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Armenian History
By Levon Zekiyan
The Vartanank War
The interregnum (428-861)
he
joint action of religious and cultural factors in the preservation of the
Armenian ethnos was to be confirmed, about half way through the fifth century,
by an event that was so important that it was to remain a turning point
in the political and religious history of Armenia. It was the so-called
war of the Vardanank', in which one sees crystallized in its heroes
and renegades, both the epic virtues and the defects that in manyways characterized
the national life of the Armenians. The war lasted for the whole latter
half of the century. Indeed, although the main battle of Avarair
(under the leadership of the Commander-in-Chief Vartan Mamikonian)
lasted no more than a day, the second of June, 451, it was followed by
year after year of tenacious passive resistance and bitter guerrilla warfare,
wisely championed, moreover, by the wives of the princes that had died
on the battle field or had been exiled. Then at last, in 485, the King
of Persia, Valash, reluctantly had to grant the Armenians freedom of worship,
conscience, and culture.
The
peace conditions proposed by the Armenians at the end of this victorious
guerrilla warfare constitute a lesson in civilization that goes well beyond
the concept and practices prevailing in those times as regards human rights.
This had very much to do with the condition of a people that simply could
not aim at the domination of others but merely desired to live undisturbed
with due respect granted to their faith and identity. Peace was therefore
concluded on the basis of three principles that the Armenians proclaimed
they would not renounce, even at the risk of annihilation:
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No one was to be forced to change religion
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People were not to be judged on the
basis of their social condition, but rather according to their actions
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No action based merely on hearsay was
to be taken by the authorities against anyone; rather, they could act only
with full knowledge of the case in point.
These same objectives could well be
pursued today in many places and circumstances.
It would by no means be superfluous
to draw special attention to one point, obvious though it may be: the war
of the Vardanank' was not a religious war in the generally accepted sense
of the term. On the part of the Armenians, it was fought with no intention
whatever of imposing a belief, nor was it motivated by any desire to implement
religious discrimination or intolerance: it was no more than a revolt against
arrogance in defence of the religious freedom and identity of a people.
After the peace treaty drawn up at
Nvarsak,
Valash bestowed upon the commander-in-chief of the Armenian forces, Vahan
Mamikonian, the title of marzpan, that is, plenipotentiary governor,
and he effectively governed Armenia with full powers. This situation of
relative tranquillity and prosperity lasted for forty years or so, after
which Armenia became yet again the theatre of encounter between Byzantium
and Persia and was to remain thus for nearly all the sixth century.
Halfway through the century, under
the rule of Justinian, the Byzantine drive to Hellenize Armenia reached
its peak. Justinian initiated a type of administration that was quite new
for the territories under Byzantium, dividing them into four regions and
entrusting their government to an imperial official, thus eliminating once
and for all the power of the nakharar, who had until that time been
the mainstay of the Armenian political system. The final anti-Chalcedon
trends of the Church in Armenia ran parallel to these developments and
certainly helped to trigger and organize ethnic defense mechanisms against
the policy of assimilation the Empire surreptitiously pursued by religious
means, among others.
The effects of the victory of Heraclius
over the Persians in 629 were rather deceptive (the event led to a momentary
reconciliation with the Greek Church, incidentally) in that the first Arab
invasion occurred in 642. From that moment on, for almost 200 years, there
reigned on Armenian soil a continuous stream of wars and bloody rebellions
in which the Byzantine armies too were often involved. One of the most
outstanding political figures of the time was T'eodoros Rshtuni,
who managed to initiate a policy of compromise between the Arabs and the
Byzantines.
The eighth century and the first
half of the ninth marked a period of crisis and stasis for Armenian culture,
since the Arab invasion and the subsequent events had cut short the marvellous
artistic boom that had begun in an earlier period and had produced such
masterpieces as the famous cathedral of Zvart'nots and the church
of the Hripsimiank', (for Hripsime and her companions, martyrs in the
early sixth century). |
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