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Caucasian Albania

Caucasian Albania is a modern exonym for a former state located in ancient times in the Caucasus, mostly in what is now Azerbaijan (where both of its capitals were located). The modern endonyms for the area are Aghwank and Aluank, among the Udi people, who regard themselves as descended from the inhabitants of Caucasian Albania. However, its original endonym is unknown.[6][7]

Caucasian Albania
2nd century BC  – 8th century AD
Caucasian Albania in the 5th and 6th centuries[1]
StatusInitial state/s unknown; later vassal kingdom and province of the Sasanian Empire and the Rashidun, Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates
CapitalKabalak (Qabala); Partaw (Barda)
Common languagesCaucasian Albanian, Parthian,[2] Middle Persian,[3][4] Armenian[5]
Religion
Paganism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism
Historical eraAntiquity
• Established
2nd century BC  
• Disestablished
 8th century AD
Today part ofAzerbaijan
Russia
Georgia
Armenia

The name Albania is derived from the Ancient Greek name Ἀλβανία and Latin Albanía.[8] The prefix "Caucasian" is used purely to avoid confusion with modern Albania of the Balkans, which has no known geographical or historical connections to Caucasian Albania. Little is known of the region's prehistory, including the origins of Caucasian Albania as a geographical and/or ethnolinguistic concept. In the 1st century BC and the 1st century AD, the area south of the Greater Caucasus and north of the Lesser Caucasus was divided between Caucasian Albania in the east, Caucasian Iberia in the center, Kolchis in the west, Armenia in the southwest and Atropatene to the southeast.

In 252, Caucasian Albania acknowledged the suzerainty of the Sasanian Empire, appearing among its provinces in Shapur I's inscription at the Ka'ba-ye Zartosht. The kingdom would remain an integral part of the empire until its fall. By the end of the 3rd-century, the kings of Caucasian Albania were replaced with an Arsacid family, and would later be succeeded by another Iranian royal family in the 5th century AD, the Mihranids.

Geonyms

 
1838 map: Colchis, Iberia and Albania

Aghuank (Old Armenian: Աղուանք Ałuankʿ, Modern Armenian: Աղվանք Aġvank’) is the Armenian name for Caucasian Albania. Armenian authors mention that the name derived from the word "ału" («աղու») meaning amiable in Armenian. The term Aghuank is polysemous and is also used in Armenian sources to denote the region between the Kur and Araxes rivers as part of Armenia.[9][better source needed] In the latter case it is sometimes used in the form "Armenian Aghuank" or "Hay-Aghuank".[10][11][12]

The Armenian historian of the region, Movses Kaghankatvatsi, who left the only more or less complete historical account about the region, explains the name Aghvank as a derivation from the word ału (Armenian for sweet, soft, tender), which, he said, was the nickname of Caucasian Albania's first governor Arran and referred to his lenient personality.[13] Movses Kaghankatvatsi and other ancient sources explain Arran or Arhan as the name of the legendary founder of Caucasian Albania (Aghvan) or even of the Iranian tribe known as Alans (Alani), who in some versions was a son of Noah's son Yafet.[14] James Darmesteter, translator of the Avesta, compared Arran with Airyana Vaego[15] which he also considered to have been in the Araxes-Ararat region,[16] although modern theories tend to place this in the east of Iran.

 
Caucasian Albania until 387

The Parthian name for the region was Ardhan (Middle Persian: Arran).[7] The Arabic was ar-Rān.[7][17] In Georgian, it was known as რანი (Rani). In Ancient Greek, it was called Ἀλβανία Albanía.[8] What its inhabitants were called is unknown.[6]

Geography

In pre-Islamic times, Caucasian Albania/Arran was a wider concept than that of post-Islamic Arran. Ancient Arran covered all of eastern Transcaucasia, which included most of the territory of the modern-day Azerbaijan Republic and part of the territory of Dagestan. However, in post-Islamic times the geographic notion of Arran reduced to the territory between the Kura and Aras rivers.[7]

Ancient Caucasian Albania lay on the south-eastern part of the Greater Caucasus mountains. It was bounded by Caucasian Iberia (present-day Georgia) to the west, by Sarmatia to the north, by the Caspian Sea to the east, and by the provinces of Artsakh and Utik in Armenia to the west along the Kura river.[18] These boundaries, though, were probably never static—at times the territory of Caucasian Albania included land to the west of the Kura river.[19]

Albania or Arran in Islamic times was a triangle of land, lowland in the east and mountainous in the west, formed by the junction of the Kura and Aras rivers,[7][20][dubious ] Mil plain and parts of the Mughan plain, and in the pre-Islamic times, corresponded roughly to the territory of the modern-day Republic of Azerbaijan.[7]

The districts of Albania were:[21]

  • Cambysene
  • Getaru
  • Elni/Xeni
  • Begh
  • Shake
  • Xolmaz
  • Kapalak
  • Hambasi
  • Gelavu
  • Hejeri
  • Kaladasht

The kingdom's capital in antiquity was Qabala (Gabala; Kapalak).[22]

Classical sources are unanimous in making the Kura River (Cyros) the frontier between Armenia and Albania after the conquest of the territories on the right bank of Kura by Armenians in the 2nd century BC.[21]

The original territory of Albania was approximately 23,000 km2.[23] After 387 AD the territory of Caucasian Albania, sometimes referred to by scholars as "Greater Albania,"[21] grew to about 45,000 km².[23] In the 5th century the capital was transferred to Partav in Utik', reported to have been built in the mid-5th century by the King Vache II of Albania,[24] but according to M. L. Chaumont, it existed earlier as an Armenian city.[25]

In a medieval chronicle "Ajayib-ad-Dunia", written in the 13th century by an unknown author, Arran is said to have been 30 farsakhs (200 km) in width, and 40 farsakhs (270 km) in length. All the right bank of the Kura River until it joined with the Aras was attributed to Arran (the left bank of the Kura was known as Shirvan). The boundaries of Arran have shifted throughout history, sometimes encompassing the entire territory of the present-day Republic of Azerbaijan, and at other times only parts of the South Caucasus. In some instances, Arran was a part of Armenia.[26]

Medieval Islamic geographers gave descriptions of Arran in general, and of its towns, which included Barda, Beylagan, and Ganja, along with others.

Ethnogenesis

Originally, at least some of the Caucasian Albanians probably spoke Lezgic languages close to those found in modern Dagestan;[27][28] overall, though, as many as 26 different languages may have been spoken in Caucasian Albania.[29]

After the Caucasian Albanians were Christianized in the 4th century, part of the population was assimilated by the Armenians (who dominated in the provinces of Artsakh and Utik that were earlier detached from the Kingdom of Armenia) and Georgians (in the north),[30] while the eastern parts of Caucasian Albania were Islamized and absorbed by Iranian[27] and subsequently Turkic peoples (modern Azerbaijanis).[6] Small remnants of this group continue to exist independently, and are known as the Udi people.[31] The pre-Islamic population of Caucasian Albania might have played a role in the ethnogenesis of a number of modern ethnicities, including the Azerbaijanis of Qabala, Zaqatala, Shaki, and Oguz; the Armenians of Oghuz and Shaki; the Georgians of Kakhetia and Hereti (Ingiloy); and the Laks, the Lezgins and the Tsakhurs of Daghestan.[32]

Alphabet and languages

Caucasian Albanian language

According to Armenian medieval historians Movses Khorenatsi, Movses Kaghankatvatsi and Koryun, the Caucasian Albanian (the Armenian name for the language is Aghvaneren, the native name of the language is unknown) alphabet was created by Mesrob Mashtots,[33][34][35] the Armenian monk, theologian and translator who is also credited with creating the Armenian alphabet.[36] This alphabet was used to write down the Udi language, which was probably the main language of the Caucasian Albanians.

Koryun, a pupil of Mesrob Mashtots, in his book The Life of Mashtots, wrote about how his tutor created the alphabet:

Then there came and visited them an elderly man, an Albanian named Benjamin. And he (Mashtots) inquired and examined the barbaric diction of the Albanian language, and then through his usual God-given keenness of mind invented an alphabet, which he, through the grace of Christ, successfully organized and put in order.[37]

 
A column capital with an Albanian inscription from a 7th-century church in Mingachevir[38] (Azerbaijan State Museum of History)

A Caucasian Albanian alphabet of fifty-two letters, bearing resemblance to Georgian, Ethiopian and Armenian characters,[Note 1] survived through a few inscriptions, and an Armenian manuscript dating from the 15th century.[39] This manuscript, Matenadaran No. 7117, first published by Ilia Abuladze in 1937 is a language manual, presenting different alphabets for comparison – Armenian alphabet, Greek, Latin, Syriac, Georgian, Coptic, and Caucasian Albanian among them. The alphabet was titled: "Ałuanicʿ girn ē" (Armenian: Աղուանից գիրն Է, meaning, "These are Albanian letters").

In 1996, Zaza Aleksidze of the Georgian Centre of Manuscripts discovered at Saint Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai, Egypt, a text written on parchment that had been reused in a Georgian palimpsest. In 2001 Aleksidze identified its script as Caucasian Albanian, and the text as an early lectionary dating to perhaps before the 6th century. Many of the letters discovered in it were not in the Albanian alphabet listed in the 15th-century Armenian manuscript.[40]

Muslim geographers Al-Muqaddasi, Ibn-Hawqal and Estakhri recorded that a language which they called Arranian was still spoken in the capital Barda and the rest of Arran in the 10th century.[7]

Iranian languages

Iranian contact in the region goes back to the Median and Achaemenid times. During this Arsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania, the Parthian language spread in the region.[2] It is possible that the language and literature for administration and record-keeping of the imperial chancellery for external affairs naturally became Parthian, based on the Aramaic alphabet. According to Toumanoff: "the predominance of Hellenism, as under the Artaxiads, was now followed by a predominance of "Iranianism", and, symptomatically, instead of Greek, as before, Parthian became the language of the educated".[2]

With the establishment of the Sassanids, Middle Persian, a closely related language to Parthian,[41] became an official language of the Sassanid Empire.[4] At this time, Persian enjoyed even more success than the Caucasian Albanian language and the region was greatly affected by Iran.[3] According to Vladimir Minorsky: "The presence of Iranian settlers in Transcaucasia, and especially in the proximity of the passes, must have played an important role in absorbing and pushing back the aboriginal inhabitants. Such names as Sharvan, Layzan, Baylaqan, etc., suggest that the Iranian immigration proceeded chiefly from Gilan and other regions on the southern coast of the Caspian".[42] The presence of the Persian language and Iranian culture continued during the Islamic era.[43][44]

Religion

The original population of the Caucasus followed different pagan religions. Under Achaemenid, Parthian and especially Sassanid influence, Zoroastrianism also grew in the region. Christianity started to spread in the late 4th century in the Sassanid era.

The Arab conquest and the Chalcedonian crisis led to severe disintegration of the Church of Caucasian Albania. Starting from the 8th century, much of the local population converted to Islam. By the 11th century there already were conciliar mosques in Partaw, Qabala and Shaki; the cities that were the creed of Caucasian Albanian Christianity.[45]

These Islamised groups would later be known as Lezgins and Tsakhurs or mix with the Turkic and Iranian population to form present-day Azeris, whereas those that remained Christian were gradually absorbed by Armenians[46] or continued to exist on their own and be known as the Udi people.

The Caucasian Albanian tribes of Hereti were converted to Eastern Orthodoxy by Dinar, Queen of Hereti in the 10th century. The religious affairs of this small principality were now officially administered by the Georgian Orthodox Church. In 1010, Hereti became absorbed into the neighbouring Georgian kingdom of Kakheti. Eventually, in the early 12th century, these lands became part of the Georgian Kingdom under David the Builder finalising the process of their Georgianisation.[47]

History

The history of Albania before the 6th century BC is unknown.

