not fail to provoke a violent reaction on the part of the semiautonomous
Arab emirates that had been established in the very heart of Armenia. They
attacked Ashot with an army of 80,000 men. Ashot's forces were only half
those of the Arabs, but nevertheless defeated them soundly. Ashot's prestige
was now at its peak. In 855, the caliph sent him the crown and recognized
him as shahnshah, king of kings of the Armenians. Basil I, emperor of Byzantians,
made haste to do the same. This was perhaps one of the happiest periods
in the tormented history of Armenia: two empires were vying with each other
not to dominate Armenia with arms but to gain its sympathy and consolidate
its independence.
This was a difficult objective, to
say the least. Indeed, the kingdom of Ashot's son, Smbat I (892-914), was
one continuous round of harsh struggles against the Arab emirates that
surrounded the young kingdom. Only by paying this high price was the Armenia
of the Bagratids able to reach the peaks of economic, social and cultural
prosperity which, according to Muyldermans, constituted a period of incomparable
splendour in Armenian history, from about 920 to 1020. The best evidence
of this was the fabulous city of Ani, built by Ashot III (952-977), with
its "thousand and one churches." Jacques de Morgan has this to say: "In
Europe, we still haae a large number of cities surrounded by their medieval
fortified walls: Avignon, Aigues-Mortes, Carcassone, in the south of France
alone. But none of these can be compared with Ani because of the deep impression
that dead city still arouses in us today: lost in the middle of an immense
solitude, still bearing the deep wounds it receivetl during its agony.
Ani under the Bagratids was a great, beautiful city, embellished with numerous
churches, palaces, beautiful walls in many-colored stone." (In Histoire
du peuple armenien, p. 121).
When
Ani fell into Byzantine hands in 1045, that was the end of the kingdom.
Unfortunately, Byzantium's expansionist policy with regard to Armenia,
developed above all under Basil II, was ultimately to the detriment of
the empire itself, for it had done away with that buffer state that had
for centuries served as a bulwark against forces from the East. In Grousset's
view, 1045 marks the beginning of the collapse of Byzantium, in spite of
its apparent prosperity. This was illusory, as soon became apparent with
the terrible defeat of Romano Diogenes at Manzikert in 1071 by the Seljuks
of Alp Arslan, which opened the gates of Anatolia fully and for good.
The arts and culture in general flourished
greatly in the reign of the Artzruni too (908-1021). The now well-known
church of Aght'amar, the marvellous architecture of the school of
Ani, and the mystical poetry of St. Grigor of Narek, with its passionate
accents and flowing lyrics, embody the highest values of this artistic
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