Median and Achaemenid era

According to one hypothesis, Caucasian Albania was incorporated in the Median empire,[25] as early as the 7th or 6th century BC. However, an increasing Persian influence on the region is usually believed to be connected with the defence of Persia's northern frontiers,[24][25] from invading nomads. As early as the Achaemenid empire, measures may have been taken to fortify the Caucasian passes. By the mid-6th century BC, Albania has been incorporated in the Achaemenid empire; it was later controlled by the Achaemenid satrapy of Media.[25][48] The building of fortifications and gates in and around Darband is traditionally ascribed to the Sassanid Empire.[24]

Hellenistic era

 
The ruins of the gates of the Albanian capital Qabala

The Greek historian Arrian mentions (perhaps anachronistically) the Caucasian Albanians for the first time in the battle of Gaugamela, where the Albanians, Medes, Cadussi and Sacae were under the command of Atropates.[25] Albania first appears in history as a vassal state in the empire of Tigranes the Great of Armenia (95-56 BC).[49] The kingdom of Albania emerged in the eastern Caucasus in 2nd or 1st century BC and along with the Georgians and Armenians formed one of the three nations of the Southern Caucasus.[21][50] Albania came under strong Armenian religious and cultural influence.[24][51][52][53][54]

Herodotus, Strabo, and other classical authors repeatedly mention the Caspians but do not seem to know much about them; they are grouped with other inhabitants of the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, like the Amardi, Anariacae, Cadusii, Albani (see below), and Vitii (Eratosthenes apud Strabo, 11.8.8), and their land (Caspiane) is said to be part of Albania (Theophanes Mytilenaeus apud Strabo, 11.4.5).[55]

In the 2nd century BC parts of Albania were conquered by the Kingdom of Armenia, presumably from Medes[6] (although possibly it was earlier part of Orontid Armenia).[56]

The original population of the territories on the right bank of Kura before the Armenian conquest consisted of various autochthonous people. Ancient chronicles provide the names of several peoples that populated these districts, including the regions of Artsakh and Utik. These were Utians, Mycians, Caspians, Gargarians, Sakasenians, Gelians, Sodians, Lupenians, Balas[ak]anians, Parsians and Parrasians.[6] According to Robert H. Hewsen, these tribes were "certainly not of Armenian origin", and "although certain Iranian peoples must have settled here during the long period of Persian and Median rule, most of the natives were not even Indo-Europeans".[6] He also states that the several peoples of the right bank of Kura "were highly Armenicized and that many were actually Armenians per se cannot be doubted". Many of those people were still being cited as distinct ethnic entities when the right bank of Kura was acquired by the Caucasian Albanians in 387 AD.[6]

Roman Empire

 
Roman inscription in Gobustan, Baku, left by Legio XII Fulminata

There was an enduring relation of Albania with Ancient Rome.[57]

The Latin rock inscription close to Boyukdash mountain in Gobustan, Baku, which mentions Legio XII Fulminata, is the world's easternmost Latin inscription known.[58] In Albania, Romans reached the Caspian Sea for the first time.[58]

The Roman coins circulated in Caucasian Albania till the end of the 3rd century AD.[59] Two denarii, which were unearthed in the 2nd-century BC layer, were minted by Clodius and Caesar.[59] The coins of Augustus are ubiquitous.[59] The Qabala treasures revealed the denarii of Otho, Vespasian, Trajan and Hadrian.

In 69-68 BC Lucullus, having overcome Armenian ruler Tigranes II, approached the borders of Caucasian Albania and was succeeded by Pompey.[60]

After the 66-65 BC wintering Pompey launched the Iberian campaign. It is reported by Strabo upon the account of Theophanes of Mytilene who participated in it.[61] As testified by Kamilla Trever, Pompey reached the Albanian border at modern Qazakh District of Azerbaijan. Igrar Aliyev showed that this region called Cambysene was inhabited mainly by stock-breeders at the time. When fording the Alazan river, he was attacked by forces of Oroezes, King of Albania, and eventually defeated them. According to Plutarch, Albanians "were led by a brother of the king, named Cosis, who as soon as the fighting was at close quarters, rushed upon Pompey himself and smote him with a javelin on the fold of his breastplate; but Pompey ran him through the body and killed him".[62] Plutarch also reported that "after the battle, Pompey set out to march to the Caspian Sea, but was turned back by a multitude of deadly reptiles when he was only three days march distant, and withdrew into Lesser Armenia".[63] The first kings of Albania were certainly the representatives of the local tribal nobility, to which attest their non-Armenian and non-Iranian names (Oroezes, Cosis and Zober in Greek sources).[64]

The population of Caucasian Albania of the Roman period is believed to have belonged to either the Northeast Caucasian peoples[7] or the South Caucasian peoples.[65] According to Strabo, the Albanians were a group of 26 tribes which lived to the north of the Kura river and each of them had its own king and language.[6] Sometime before the 1st century BC they federated into one state and were ruled by one king.[66]

Strabo wrote of the Caucasian Albanians in the 1st century BC:

At the present time, indeed, one king rules all the tribes, but formerly the several tribes were ruled separately by kings of their own according to their several languages. They have twenty-six languages, because they have no easy means of intercourse with one another.[66]

 
Caucasian Albania was a vassal of the Roman Empire around 300 AD.

Albania is also mentioned by Dionysius Periegetes (2nd or 3rd century AD) who describes Albanians as a nation of warriors, living by the Iberians and the Georgians.[67]

In 1899 a silver plate featuring Roman toreutics was excavated near Azerbaijani village of Qalagah. The rock inscription near the south-eastern part of Boyukdash's foot (70 km from Baku) was discovered on June 2, 1948, by Azerbaijani archaeologist Ishag Jafarzadeh. The legend is IMPDOMITIANO CAESARE·AVG GERMANIC L·IVLIVS MAXIMVS> LEG XII·FVL. According to Domitian's titles in it, the related march took place between 84 and 96. The inscription was studied by Russian expert Yevgeni Pakhomov, who assumed that the associated campaign was launched to control the Derbent Gate and that the XII Fulminata has marched out either from Melitene, its permanent base, or Armenia, where it might have moved from before.[68] Pakhomov supposed that the legion proceeded to the spot continually along the Aras River. The later version, published in 1956, states that the legion was stationing in Cappadocia by that time whereas the centurion might have been in Albania with some diplomatic mission because for the talks with the Eastern rulers the Roman commanders were usually sending centurions.[69]

In 1953 twelve denarii of Augustus were unearthed.[59] In 1958 one denarius, coined in c. 82 AD, was revealed in the Şamaxı trove.[59]

During the reign of Roman emperor Hadrian (117-138) Albania was invaded by the Alans, an Iranian nomadic group.[70] This invasion promoted an alliance between Rome and the Albanians that was reinforced under Antoninus Pius in 140 AD. Sassanians occupied the area around 240 AD but after a few years, the Roman Empire regained control of Caucasian Albania.

In 297 the treaty of Nisibis stipulated the reestablishment of the Roman protectorate over Caucasian Iberia and Albania. But fifty years later Rome lost the area that since then remained an integral part of the Sasanian Empire.

Parthian period

Under Parthian rule, Iranian political and cultural influence increased in the region.[2] Whatever the sporadic suzerainty of Rome, the country was now a part—together with Iberia (East Georgia) and (Caucasian) Albania, where other Arsacid branches reigned—of a pan-Arsacid family federation.[2] Culturally, the predominance of Hellenism, as under the Artaxiads, was now followed by a predominance of "Iranianism", and, symptomatically, instead of Greek, as before, Parthian became the language of the educated.[2] An incursion in this era was made by the Alans who between 134 and 136 attacked Albania, Media, and Armenia, penetrating as far as Cappadocia. But Vologases persuaded them to withdraw, probably by paying them.

Sassanid period

In 252–253, Caucasian Albania, along with Caucasian Iberia and Greater Armenia, was conquered and annexed by the Sassanid Empire. Albania became a vassal state of the Sassanid Empire,[71] but retained its monarchy; the Albanian king had no real power and most civil, religious, and military authority lay with the Sassanid marzban (military governor) of the territory.[Note 2]

The Roman Empire again obtained control of Caucasian Albania as a vassal state for a few years around 300 AD, but then the Sassanids regained control and subsequently dominated the area for centuries until the Arab invasions.

Albania was mentioned among the Sassanid provinces listed in the trilingual inscription of Shapur I at Naqsh-e Rustam.[72][73]

In the middle of the 4th century, King Urnayr of Albania arrived in Armenia and was baptized by Gregory the Illuminator, but Christianity spread in Albania only gradually, and the Albanian king remained loyal to the Sassanids. After the partition of Armenia between Byzantium and Persia (in 387 AD), Albania with Sassanid help was able to seize from Armenia all the right bank of the river Kura up to river Araxes, including Artsakh and Utik.[25]

In the mid-5th century, the Sassanid King Yazdegerd II passed an edict requiring all the Christians in his empire to convert to Zoroastrianism, fearing that Christians might ally with Roman Empire, which had recently adopted Christianity as its official religion. This led to a rebellion of Albanians, along with Armenians and Georgians. At the Battle of Avarayr, the allied forces of Caucasian Albania, Georgia, and Armenia, devoted to Christianity, suffered defeat at the hands of the Sassanid army. Many of the Armenian nobility fled to the mountainous regions of Albania, particularly to Artsakh, which had become a center for resistance to Sassanid Persia. The religious center of the Albanian state also moved here. However, King Vache of Albania, a relative of Yazdegerd II, was forced to convert to Zoroastrianism, but soon thereafter converted back to Christianity.

According to The History of the Country of Albania, Peroz ordered the Albanian king Vache II to have the city of Perozapat ("the city of Peroz" or "Prosperous Peroz") constructed. However, this is unlikely as the Kingdom of Caucasian Albania had been abolished by Peroz after suppressing a revolt by Vache II in the mid-460s.[74] The city was seemingly founded by Peroz himself after the removal of the ruling family in Caucasian Albania. Due to its more secure location, it was made the new residence of the Iranian marzbans.[75] Albania remained kingless until 485, when Vachagan III (r. 485–510) was installed on the throne by Peroz's brother and successor Balash (r. 484–488).[76] In 552, the seat of the Albanian Catholicos was also transferred to Partaw.[25][77]

By the end of the 5th century, the ancient Arsacid royal house of Albania, a branch of the ruling dynasty of Parthia, became extinct, and in the 6th century, it was replaced by princes of the Persian or Parthian Mihranid family, who claimed descent from the Sassanids. They assumed the Persian title of Arranshah (i.e. the Shah of Arran, the Persian name of Albania).[7] The ruling dynasty was named after its Persian founder Mihran, who was a distant relative of the Sasanians.[78] The Mihranid dynasty survived under Muslim suzerainty until 821–22.[79]

In the late 6th to early 7th centuries the territory of Albania became an arena of wars between Sassanid Persia, Byzantium, and the Khazar Khanate, the latter two very often acting as allies against Sassanid Persia. In 628, during the Third Perso-Turkic War, the Khazars invaded Albania, and their leader Ziebel declared himself Lord of Albania, levying a tax on merchants and the fishermen of the Kura and Araxes rivers "in accordance with the land survey of the kingdom of Persia". Most of Transcaucasia was under Khazar rule before the arrival of the Arabs.[24] However, some other sources state that the Khazars later left the region because of political instability.[80]

According to Peter Golden, "steady pressure from Turkic nomads was typical of the Khazar era, although there are no unambiguous references to permanent settlements",[81] while Vladimir Minorsky stated that, in Islamic times, "the town of Qabala lying between Shirvan and Shakki was a place where Khazars were probably settled".[17]

Impact of Armenian politics, culture and civilization

Armenian politics, culture and civilization played a critical role in the entire history of Caucasian Albania (Aghvank, in Armenian).[82] This, due to the fact that after the partition of the Kingdom of Armenia by Persia and Byzantium in 387 AD, the Armenian provinces of Artsakh and Utik were disassociated from the Armenian kingdom and included by Persians into a single province (marzpanate) called Aghvank (Arran).[83] This new unit included: the original Caucasian Albania, found between the River Kura and the Great Caucasus; tribes living along the Caspian shore; as well as Artsakh and Utik, two territories now detached from Armenia.[84][85][86]

 
Armenian monk Mesrop Mashtots invented the Gargarean ("Caucasian Albanian") alphabet in the 5th century, after creating the Armenian script (art by Francesco Maggiotto, 1750–1805).[34][87]

The Armenian medieval atlas Ashkharhatsuyts (Աշխարացույց), compiled in the 7th century by Anania Shirakatsi (Անանիա Շիրակացի, but sometimes attributed to Movses Khorenatsi as well), categorizes Artsakh and Utik as provinces of Armenia despite their presumed detachment from the Armenian Kingdom and their political association with Caucasian Albania and Persia at the time of his writing.[88] Shirakatsi specifies that Artsakh and Utik are "now detached" from Armenia and included in "Aghvank," and he takes care to distinguish this new entity from the old "Aghvank strictly speaking" (Բուն Աղվանք) situated north of the river Kura. Because it was more homogeneous and more developed than the original tribes to the north of the Kura, the Armenian element took over Caucasian Albania's political life and was progressively able to impose its language and culture.[89][90]

The Armenian population of Artsakh and Utik remained in place as did the entire political, social, cultural and military structure of the provinces.[53][91] In the 5th century, early medieval historian Khorenatsi (Խորենացի) testifies that the population of Artsakh and Utik spoke Armenian, with the River Kura, in his words, marking the "boundary of Armenian speech" (... զեզերս հայկական խօսիցս).[92][93][94] though this does not mean that its population consisted exclusively of ethnic Armenians.[86][95]

Whatever little is known about Caucasian Albania after 387 AD comes from the Old Armenian text History of the Land of Aghvank (Պատմություն Աղվանից Աշխարհի) by the Armenian author Movses Kaghankatvatsi (also known as Movses Daskhurantsi),[96] which in essence is the history of Armenia's provinces of Artsakh and Utik.[89] Kaghankatvatsi, repeating Khorenatsi, mentions that the very name "Aghvank"/"Albania" is of Armenian origin, and relates it to the Armenian word "aghu" (աղու, meaning "kind," "benevolent".[97] Khorenatsi states that "aghu" was a nickname given to Prince Arran, whom the Armenian King Vologases I (Vagharsh I) appointed as governor of northeastern provinces bordering on Armenia. According to a legend reported by Khorenatsi, Arran was a descendant of Sisak, the ancestor of the Siunids of Armenia's province of Syunik, and thus a great-grandson of the ancestral eponym of the Armenians, the Forefather Hayk.[98] Kaghankatvatsi and another Armenian author, Kirakos Gandzaketsi, confirm Arran's belonging to Hayk's bloodline by calling Arranshahiks "a Haykazian dynasty".[99]

 
Amaras Monastery in Karabagh, where in the 5th century Mesrob Mashtots set up the first school to use his Armenian alphabet[100][101]

In Kaghankatvatsi's History and in the historical text of the Armenian early medieval author Agathangelos, the Kingdom of Aghvank's feudal system, including its political terminology, was Armenian.[102] As in Armenia, nobles of Aghvank are referred to by the terms nakharars (նախարար), azats (ազատ), hazarapets (հազարապետ), marzpets (մարզպետ), shinakans (շինական), etc.[89][96]

Princely families, which were later mentioned in Kaghankatvatsi's History were included in the Table of Ranks called "Gahnamak" (direct translation: "List of Thrones," Arm. Գահնամակ) of the Kingdom of Armenia, which defined Armenia's aristocratic hierarchy.[103] Princely families of Caucasian Albania were also included in the Table of Armies called "Zoranamak" (Arm. Զորանամակ) of the Kingdom of Armenia which determined military obligations of key aristocratic families before the Armenian King in times of war.[89]

As in Armenia, the "Albanian" clergy used exclusively Armenian church terms for clerical hierarchy (katholikos/կաթողիկոս, vardapet/վարդապետ, sargavag/սարգավագ, etc.)[89][104] Identifiably Armenian are also most if not all toponyms found in the History. Not only are the names of most towns, villages, mountains, and rivers uniquely Armenian morphologically, exactly the same toponyms were and are still found in other parts of historical Armenia. They include the root kert ("town") for towns (Arm.: կերտ, such Dastakert, Hnarakert – compare with Tigranakert or modern Stapanakert in Nagorno Karabakh),[105] shen and kan (village) for villages (Arm. շեն, and կան, such as Karashen or Dyutakan), etc.[106]

First names of most rulers, commoners and clergy in Kaghankatvatsi's History are uniquely Armenian. Many of these names survived for centuries and are still used only by modern Armenians.[107] These include: Vachagan (Վախագան), Vache (Վաչե), Bakur (Բակուր), Taguhi (Թագուհի), Vrtanes (Վրթաննես), Viro (Վիրո), Varaz-Trdat (Վարազ-Տրդաթ), Marut (Մարութ), etc. Some of these names can be translated from Armenian as common words: e.g. Taguhi means "queen" and Varaz means "wild boar".[107] In fact, Armenians to this day use the first name Aghvan (Աղվան) that directly refers to the Kingdom of Aghvank.[108]

After the partition, the capital city of Caucasian Albania was moved from the territories on the eastern bank of the River Kura (referred to by Armenians "Aghvank Proper," Arm. Բուն Աղվանք) to Partav, located in the former Armenian province of Utik. This was followed by the transfer of the Seat of the Kingdom of Albania's religious leader (Katholicos) from territories north of Kura to Partav.[96]

The Kingdom of Albania was converted to Christianity at the start of the 4th century by none other than the Armenian evangelizer St. Gregory the Enlightener (Arm. Սբ. Գրիգոր Լուսավորիչ), who baptized Armenia into the first Christian state by 301 AD.[109] In about 330 AD, the grandson of St. Gregory, St. Grigoris, ecumenical head of the eastern provinces of Armenia, was designated bishop for the Kingdom of Aghvank. Mausoleum interning Grigoris’ remains, the Amaras Monastery stands as the oldest dated monument in Nagorno Karabakh. Amaras was started by St. Gregory and completed by St. Grigoris himself.[110]

According to tradition, the Amaras Monastery housed the first Armenian school in historical Armenia,[111] which was opened early in the 5th century by the inventor of the Armenian alphabet St. Mesrob Mashtots. St. Mesrob Mashtots was intensely active in preaching Gospel in Artsakh and Utik. Movses Kaghankatvatsi's History dedicates four separate chapters to St. Mashtots’ mission, referring to him as "enlightener" and "saint" (chapters 27, 28 and 29 of Book One, and chapter 3 of Book Two).[112] Overall, St. Mesrob made three trips to the Kingdom of Albania where he toured not only the Armenian lands of Artsakh and Utik but also territories to the north of the River Kura.[112]

Kaghankatvatsi's History describes Armenian influence on the Church of Aghvank, whose jurisdiction extended from Artsakh and Utik to regions to the north of the River Kura, in the territories of the "original", "pre-Armenian" Caucasian Albania.[113] One of the consequences of this was that the Armenian language progressively supplanted Albanian as the language of church and state (and only if there was any single "Albanian" language in the first place which is doubtful because the population of Albania/Aghvank was described as consisting of as many 26 different tribes).[113] In the same 7th century, Armenian poet Davtak Kertogh writes his Elegy on the Death of Grand Prince Juansher, where each passage begins with a letter of Armenian script in alphabetical order.[105][114]

Christianization

The polytheistic religion of Albania was centered on the worship of three divinities, designated by Interpretatio Romana as Sol, Zeus, and Luna.

Christianity started to enter Caucasian Albania at an early date, according to Movses Kaghankatvatsi, as early as during the 1st century. The first Christian church in the region was built by St. Eliseus, a disciple of Thaddeus of Edessa, at a place called Gis. Shortly after Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion (301 AD), the Caucasian Albanian king Urnayr went to the See of the Armenian Apostolic Church to receive baptism from St. Gregory the Illuminator, the first Patriarch of Armenia.[96][109]

King Vachagan III helped to implant Christianity in Caucasian Albania, through a synod allowing the church legal rights in some domestic issues.[115] In 498 AD (in other sources, 488 AD)[citation needed] in the settlement named Aluen (Aghuen) (present-day Agdam District of Azerbaijan), an Albanian church council convened to adopt laws further strengthening the position of Christianity in Albania.[citation needed]

Albanian churchmen took part in missionary efforts in the Caucasus and Pontic regions. In 682, the catholicos, Israel, led an unsuccessful delegation to convert Alp Iluetuer, the ruler of the North Caucasian Huns, to Christianity. The Albanian Church maintained a number of monasteries in the Holy Land.[116] In the 7th century, Varaz-Grigor, ruler of Albania, and "his nation" were christened by Emperor Heraclius at Gardman.[117]

After the overthrow of Nerses in 705,[non sequitur] the Caucasian Albanian elite decided to reestablish the tradition of having their Catholicoi ordained through the Patriarch of Armenia, as it was the case before 590.[118] This event is generally regarded as the abolition of the Church of Caucasian Albania, and the lowering of its denominational status to that of a Catholicate within the body of the Armenian Apostolic Church.[45]

Islamic era

Sassanid Albania fell to the Islamic conquest of Persia in the mid-7th century and was incorporated into the Rashidun Caliphate. King Javanshir of Albania, the most prominent ruler of Mihranid dynasty, fought against the Arab invasion of caliph Uthman on the side of Sassanid Iran. Facing the threat of the Arab invasion on the south and the Khazar offensive on the north, Javanshir had to recognize the caliph's suzerainty. The Arabs then reunited the territory with Armenia under one governor.[25]

By the 8th century, "Albania" had been reduced to a strictly geographical and titular ecclesiastical connotation,[119] and was referred to as such by medieval Armenian historians; on its place sprang a number principalities, such as that of the Armenian principality and kingdom of Khachen, along with various Caucasian, Iranian and Arabic principalities: the principality of Shaddadids, the principality of Shirvan, the principality of Derbent. Most of the region was ruled by the Persian Sajid dynasty from 890 to 929. The region was at times part of the Abbasid province of Armenia based on numismatic and historical evidence.

Early Muslim ruling dynasties of the time included Rawadids, Sajids, Salarids, Shaddadids, Shirvanshahs, and the Sheki and Tiflis emirates. The principal cities of Arran in early medieval times were Barda (Partav) and Ganja. Barda reached prominence in the 10th century, and was used to house a mint. Barda was sacked by the Rus and Norse several times in the 10th century as a result of the Caspian expeditions of the Rus. Barda never revived after these raids and was replaced as capital by Baylaqan, which in turn was sacked by the Mongols in 1221. After this Ganja rose to prominence and became the central city of the region. The capital of the Shaddadid dynasty, Ganja was considered the "mother city of Arran" during their reign.

The territory of Arran became a part of the Seljuk empire, followed by the Ildegizid state. It was taken briefly by the Khwarizmid dynasty and then overran by Mongol Hulagu empire in the 13th century. Later, it became a part of Chobanid, Jalayirid, Timurid, and Safavid states.

In Azerbaijani historiography

The history of Caucasian Albania has been a major topic of Azerbaijani revisionist theories, which came under criticism in Western and Russian academic and analytical circles, and were often characterized as "bizarre" and "futile".[120][121][122][123][124][125][126][127][128]

In his article "The Albanian Myth", Russian historian and anthropologist Victor Schnirelmann states that Azerbaijani academics have been "renaming prominent medieval Armenian political leaders, historians and writers, who lived in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia into "Albanians". Schnirelmann argues that these efforts were first launched in the 1950s and were directed towards "ripping the population of early medieval Nagorno Karabakh off from their Armenian heritage" and "cleansing Azerbaijan of Armenian history".[129] In the 1970s, Azerbaijan made a transition from ignoring, discounting or concealing Armenian historical heritage in Soviet Azerbaijan to misattributing and mischaracterizing it as examples of Azerbaijani culture by arbitrarily declaring "Caucasian Albanians" as ancestors of modern Azerbaijanis.[130] In this regard, Thomas de Waal, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, writes about the political context of Azerbaijan's historical revisionism:

This rather bizarre argument has the strong political subtext that Nagorno Karabakh had in fact been Caucasian Albanian and that Armenians had no claim to it.[131]

Schnirelmann states that a significant revisionist method used by Azerbaijani scholars was "re-publishing of ancient and medieval sources, where the term "Armenian state" was routinely and systematically removed and replaced with "Albanian state".[132] American author George Bournoutian gives examples of how that was done by Ziya Bunyadov, vice-chairman of Azerbaijani Academy of Sciences,[133] who earned the nickname of "Azerbaijan’s foremost Armenophobe".[132][134]

According to de Waal:

Buniatov’s scholarly credentials were dubious. It later transpired that the two articles he published in 1960 and 1965 on Caucasian Albania were direct plagiarism. Under his own name, he had simply published, unattributed, translations of two articles, originally written in English by Western scholars C.F.J. Dowsett and Robert Hewsen.[135]

Hewsen, a historian from Rowan College and the acknowledged authority in this field, wrote in his volume Armenia: A Historical Atlas, published by University of Chicago Press:

Scholars should be on guard when using Soviet and post-Soviet Azeri editions of Azeri, Persian, and even Russian and Western European sources printed in Baku. These have been edited to remove references to Armenians and have been distributed in large numbers in recent years. When utilizing such sources, the researchers should seek out pre-Soviet editions wherever possible.

— Robert Hewsen[136]

According to de Waal, a disciple of Bunyadov, Farida Mammadova, has "taken the Albanian theory and used it to push Armenians out of the Caucasus altogether. She had relocated Caucasian Albania into what is now the Republic of Armenia. All those lands, churches, and monasteries in the Republic of Armenia—all had been Albanian. No sacred Armenian fact was left un-attacked". De Waal describes Mammadova as a sophisticated end of what "in Azerbaijan has become a very blunt instrument indeed".[137][138] Both Ziya Bunyadov and Farida Mammadova are known for their anti-Armenian public pronouncements and pamphlets.[138][139][140]

Historical revisionism in Azerbaijan supported a number of policies on the ground, including cultural vandalism directed against Armenian monuments in Soviet and post-Soviet Azerbaijan.[121] Armenian memorial stone crosses known as "khachkars" on the territory of Azerbaijan were regularly misrepresented as "Caucasian Albanian" both before and after Azerbaijan's independence.[141] Furthermore, mischaracterization of Armenian khachkars as supposedly non-Armenian monuments of Caucasian Albania was associated with acts of cultural vandalism against Armenian historical monuments in Nakhichevan.[120] The Khachkar destruction in Nakhchivan refer to the systematic campaign by the government of Azerbaijan to completely demolish the Armenian cemetery in Julfa with thousands of Armenian khachkars near the town of Julfa (known as Jugha in Armenian), Nakhchivan. Claims by Armenians that Azerbaijan was undertaking a systematic campaign to destroy and remove the monuments first arose in late 1998 and those charges were renewed in 2002 and 2005.[142] Adam T. Smith, an anthropologist and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago, called the removal of the khachkars "a shameful episode in humanity's relation to its past, a deplorable act on the part of the government of Azerbaijan which requires both explanation and repair". Smith and other scholars, as well as several United States Senators, signed a letter to the UNESCO and other organizations condemning Azerbaijan's government.[143] Azerbaijan instead contends that the monuments were not of Armenian, but of Caucasian Albanian, origin, which, per Thomas De Waal, did not protect "the graveyard from an act in the history wars".[144]

Anti-Armenian cultural vandalism in Azerbaijan perpetrated with the use of revisionist theories on Caucasian Albania was also noted in northern Azerbaijan, where Norwegian archeologists were involved in the restoration of an Armenian-Georgian church in the village of Kish near the city of Shaki. Azerbaijanis erased Armenian inscriptions on the church's walls, which led to by an official complaint by Norwegian foreign ministry.[145]

Furthermore, revisionist theories about Caucasian Albania have also been used by Azerbaijani statesmen in the ongoing Azerbaijani-Georgian dispute over the territorial status of David Gareja monastery complex, a Georgian spiritual and historical monument partially located on the territory of Azerbaijani Republic. David Gareja is a rock-hewn Georgian Orthodox monastery complex in the Kakheti region of Eastern Georgia, on the semi-desert slopes of Mount Gareja, some 60–70 km southeast of Georgia's capital Tbilisi. Giorgi Manjgaladze, Georgia's deputy foreign minister proposed that Georgia would be willing to exchange other territory for the remainder of David Gareja because of its historical and cultural significance to the Georgians.[146][147] Baku disapproves of this land swap,[148] and in April 2007, Azerbaijan's deputy foreign minister Khalaf Khalafov told a press conference in Baku that it was "out of the question" for Azerbaijan to "give up its claims to the borderlands" including David Gareja. Khalafov then stated that the monastery "was home to the Caucasian Albanians, who are believed to have been the earliest inhabitants of Azerbaijan".[149] Georgian art historian Dimitri Tumanishvili dismissed this claim and stated that the complex "is covered in the work of Georgian masters". "There are Georgian inscriptions everywhere dating back to the sixth century," he said, "There are no traces of another culture there. After that, I don’t think you need any further proof."[150]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ See sample of script with letters that resemble other alphabets, specifically Georgian (19 letters), Ethiopian (14 letters) and Armenian (10 letters) in "The Albanian Script: The Process How Its Secrets Were Revealed," by Zaza Aleksidze and Betty Blair
  2. ^ Nevertheless, "despite being one of the chief vassals of Sasanian Shahanshah, the Albanian king had only a semblance of authority, and the Sassanid marzban (military governor) held most civil, religious, and military authority.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Hewsen 2001, p. 41.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Toumanoff, Cyril. The Arsacids. Encyclopædia Iranica. excerpt:"Whatever the sporadic suzerainty of Rome, the country was now a part—together with Iberia (East Georgia) and (Caucasian) Albania, where other Arsacid branched reigned—of a pan-Arsacid family federation. Culturally, the predominance of Hellenism, as under the Artaxiads, was now followed by a predominance of "Iranianism," and, symptomatically, instead of Greek, as before, Parthian became the language of the educated"
  3. ^ a b Shnirelman, V.A.(2001), 'The value of the Past: Myths, Identity and Politics in Transcaucasia', Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. pp 79: "Yet, even at the time of Caucasian Albania and later on, as well, the region was greatly affected by Iran and Persian enjoyed even more success than the Albanian language".
  4. ^ a b Benjamin W. Fortson, "Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction", John Wiley and Sons, 2009. pg 242: "Middle Persian was the official language of the Sassanian dynasty"
  5. ^ Walker, Christopher J. (2000). "Mountainous Karabagh". In John Wright; Richard Schofield; Suzanne Goldenberg (eds.). Transcaucasian Boundaries. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 145. ISBN 9781135368500. Armenian culture became important in Caucasian Albania and, by the eight century, Armenian appears to have been spoken throughout much of the region.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Robert H. Hewsen. "Ethno-History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians", in: Samuelian, Thomas J. (Ed.), Classical Armenian Culture. Influences and Creativity. Chicago: 1982, pp. 27-40.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bosworth, Clifford E. Arran. Encyclopædia Iranica.
  8. ^ a b James Stuart Olson. An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires. ISBN 0-313-27497-5
  9. ^ History of Armenia composed by abbot Chamchian, Mikayel. Պատմութիւն Հայոց (History of Armenia). Venice, 1786, p. 131.
  10. ^ A. Yanovskiy, About the Ancient Caucasian Albania (А. Яновский, О древней Кавказской Албании. Журнал МНЛ, 1864, ч. II, с. 180.)
  11. ^ S. V. Yushkov, On question of the boundaries of ancient Albania. Moscow, 1937, p. 137. (С. В. Юшков, К вопросу о границах древней Албании. «Исторические записки АН СССР», т. I, М., 1937, с. 137.)
  12. ^ Ghevond Alishan, Aghuank (Ղևոնդ Ալիշան, «Աղուանք»), Venice: "Bazmavep", 1970, N 11-12, p. 341.
  13. ^ The History of Aluank by Moses of Kalankatuyk. Book I, chapter IV
  14. ^ "Moses Kalankatuatsi. History of country of Aluank. Chapter IV". Vostlit.info. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
  15. ^ "Darmesteter's translation and notes". Avesta.org. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
  16. ^ Darmesteter, James (trans., ed.). "Vendidad". Zend Avesta I (SBE 4). Oxford University Press, 1880. p. 3, p. 5 n.2,3.
  17. ^ a b V. Minorsky. Caucasica IV. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 15, No. 3. (1953), p. 504
  18. ^ Anon. Armenian "Geography" («Աշխարհացոյց»), Sec. IV, Asia, The lands of Greater Asia.
  19. ^ Balayan, Vahram (2005). Zovig Balian, Gayane Hairapetyan (ed.). Artsakh History. Yerevan, Armenia: Scientific Council of the Institute of History of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia. pp. 55–56. ISBN 99930-2-078-8.
  20. ^ C. J. F. Dowsett. "The Albanian Chronicle of Mxit'ar Goš", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 21, No. 1/3. (1958) p. 475: "In Albania, Xacen, part of the old province of Arcax, had preserved its independence, and we know that it was partly at the request of one of its rulers, Prince Vaxtang, that Mxit'ar composed his lawbook".
  21. ^ a b c d Hewsen 2001, pp. 40–41
  22. ^ Strabo had no knowledge of any city in Albania, although in the 1st century AD Pliny mentions the initial capital of the kingdom - Qabala. The name of the city has been pronounced in many different ways including Gabala, Kabalaka, Shabala, and Tabala.
  23. ^ a b (in Armenian) Yeremyan, Suren T. «Հայաստանը ըստ «Աշխարհացույցի» (Armenia According to the "Ashkharhatsuyts"). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1963, p. 34.
  24. ^ a b c d e Minorsky, Vladimir. A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th-11th Centuries. Cambridge, 1958.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h Chaumont, M. L. . Encyclopædia Iranica. Archived from the original on 2007-03-10.
  26. ^ Abi Ali Ahmad ibn Umar ibn Rustah, al-A'laq Al-Nafisah, Tab'ah 1, Bayrut : Dar al-Kutub al-ʻIlmiyah, 1998, pg 96-98.
  27. ^ a b История Востока. В 6 т. Т. 2. Восток в средние века. М., «Восточная литература», 2002. ISBN 5-02-017711-3 (History of the East. In 6 volumes. Volume 2. Moscow, publishing house of the Russian Academy of sciences «East literature»): At this time the multi-ethnic population of left-bank Albania was increasingly adopiting the Persian language. Mainly, this applies to the cities of Aran and Shirvan, as the two main regions on the territory of Azerbaijan began to be called in the 9th-10th centuries. With regard to the rural population, it would seem that they mostly retained for a long time their old languages, related to the modern Daghestanian languages, especially Lezgin. (Russian text: Пестрое в этническом плане население левобережной Албании в это время все больше переходит на персидский язык. Главным образом это относится к городам Арана и Ширвана, как стали в IX-Х вв. именоваться два главные области на территории Азербайджана. Что касается сельского населения, то оно, по-видимому, в основном сохраняло еще долгое время свои старые языки, родственные современным дагестанским, прежде всего лезгинскому.)
  28. ^ "Caucasian Albanian Script. The Significance of Decipherment by Dr. Zaza Alexidze". Azer.com. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
  29. ^ Minorsky, Vladimir (1953). : 504. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  30. ^ Ronald G. Suny: What Happened in Soviet Armenia? Middle East Report, No. 153, Islam and the State. (Jul. - Aug., 1988), pp. 37-40.
  31. ^ Kuznetsov, Igor. "Udis" (in Russian). vehi.net.
  32. ^ Stuart, James (1994). An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 27. ISBN 0-313-27497-5.
  33. ^ J. Gippert, W. Schulze. Some Remarks on the Caucasian Albanian Palimpsests / Iran and the Caucasus 11 (2007). "Rather, we have to assume that Old Udi corresponds to the language of the ancient Gargars (cf. Movsēs Kałankatuac‘i who tells us that Mesrob Maštoc‘ (362–440) created with the help [of the bishop Ananian and the translator Benjamin] an alphabet for the guttural, harsh, barbarous, and rough language of the Gargarac‘ik‘)".
  34. ^ a b К. В. Тревер. Очерки по истории и культуре Кавказской Албании. М—Л., 1959:"Как известно, в V в. Месроп Маштоц, создавая албанский алфавит, в основу его положил гаргарское наречие албанского языка («создал письмена гаргарского языка, богатого горловыми звуками»). Это последнее обстоятельство позволяет высказать предположение, что именно гаргары являлись наиболее культурным и ведущим албанским племенем".
  35. ^ Peter R. Ackroyd. The Cambridge history of the Bible. Cambridge University Press, 1963. Vol. 2. p. 368: "The third Caucasian people, the Albanians, also received an alphabet from Mesrob, to supply scripture for their Christian church. This church did not survive beyond the conquests of Islam, and all but few traces of the script have been lost, and there are no remains of the version known".
  36. ^ Movses Kalankatuatsi. History of the Land of Aluank, translated from Old Armenian by Sh. V. Smbatian. Yerevan: Matenadaran (Institute of Ancient Manuscripts), 1984
  37. ^ Koriun, The life of Mashtots, Ch. 16.
  38. ^ Joseph L. Wieczynski, George N. Rhyne. The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History. Academic International Press, 1976. ISBN 0-87569-064-5, ISBN 978-0-87569-064-3
  39. ^ Thomson, Robert W. (1996). Rewriting Caucasian History: The Medieval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian Chronicles. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-826373-2.
  40. ^ Alexidze, Zaza. (PDF). Science.org.ge. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2011.
  41. ^ "Encyclopædia Britannica: "Middle Persian [Sassanian Pahlava] and Parthian were doubtlessly similar enough to be mutually intelligible". 2003. p. 627.
  42. ^ Minorsky, Vladimir (1958). "A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th–11th Centuries", Cambridge, 1958.
  43. ^ Istakhari(1994), Ibrahim. " Masalek va Mamalek", tr. As’ad ibn Abdullah Tustari, Majmueyeh Enteshārat Adabi o Tarikho Moqufāt Doctor Afshar, Tehran. On Istakhri: Estakhri of the 10th century also states: "In Azerbeijan, Armenia and Arran they speak Persian and Arabic, except for the area around the city of Dabil: they speak Armenian around that city, and in the country of Barda people speak Arranian". Original Arabic: و لسان اذربيجان و ارمينيه و الران الفارسيه و العربيه غير ان اھل دبيل و حواليھا یتکلمون بالارمنيه، و نواحی بردعه لسانھم ارانيه (Estakhari, Abu Eshaq Ebrahim. Masalek va Mamalek. Bonyad Moqufat Dr. Afshar, Tehran, 1371 (1992-1993))
  44. ^ История Востока. В 6 т. Т. 2. Восток в средние века. М., «Восточная литература», 2002. ISBN 5-02-017711-3 (History of the East. In 6 volumes. Volume 2. Moscow, publishing house of the Russian Academy of sciences «East literature»): The polyethnic population of Albania left-bank at this time is increasingly moving to the Persian language. Mainly this applies to cities of Aran and Shirvan, as begin from 9-10 centuries[clarification needed] named two main areas in the territory of Azerbaijan. With regard to the rural population, it would seem, mostly retained for a long time, their old languages, related to modern Daghestanian family, especially Lezgin. (Russian text: Пестрое в этническом плане население левобережной Албании в это время все больше переходит на персидский язык. Главным образом это относится к городам Арана и Ширвана, как стали в IX-Х вв. именоваться два главные области на территории Азербайджана. Что касается сельского населения, то оно, по-видимому, в основном сохраняло еще долгое время свои старые языки, родственные современным дагестанским, прежде всего лезгинскому.
  45. ^ a b Kuznetsov, Igor. "Udis" (in Russian). vehi.net.
  46. ^ Ronald G. Suny: What Happened in Soviet Armenia? Middle East Report, No. 153, Islam and the State. (Jul. – Aug., 1988), pp. 37–40.
  47. ^ (in Russian) Caucasian Albania. The Eastern Orthodox Encyclopædia.
  48. ^ Bruno Jacobs, "ACHAEMENID RULE IN Caucasus" in Encyclopædia Iranica. January 9, 2006. Excerpt: "Achaemenid rule in the Caucasus region was established, at the latest, in the course of the Scythian campaign of Darius I in 513-12 BCE. The Persian domination of the cis-Caucasian area (the northern side of the range) was brief, and archeological findings indicate that the Great Caucasus formed the northern border of the empire during most, if not all, of the Achaemenid period after Darius"
  49. ^ Hewsen 2001, p. 40.
  50. ^ Тревер К. В. Очерки по истории и культуре кавказской Албании IV в. до н. э. — VII в. н. э. М.-Л., 1959, p 144
  51. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica. Article: Azerbaijan
  52. ^ Walker, Christopher J. Armenia and Karabagh: The Struggle for Unity. London: Minority Rights Group Publications, 1991, p. 10.
  53. ^ a b Istorija Vostoka. V 6 t. T. 2, Vostok v srednije veka Moskva, «Vostochnaya Literatura», 2002. ISBN 5-02-017711-3
  54. ^ Robert H. Hewsen. "Ethno-History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians", in: Samuelian, Thomas J. (Ed.), Classical Armenian Culture. Influences and Creativity, Chicago: 1982
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  131. ^ Thomas De Waal. The Caucasus: An Introduction. Oxford University Press, USA. 2010, p. 107
  132. ^ a b Esayi Hasan Jalaeants (Author), George A. Bournoutian (Translator). Brief History of the Aghuank Region: (Patmut'iwn Hamarot Aghuanits Erkri). Mazda Publishers (July 2009), Introduction, pp. 9-21
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References

  • Hewsen, Robert H. (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226332284.
  • Marco Bais Albania caucasica: ethnos, storia, territorio attraverso le fonti greche, latine e armene. Mimesis Edizioni. Roma, 2001 ISBN 88-87231-95-8 (in Italian)
  • Movses Kalankatuatsi. The History of Aluank. Translated from Old Armenian (Grabar) by Sh.V.Smbatian, Yerevan, 1984. (in Russian)
  • Koriun, The Life of Mashtots, translated from Old Armenian (Grabar) by Bedros Norehad.
  • Movses Kalankatuatsi. History of Albania. Translated by L. Davlianidze-Tatishvili, Tbilisi, 1985. (in Georgian)
  • Movses Khorenatsi The History of Armenia. Translated from Old Armenian (Grabar) by Gagik Sargsyan, Yerevan, 1990. (in Russian)
  • Ilia Abuladze. "About the discovery of the alphabet of the Caucasian Albanians". Bulletin of the Institute of Language, History and Material Culture (ENIMK), Vol. 4, Ch. I, Tbilisi, 1938.
  • Chaumont, M. L. (1985). "Albania". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. I, Fasc. 8. pp. 806–810.
  • Gadjiev, Murtazali (2017). "Construction Activities of Kavād I in Caucasian Albania". Iran and the Caucasus. Brill. 21 (2): 121–131. doi:10.1163/1573384X-20170202.
  • Gadjiev, Murtazali (2020). "The Chronology of the Arsacid Albanians". From Caucasian Albania to Arrān: The East Caucasus Between Antiquity and Medieval Islam (C. 300 Bce – 1000 Ad). Ed. By Rodert G. Hoyland. Piscataway: Gorgias Press, 2020. P. 29-35. Gorgias Press: 29–35.
  • Toumanoff, C. (1986). "Arsacids vii. The Arsacid dynasty of Armenia". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. II, Fasc. 5. pp. 543–546.

External links

  • Caucasian History
  • Caucasian Albania, An International Handbook, Edited by Jost Gippert and Jasmine Dum-Tragut, 2023

caucasian, albania, this, article, about, political, entity, geographic, region, arran, caucasus, province, sasanian, province, modern, exonym, former, state, located, ancient, times, caucasus, mostly, what, azerbaijan, where, both, capitals, were, located, mo. This article is about the political entity For the geographic region see Arran Caucasus For the province see Caucasian Albania Sasanian province Caucasian Albania is a modern exonym for a former state located in ancient times in the Caucasus mostly in what is now Azerbaijan where both of its capitals were located The modern endonyms for the area are Aghwank and Aluank among the Udi people who regard themselves as descended from the inhabitants of Caucasian Albania However its original endonym is unknown 6 7 Caucasian Albania2nd century BC 8th century ADCaucasian Albania in the 5th and 6th centuries 1 StatusInitial state s unknown later vassal kingdom and province of the Sasanian Empire and the Rashidun Umayyad and Abbasid CaliphatesCapitalKabalak Qabala Partaw Barda Common languagesCaucasian Albanian Parthian 2 Middle Persian 3 4 Armenian 5 ReligionPaganism Christianity ZoroastrianismHistorical eraAntiquity Established2nd century BC Disestablished 8th century ADToday part ofAzerbaijanRussiaGeorgiaArmeniaThe name Albania is derived from the Ancient Greek name Ἀlbania and Latin Albania 8 The prefix Caucasian is used purely to avoid confusion with modern Albania of the Balkans which has no known geographical or historical connections to Caucasian Albania Little is known of the region s prehistory including the origins of Caucasian Albania as a geographical and or ethnolinguistic concept In the 1st century BC and the 1st century AD the area south of the Greater Caucasus and north of the Lesser Caucasus was divided between Caucasian Albania in the east Caucasian Iberia in the center Kolchis in the west Armenia in the southwest and Atropatene to the southeast In 252 Caucasian Albania acknowledged the suzerainty of the Sasanian Empire appearing among its provinces in Shapur I s inscription at the Ka ba ye Zartosht The kingdom would remain an integral part of the empire until its fall By the end of the 3rd century the kings of Caucasian Albania were replaced with an Arsacid family and would later be succeeded by another Iranian royal family in the 5th century AD the Mihranids Contents 1 Geonyms 2 Geography 3 Ethnogenesis 3 1 Alphabet and languages 3 1 1 Caucasian Albanian language 3 1 2 Iranian languages 3 2 Religion 4 History 4 1 Median and Achaemenid era 4 2 Hellenistic era 4 3 Roman Empire 4 4 Parthian period 4 5 Sassanid period 4 6 Impact of Armenian politics culture and civilization 4 7 Christianization 4 8 Islamic era 5 In Azerbaijani historiography 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksGeonyms nbsp 1838 map Colchis Iberia and AlbaniaAghuank Old Armenian Աղուանք Aluankʿ Modern Armenian Աղվանք Aġvank is the Armenian name for Caucasian Albania Armenian authors mention that the name derived from the word alu աղու meaning amiable in Armenian The term Aghuank is polysemous and is also used in Armenian sources to denote the region between the Kur and Araxes rivers as part of Armenia 9 better source needed In the latter case it is sometimes used in the form Armenian Aghuank or Hay Aghuank 10 11 12 The Armenian historian of the region Movses Kaghankatvatsi who left the only more or less complete historical account about the region explains the name Aghvank as a derivation from the word alu Armenian for sweet soft tender which he said was the nickname of Caucasian Albania s first governor Arran and referred to his lenient personality 13 Movses Kaghankatvatsi and other ancient sources explain Arran or Arhan as the name of the legendary founder of Caucasian Albania Aghvan or even of the Iranian tribe known as Alans Alani who in some versions was a son of Noah s son Yafet 14 James Darmesteter translator of the Avesta compared Arran with Airyana Vaego 15 which he also considered to have been in the Araxes Ararat region 16 although modern theories tend to place this in the east of Iran nbsp Caucasian Albania until 387The Parthian name for the region was Ardhan Middle Persian Arran 7 The Arabic was ar Ran 7 17 In Georgian it was known as რანი Rani In Ancient Greek it was called Ἀlbania Albania 8 What its inhabitants were called is unknown 6 GeographyIn pre Islamic times Caucasian Albania Arran was a wider concept than that of post Islamic Arran Ancient Arran covered all of eastern Transcaucasia which included most of the territory of the modern day Azerbaijan Republic and part of the territory of Dagestan However in post Islamic times the geographic notion of Arran reduced to the territory between the Kura and Aras rivers 7 Ancient Caucasian Albania lay on the south eastern part of the Greater Caucasus mountains It was bounded by Caucasian Iberia present day Georgia to the west by Sarmatia to the north by the Caspian Sea to the east and by the provinces of Artsakh and Utik in Armenia to the west along the Kura river 18 These boundaries though were probably never static at times the territory of Caucasian Albania included land to the west of the Kura river 19 Albania or Arran in Islamic times was a triangle of land lowland in the east and mountainous in the west formed by the junction of the Kura and Aras rivers 7 20 dubious discuss Mil plain and parts of the Mughan plain and in the pre Islamic times corresponded roughly to the territory of the modern day Republic of Azerbaijan 7 The districts of Albania were 21 Cambysene Getaru Elni Xeni Begh Shake Xolmaz Kapalak Hambasi Gelavu Hejeri Kaladasht The kingdom s capital in antiquity was Qabala Gabala Kapalak 22 Classical sources are unanimous in making the Kura River Cyros the frontier between Armenia and Albania after the conquest of the territories on the right bank of Kura by Armenians in the 2nd century BC 21 The original territory of Albania was approximately 23 000 km2 23 After 387 AD the territory of Caucasian Albania sometimes referred to by scholars as Greater Albania 21 grew to about 45 000 km 23 In the 5th century the capital was transferred to Partav in Utik reported to have been built in the mid 5th century by the King Vache II of Albania 24 but according to M L Chaumont it existed earlier as an Armenian city 25 In a medieval chronicle Ajayib ad Dunia written in the 13th century by an unknown author Arran is said to have been 30 farsakhs 200 km in width and 40 farsakhs 270 km in length All the right bank of the Kura River until it joined with the Aras was attributed to Arran the left bank of the Kura was known as Shirvan The boundaries of Arran have shifted throughout history sometimes encompassing the entire territory of the present day Republic of Azerbaijan and at other times only parts of the South Caucasus In some instances Arran was a part of Armenia 26 Medieval Islamic geographers gave descriptions of Arran in general and of its towns which included Barda Beylagan and Ganja along with others EthnogenesisOriginally at least some of the Caucasian Albanians probably spoke Lezgic languages close to those found in modern Dagestan 27 28 overall though as many as 26 different languages may have been spoken in Caucasian Albania 29 After the Caucasian Albanians were Christianized in the 4th century part of the population was assimilated by the Armenians who dominated in the provinces of Artsakh and Utik that were earlier detached from the Kingdom of Armenia and Georgians in the north 30 while the eastern parts of Caucasian Albania were Islamized and absorbed by Iranian 27 and subsequently Turkic peoples modern Azerbaijanis 6 Small remnants of this group continue to exist independently and are known as the Udi people 31 The pre Islamic population of Caucasian Albania might have played a role in the ethnogenesis of a number of modern ethnicities including the Azerbaijanis of Qabala Zaqatala Shaki and Oguz the Armenians of Oghuz and Shaki the Georgians of Kakhetia and Hereti Ingiloy and the Laks the Lezgins and the Tsakhurs of Daghestan 32 Alphabet and languages Caucasian Albanian language Main article Caucasian Albanian language According to Armenian medieval historians Movses Khorenatsi Movses Kaghankatvatsi and Koryun the Caucasian Albanian the Armenian name for the language is Aghvaneren the native name of the language is unknown alphabet was created by Mesrob Mashtots 33 34 35 the Armenian monk theologian and translator who is also credited with creating the Armenian alphabet 36 This alphabet was used to write down the Udi language which was probably the main language of the Caucasian Albanians Koryun a pupil of Mesrob Mashtots in his book The Life of Mashtots wrote about how his tutor created the alphabet Then there came and visited them an elderly man an Albanian named Benjamin And he Mashtots inquired and examined the barbaric diction of the Albanian language and then through his usual God given keenness of mind invented an alphabet which he through the grace of Christ successfully organized and put in order 37 nbsp A column capital with an Albanian inscription from a 7th century church in Mingachevir 38 Azerbaijan State Museum of History A Caucasian Albanian alphabet of fifty two letters bearing resemblance to Georgian Ethiopian and Armenian characters Note 1 survived through a few inscriptions and an Armenian manuscript dating from the 15th century 39 This manuscript Matenadaran No 7117 first published by Ilia Abuladze in 1937 is a language manual presenting different alphabets for comparison Armenian alphabet Greek Latin Syriac Georgian Coptic and Caucasian Albanian among them The alphabet was titled Aluanicʿ girn e Armenian Աղուանից գիրն Է meaning These are Albanian letters In 1996 Zaza Aleksidze of the Georgian Centre of Manuscripts discovered at Saint Catherine s Monastery at Mount Sinai Egypt a text written on parchment that had been reused in a Georgian palimpsest In 2001 Aleksidze identified its script as Caucasian Albanian and the text as an early lectionary dating to perhaps before the 6th century Many of the letters discovered in it were not in the Albanian alphabet listed in the 15th century Armenian manuscript 40 Muslim geographers Al Muqaddasi Ibn Hawqal and Estakhri recorded that a language which they called Arranian was still spoken in the capital Barda and the rest of Arran in the 10th century 7 Iranian languages Further information Parthian language and Persian language Iranian contact in the region goes back to the Median and Achaemenid times During this Arsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania the Parthian language spread in the region 2 It is possible that the language and literature for administration and record keeping of the imperial chancellery for external affairs naturally became Parthian based on the Aramaic alphabet According to Toumanoff the predominance of Hellenism as under the Artaxiads was now followed by a predominance of Iranianism and symptomatically instead of Greek as before Parthian became the language of the educated 2 With the establishment of the Sassanids Middle Persian a closely related language to Parthian 41 became an official language of the Sassanid Empire 4 At this time Persian enjoyed even more success than the Caucasian Albanian language and the region was greatly affected by Iran 3 According to Vladimir Minorsky The presence of Iranian settlers in Transcaucasia and especially in the proximity of the passes must have played an important role in absorbing and pushing back the aboriginal inhabitants Such names as Sharvan Layzan Baylaqan etc suggest that the Iranian immigration proceeded chiefly from Gilan and other regions on the southern coast of the Caspian 42 The presence of the Persian language and Iranian culture continued during the Islamic era 43 44 Religion The original population of the Caucasus followed different pagan religions Under Achaemenid Parthian and especially Sassanid influence Zoroastrianism also grew in the region Christianity started to spread in the late 4th century in the Sassanid era The Arab conquest and the Chalcedonian crisis led to severe disintegration of the Church of Caucasian Albania Starting from the 8th century much of the local population converted to Islam By the 11th century there already were conciliar mosques in Partaw Qabala and Shaki the cities that were the creed of Caucasian Albanian Christianity 45 These Islamised groups would later be known as Lezgins and Tsakhurs or mix with the Turkic and Iranian population to form present day Azeris whereas those that remained Christian were gradually absorbed by Armenians 46 or continued to exist on their own and be known as the Udi people The Caucasian Albanian tribes of Hereti were converted to Eastern Orthodoxy by Dinar Queen of Hereti in the 10th century The religious affairs of this small principality were now officially administered by the Georgian Orthodox Church In 1010 Hereti became absorbed into the neighbouring Georgian kingdom of Kakheti Eventually in the early 12th century these lands became part of the Georgian Kingdom under David the Builder finalising the process of their Georgianisation 47 HistoryThe history of Albania before the 6th century BC is unknown Median and Achaemenid era According to one hypothesis Caucasian Albania was incorporated in the Median empire 25 as early as the 7th or 6th century BC However an increasing Persian influence on the region is usually believed to be connected with the defence of Persia s northern frontiers 24 25 from invading nomads As early as the Achaemenid empire measures may have been taken to fortify the Caucasian passes By the mid 6th century BC Albania has been incorporated in the Achaemenid empire it was later controlled by the Achaemenid satrapy of Media 25 48 The building of fortifications and gates in and around Darband is traditionally ascribed to the Sassanid Empire 24 Hellenistic era nbsp The ruins of the gates of the Albanian capital QabalaThe Greek historian Arrian mentions perhaps anachronistically the Caucasian Albanians for the first time in the battle of Gaugamela where the Albanians Medes Cadussi and Sacae were under the command of Atropates 25 Albania first appears in history as a vassal state in the empire of Tigranes the Great of Armenia 95 56 BC 49 The kingdom of Albania emerged in the eastern Caucasus in 2nd or 1st century BC and along with the Georgians and Armenians formed one of the three nations of the Southern Caucasus 21 50 Albania came under strong Armenian religious and cultural influence 24 51 52 53 54 Herodotus Strabo and other classical authors repeatedly mention the Caspians but do not seem to know much about them they are grouped with other inhabitants of the southern shore of the Caspian Sea like the Amardi Anariacae Cadusii Albani see below and Vitii Eratosthenes apud Strabo 11 8 8 and their land Caspiane is said to be part of Albania Theophanes Mytilenaeus apud Strabo 11 4 5 55 In the 2nd century BC parts of Albania were conquered by the Kingdom of Armenia presumably from Medes 6 although possibly it was earlier part of Orontid Armenia 56 The original population of the territories on the right bank of Kura before the Armenian conquest consisted of various autochthonous people Ancient chronicles provide the names of several peoples that populated these districts including the regions of Artsakh and Utik These were Utians Mycians Caspians Gargarians Sakasenians Gelians Sodians Lupenians Balas ak anians Parsians and Parrasians 6 According to Robert H Hewsen these tribes were certainly not of Armenian origin and although certain Iranian peoples must have settled here during the long period of Persian and Median rule most of the natives were not even Indo Europeans 6 He also states that the several peoples of the right bank of Kura were highly Armenicized and that many were actually Armenians per se cannot be doubted Many of those people were still being cited as distinct ethnic entities when the right bank of Kura was acquired by the Caucasian Albanians in 387 AD 6 Roman Empire Main article Roman influence in Caucasian Albania nbsp Roman inscription in Gobustan Baku left by Legio XII FulminataThere was an enduring relation of Albania with Ancient Rome 57 The Latin rock inscription close to Boyukdash mountain in Gobustan Baku which mentions Legio XII Fulminata is the world s easternmost Latin inscription known 58 In Albania Romans reached the Caspian Sea for the first time 58 The Roman coins circulated in Caucasian Albania till the end of the 3rd century AD 59 Two denarii which were unearthed in the 2nd century BC layer were minted by Clodius and Caesar 59 The coins of Augustus are ubiquitous 59 The Qabala treasures revealed the denarii of Otho Vespasian Trajan and Hadrian In 69 68 BC Lucullus having overcome Armenian ruler Tigranes II approached the borders of Caucasian Albania and was succeeded by Pompey 60 After the 66 65 BC wintering Pompey launched the Iberian campaign It is reported by Strabo upon the account of Theophanes of Mytilene who participated in it 61 As testified by Kamilla Trever Pompey reached the Albanian border at modern Qazakh District of Azerbaijan Igrar Aliyev showed that this region called Cambysene was inhabited mainly by stock breeders at the time When fording the Alazan river he was attacked by forces of Oroezes King of Albania and eventually defeated them According to Plutarch Albanians were led by a brother of the king named Cosis who as soon as the fighting was at close quarters rushed upon Pompey himself and smote him with a javelin on the fold of his breastplate but Pompey ran him through the body and killed him 62 Plutarch also reported that after the battle Pompey set out to march to the Caspian Sea but was turned back by a multitude of deadly reptiles when he was only three days march distant and withdrew into Lesser Armenia 63 The first kings of Albania were certainly the representatives of the local tribal nobility to which attest their non Armenian and non Iranian names Oroezes Cosis and Zober in Greek sources 64 The population of Caucasian Albania of the Roman period is believed to have belonged to either the Northeast Caucasian peoples 7 or the South Caucasian peoples 65 According to Strabo the Albanians were a group of 26 tribes which lived to the north of the Kura river and each of them had its own king and language 6 Sometime before the 1st century BC they federated into one state and were ruled by one king 66 Strabo wrote of the Caucasian Albanians in the 1st century BC At the present time indeed one king rules all the tribes but formerly the several tribes were ruled separately by kings of their own according to their several languages They have twenty six languages because they have no easy means of intercourse with one another 66 nbsp Caucasian Albania was a vassal of the Roman Empire around 300 AD Albania is also mentioned by Dionysius Periegetes 2nd or 3rd century AD who describes Albanians as a nation of warriors living by the Iberians and the Georgians 67 In 1899 a silver plate featuring Roman toreutics was excavated near Azerbaijani village of Qalagah The rock inscription near the south eastern part of Boyukdash s foot 70 km from Baku was discovered on June 2 1948 by Azerbaijani archaeologist Ishag Jafarzadeh The legend is IMPDOMITIANO CAESARE AVG GERMANIC L IVLIVS MAXIMVS gt LEG XII FVL According to Domitian s titles in it the related march took place between 84 and 96 The inscription was studied by Russian expert Yevgeni Pakhomov who assumed that the associated campaign was launched to control the Derbent Gate and that the XII Fulminata has marched out either from Melitene its permanent base or Armenia where it might have moved from before 68 Pakhomov supposed that the legion proceeded to the spot continually along the Aras River The later version published in 1956 states that the legion was stationing in Cappadocia by that time whereas the centurion might have been in Albania with some diplomatic mission because for the talks with the Eastern rulers the Roman commanders were usually sending centurions 69 In 1953 twelve denarii of Augustus were unearthed 59 In 1958 one denarius coined in c 82 AD was revealed in the Samaxi trove 59 During the reign of Roman emperor Hadrian 117 138 Albania was invaded by the Alans an Iranian nomadic group 70 This invasion promoted an alliance between Rome and the Albanians that was reinforced under Antoninus Pius in 140 AD Sassanians occupied the area around 240 AD but after a few years the Roman Empire regained control of Caucasian Albania In 297 the treaty of Nisibis stipulated the reestablishment of the Roman protectorate over Caucasian Iberia and Albania But fifty years later Rome lost the area that since then remained an integral part of the Sasanian Empire Parthian period Main article Arsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania Further information Parthian Empire and Parthian language Under Parthian rule Iranian political and cultural influence increased in the region 2 Whatever the sporadic suzerainty of Rome the country was now a part together with Iberia East Georgia and Caucasian Albania where other Arsacid branches reigned of a pan Arsacid family federation 2 Culturally the predominance of Hellenism as under the Artaxiads was now followed by a predominance of Iranianism and symptomatically instead of Greek as before Parthian became the language of the educated 2 An incursion in this era was made by the Alans who between 134 and 136 attacked Albania Media and Armenia penetrating as far as Cappadocia But Vologases persuaded them to withdraw probably by paying them Sassanid period Main article Albania satrapy In 252 253 Caucasian Albania along with Caucasian Iberia and Greater Armenia was conquered and annexed by the Sassanid Empire Albania became a vassal state of the Sassanid Empire 71 but retained its monarchy the Albanian king had no real power and most civil religious and military authority lay with the Sassanid marzban military governor of the territory Note 2 The Roman Empire again obtained control of Caucasian Albania as a vassal state for a few years around 300 AD but then the Sassanids regained control and subsequently dominated the area for centuries until the Arab invasions Albania was mentioned among the Sassanid provinces listed in the trilingual inscription of Shapur I at Naqsh e Rustam 72 73 In the middle of the 4th century King Urnayr of Albania arrived in Armenia and was baptized by Gregory the Illuminator but Christianity spread in Albania only gradually and the Albanian king remained loyal to the Sassanids After the partition of Armenia between Byzantium and Persia in 387 AD Albania with Sassanid help was able to seize from Armenia all the right bank of the river Kura up to river Araxes including Artsakh and Utik 25 In the mid 5th century the Sassanid King Yazdegerd II passed an edict requiring all the Christians in his empire to convert to Zoroastrianism fearing that Christians might ally with Roman Empire which had recently adopted Christianity as its official religion This led to a rebellion of Albanians along with Armenians and Georgians At the Battle of Avarayr the allied forces of Caucasian Albania Georgia and Armenia devoted to Christianity suffered defeat at the hands of the Sassanid army Many of the Armenian nobility fled to the mountainous regions of Albania particularly to Artsakh which had become a center for resistance to Sassanid Persia The religious center of the Albanian state also moved here However King Vache of Albania a relative of Yazdegerd II was forced to convert to Zoroastrianism but soon thereafter converted back to Christianity According to The History of the Country of Albania Peroz ordered the Albanian king Vache II to have the city of Perozapat the city of Peroz or Prosperous Peroz constructed However this is unlikely as the Kingdom of Caucasian Albania had been abolished by Peroz after suppressing a revolt by Vache II in the mid 460s 74 The city was seemingly founded by Peroz himself after the removal of the ruling family in Caucasian Albania Due to its more secure location it was made the new residence of the Iranian marzbans 75 Albania remained kingless until 485 when Vachagan III r 485 510 was installed on the throne by Peroz s brother and successor Balash r 484 488 76 In 552 the seat of the Albanian Catholicos was also transferred to Partaw 25 77 By the end of the 5th century the ancient Arsacid royal house of Albania a branch of the ruling dynasty of Parthia became extinct and in the 6th century it was replaced by princes of the Persian or Parthian Mihranid family who claimed descent from the Sassanids They assumed the Persian title of Arranshah i e the Shah of Arran the Persian name of Albania 7 The ruling dynasty was named after its Persian founder Mihran who was a distant relative of the Sasanians 78 The Mihranid dynasty survived under Muslim suzerainty until 821 22 79 In the late 6th to early 7th centuries the territory of Albania became an arena of wars between Sassanid Persia Byzantium and the Khazar Khanate the latter two very often acting as allies against Sassanid Persia In 628 during the Third Perso Turkic War the Khazars invaded Albania and their leader Ziebel declared himself Lord of Albania levying a tax on merchants and the fishermen of the Kura and Araxes rivers in accordance with the land survey of the kingdom of Persia Most of Transcaucasia was under Khazar rule before the arrival of the Arabs 24 However some other sources state that the Khazars later left the region because of political instability 80 According to Peter Golden steady pressure from Turkic nomads was typical of the Khazar era although there are no unambiguous references to permanent settlements 81 while Vladimir Minorsky stated that in Islamic times the town of Qabala lying between Shirvan and Shakki was a place where Khazars were probably settled 17 Impact of Armenian politics culture and civilization Armenian politics culture and civilization played a critical role in the entire history of Caucasian Albania Aghvank in Armenian 82 This due to the fact that after the partition of the Kingdom of Armenia by Persia and Byzantium in 387 AD the Armenian provinces of Artsakh and Utik were disassociated from the Armenian kingdom and included by Persians into a single province marzpanate called Aghvank Arran 83 This new unit included the original Caucasian Albania found between the River Kura and the Great Caucasus tribes living along the Caspian shore as well as Artsakh and Utik two territories now detached from Armenia 84 85 86 nbsp Armenian monk Mesrop Mashtots invented the Gargarean Caucasian Albanian alphabet in the 5th century after creating the Armenian script art by Francesco Maggiotto 1750 1805 34 87 The Armenian medieval atlas Ashkharhatsuyts Աշխարացույց compiled in the 7th century by Anania Shirakatsi Անանիա Շիրակացի but sometimes attributed to Movses Khorenatsi as well categorizes Artsakh and Utik as provinces of Armenia despite their presumed detachment from the Armenian Kingdom and their political association with Caucasian Albania and Persia at the time of his writing 88 Shirakatsi specifies that Artsakh and Utik are now detached from Armenia and included in Aghvank and he takes care to distinguish this new entity from the old Aghvank strictly speaking Բուն Աղվանք situated north of the river Kura Because it was more homogeneous and more developed than the original tribes to the north of the Kura the Armenian element took over Caucasian Albania s political life and was progressively able to impose its language and culture 89 90 The Armenian population of Artsakh and Utik remained in place as did the entire political social cultural and military structure of the provinces 53 91 In the 5th century early medieval historian Khorenatsi Խորենացի testifies that the population of Artsakh and Utik spoke Armenian with the River Kura in his words marking the boundary of Armenian speech զեզերս հայկական խօսիցս 92 93 94 though this does not mean that its population consisted exclusively of ethnic Armenians 86 95 Whatever little is known about Caucasian Albania after 387 AD comes from the Old Armenian text History of the Land of Aghvank Պատմություն Աղվանից Աշխարհի by the Armenian author Movses Kaghankatvatsi also known as Movses Daskhurantsi 96 which in essence is the history of Armenia s provinces of Artsakh and Utik 89 Kaghankatvatsi repeating Khorenatsi mentions that the very name Aghvank Albania is of Armenian origin and relates it to the Armenian word aghu աղու meaning kind benevolent 97 Khorenatsi states that aghu was a nickname given to Prince Arran whom the Armenian King Vologases I Vagharsh I appointed as governor of northeastern provinces bordering on Armenia According to a legend reported by Khorenatsi Arran was a descendant of Sisak the ancestor of the Siunids of Armenia s province of Syunik and thus a great grandson of the ancestral eponym of the Armenians the Forefather Hayk 98 Kaghankatvatsi and another Armenian author Kirakos Gandzaketsi confirm Arran s belonging to Hayk s bloodline by calling Arranshahiks a Haykazian dynasty 99 nbsp Amaras Monastery in Karabagh where in the 5th century Mesrob Mashtots set up the first school to use his Armenian alphabet 100 101 In Kaghankatvatsi s History and in the historical text of the Armenian early medieval author Agathangelos the Kingdom of Aghvank s feudal system including its political terminology was Armenian 102 As in Armenia nobles of Aghvank are referred to by the terms nakharars նախարար azats ազատ hazarapets հազարապետ marzpets մարզպետ shinakans շինական etc 89 96 Princely families which were later mentioned in Kaghankatvatsi s History were included in the Table of Ranks called Gahnamak direct translation List of Thrones Arm Գահնամակ of the Kingdom of Armenia which defined Armenia s aristocratic hierarchy 103 Princely families of Caucasian Albania were also included in the Table of Armies called Zoranamak Arm Զորանամակ of the Kingdom of Armenia which determined military obligations of key aristocratic families before the Armenian King in times of war 89 As in Armenia the Albanian clergy used exclusively Armenian church terms for clerical hierarchy katholikos կաթողիկոս vardapet վարդապետ sargavag սարգավագ etc 89 104 Identifiably Armenian are also most if not all toponyms found in the History Not only are the names of most towns villages mountains and rivers uniquely Armenian morphologically exactly the same toponyms were and are still found in other parts of historical Armenia They include the root kert town for towns Arm կերտ such Dastakert Hnarakert compare with Tigranakert or modern Stapanakert in Nagorno Karabakh 105 shen and kan village for villages Arm շեն and կան such as Karashen or Dyutakan etc 106 First names of most rulers commoners and clergy in Kaghankatvatsi s History are uniquely Armenian Many of these names survived for centuries and are still used only by modern Armenians 107 These include Vachagan Վախագան Vache Վաչե Bakur Բակուր Taguhi Թագուհի Vrtanes Վրթաննես Viro Վիրո Varaz Trdat Վարազ Տրդաթ Marut Մարութ etc Some of these names can be translated from Armenian as common words e g Taguhi means queen and Varaz means wild boar 107 In fact Armenians to this day use the first name Aghvan Աղվան that directly refers to the Kingdom of Aghvank 108 After the partition the capital city of Caucasian Albania was moved from the territories on the eastern bank of the River Kura referred to by Armenians Aghvank Proper Arm Բուն Աղվանք to Partav located in the former Armenian province of Utik This was followed by the transfer of the Seat of the Kingdom of Albania s religious leader Katholicos from territories north of Kura to Partav 96 The Kingdom of Albania was converted to Christianity at the start of the 4th century by none other than the Armenian evangelizer St Gregory the Enlightener Arm Սբ Գրիգոր Լուսավորիչ who baptized Armenia into the first Christian state by 301 AD 109 In about 330 AD the grandson of St Gregory St Grigoris ecumenical head of the eastern provinces of Armenia was designated bishop for the Kingdom of Aghvank Mausoleum interning Grigoris remains the Amaras Monastery stands as the oldest dated monument in Nagorno Karabakh Amaras was started by St Gregory and completed by St Grigoris himself 110 According to tradition the Amaras Monastery housed the first Armenian school in historical Armenia 111 which was opened early in the 5th century by the inventor of the Armenian alphabet St Mesrob Mashtots St Mesrob Mashtots was intensely active in preaching Gospel in Artsakh and Utik Movses Kaghankatvatsi s History dedicates four separate chapters to St Mashtots mission referring to him as enlightener and saint chapters 27 28 and 29 of Book One and chapter 3 of Book Two 112 Overall St Mesrob made three trips to the Kingdom of Albania where he toured not only the Armenian lands of Artsakh and Utik but also territories to the north of the River Kura 112 Kaghankatvatsi s History describes Armenian influence on the Church of Aghvank whose jurisdiction extended from Artsakh and Utik to regions to the north of the River Kura in the territories of the original pre Armenian Caucasian Albania 113 One of the consequences of this was that the Armenian language progressively supplanted Albanian as the language of church and state and only if there was any single Albanian language in the first place which is doubtful because the population of Albania Aghvank was described as consisting of as many 26 different tribes 113 In the same 7th century Armenian poet Davtak Kertogh writes his Elegy on the Death of Grand Prince Juansher where each passage begins with a letter of Armenian script in alphabetical order 105 114 Christianization Main article Church of Caucasian Albania The polytheistic religion of Albania was centered on the worship of three divinities designated by Interpretatio Romana as Sol Zeus and Luna Christianity started to enter Caucasian Albania at an early date according to Movses Kaghankatvatsi as early as during the 1st century The first Christian church in the region was built by St Eliseus a disciple of Thaddeus of Edessa at a place called Gis Shortly after Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion 301 AD the Caucasian Albanian king Urnayr went to the See of the Armenian Apostolic Church to receive baptism from St Gregory the Illuminator the first Patriarch of Armenia 96 109 King Vachagan III helped to implant Christianity in Caucasian Albania through a synod allowing the church legal rights in some domestic issues 115 In 498 AD in other sources 488 AD citation needed in the settlement named Aluen Aghuen present day Agdam District of Azerbaijan an Albanian church council convened to adopt laws further strengthening the position of Christianity in Albania citation needed Albanian churchmen took part in missionary efforts in the Caucasus and Pontic regions In 682 the catholicos Israel led an unsuccessful delegation to convert Alp Iluetuer the ruler of the North Caucasian Huns to Christianity The Albanian Church maintained a number of monasteries in the Holy Land 116 In the 7th century Varaz Grigor ruler of Albania and his nation were christened by Emperor Heraclius at Gardman 117 After the overthrow of Nerses in 705 non sequitur the Caucasian Albanian elite decided to reestablish the tradition of having their Catholicoi ordained through the Patriarch of Armenia as it was the case before 590 118 This event is generally regarded as the abolition of the Church of Caucasian Albania and the lowering of its denominational status to that of a Catholicate within the body of the Armenian Apostolic Church 45 Islamic era Further information Shirvan Arran Caucasus and Arminiya Sassanid Albania fell to the Islamic conquest of Persia in the mid 7th century and was incorporated into the Rashidun Caliphate King Javanshir of Albania the most prominent ruler of Mihranid dynasty fought against the Arab invasion of caliph Uthman on the side of Sassanid Iran Facing the threat of the Arab invasion on the south and the Khazar offensive on the north Javanshir had to recognize the caliph s suzerainty The Arabs then reunited the territory with Armenia under one governor 25 By the 8th century Albania had been reduced to a strictly geographical and titular ecclesiastical connotation 119 and was referred to as such by medieval Armenian historians on its place sprang a number principalities such as that of the Armenian principality and kingdom of Khachen along with various Caucasian Iranian and Arabic principalities the principality of Shaddadids the principality of Shirvan the principality of Derbent Most of the region was ruled by the Persian Sajid dynasty from 890 to 929 The region was at times part of the Abbasid province of Armenia based on numismatic and historical evidence Early Muslim ruling dynasties of the time included Rawadids Sajids Salarids Shaddadids Shirvanshahs and the Sheki and Tiflis emirates The principal cities of Arran in early medieval times were Barda Partav and Ganja Barda reached prominence in the 10th century and was used to house a mint Barda was sacked by the Rus and Norse several times in the 10th century as a result of the Caspian expeditions of the Rus Barda never revived after these raids and was replaced as capital by Baylaqan which in turn was sacked by the Mongols in 1221 After this Ganja rose to prominence and became the central city of the region The capital of the Shaddadid dynasty Ganja was considered the mother city of Arran during their reign The territory of Arran became a part of the Seljuk empire followed by the Ildegizid state It was taken briefly by the Khwarizmid dynasty and then overran by Mongol Hulagu empire in the 13th century Later it became a part of Chobanid Jalayirid Timurid and Safavid states In Azerbaijani historiographySee also Historical negationism Azerbaijan The history of Caucasian Albania has been a major topic of Azerbaijani revisionist theories which came under criticism in Western and Russian academic and analytical circles and were often characterized as bizarre and futile 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 In his article The Albanian Myth Russian historian and anthropologist Victor Schnirelmann states that Azerbaijani academics have been renaming prominent medieval Armenian political leaders historians and writers who lived in Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia into Albanians Schnirelmann argues that these efforts were first launched in the 1950s and were directed towards ripping the population of early medieval Nagorno Karabakh off from their Armenian heritage and cleansing Azerbaijan of Armenian history 129 In the 1970s Azerbaijan made a transition from ignoring discounting or concealing Armenian historical heritage in Soviet Azerbaijan to misattributing and mischaracterizing it as examples of Azerbaijani culture by arbitrarily declaring Caucasian Albanians as ancestors of modern Azerbaijanis 130 In this regard Thomas de Waal a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace writes about the political context of Azerbaijan s historical revisionism This rather bizarre argument has the strong political subtext that Nagorno Karabakh had in fact been Caucasian Albanian and that Armenians had no claim to it 131 Schnirelmann states that a significant revisionist method used by Azerbaijani scholars was re publishing of ancient and medieval sources where the term Armenian state was routinely and systematically removed and replaced with Albanian state 132 American author George Bournoutian gives examples of how that was done by Ziya Bunyadov vice chairman of Azerbaijani Academy of Sciences 133 who earned the nickname of Azerbaijan s foremost Armenophobe 132 134 According to de Waal Buniatov s scholarly credentials were dubious It later transpired that the two articles he published in 1960 and 1965 on Caucasian Albania were direct plagiarism Under his own name he had simply published unattributed translations of two articles originally written in English by Western scholars C F J Dowsett and Robert Hewsen 135 Hewsen a historian from Rowan College and the acknowledged authority in this field wrote in his volume Armenia A Historical Atlas published by University of Chicago Press Scholars should be on guard when using Soviet and post Soviet Azeri editions of Azeri Persian and even Russian and Western European sources printed in Baku These have been edited to remove references to Armenians and have been distributed in large numbers in recent years When utilizing such sources the researchers should seek out pre Soviet editions wherever possible Robert Hewsen 136 According to de Waal a disciple of Bunyadov Farida Mammadova has taken the Albanian theory and used it to push Armenians out of the Caucasus altogether She had relocated Caucasian Albania into what is now the Republic of Armenia All those lands churches and monasteries in the Republic of Armenia all had been Albanian No sacred Armenian fact was left un attacked De Waal describes Mammadova as a sophisticated end of what in Azerbaijan has become a very blunt instrument indeed 137 138 Both Ziya Bunyadov and Farida Mammadova are known for their anti Armenian public pronouncements and pamphlets 138 139 140 Historical revisionism in Azerbaijan supported a number of policies on the ground including cultural vandalism directed against Armenian monuments in Soviet and post Soviet Azerbaijan 121 Armenian memorial stone crosses known as khachkars on the territory of Azerbaijan were regularly misrepresented as Caucasian Albanian both before and after Azerbaijan s independence 141 Furthermore mischaracterization of Armenian khachkars as supposedly non Armenian monuments of Caucasian Albania was associated with acts of cultural vandalism against Armenian historical monuments in Nakhichevan 120 The Khachkar destruction in Nakhchivan refer to the systematic campaign by the government of Azerbaijan to completely demolish the Armenian cemetery in Julfa with thousands of Armenian khachkars near the town of Julfa known as Jugha in Armenian Nakhchivan Claims by Armenians that Azerbaijan was undertaking a systematic campaign to destroy and remove the monuments first arose in late 1998 and those charges were renewed in 2002 and 2005 142 Adam T Smith an anthropologist and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago called the removal of the khachkars a shameful episode in humanity s relation to its past a deplorable act on the part of the government of Azerbaijan which requires both explanation and repair Smith and other scholars as well as several United States Senators signed a letter to the UNESCO and other organizations condemning Azerbaijan s government 143 Azerbaijan instead contends that the monuments were not of Armenian but of Caucasian Albanian origin which per Thomas De Waal did not protect the graveyard from an act in the history wars 144 Anti Armenian cultural vandalism in Azerbaijan perpetrated with the use of revisionist theories on Caucasian Albania was also noted in northern Azerbaijan where Norwegian archeologists were involved in the restoration of an Armenian Georgian church in the village of Kish near the city of Shaki Azerbaijanis erased Armenian inscriptions on the church s walls which led to by an official complaint by Norwegian foreign ministry 145 Furthermore revisionist theories about Caucasian Albania have also been used by Azerbaijani statesmen in the ongoing Azerbaijani Georgian dispute over the territorial status of David Gareja monastery complex a Georgian spiritual and historical monument partially located on the territory of Azerbaijani Republic David Gareja is a rock hewn Georgian Orthodox monastery complex in the Kakheti region of Eastern Georgia on the semi desert slopes of Mount Gareja some 60 70 km southeast of Georgia s capital Tbilisi Giorgi Manjgaladze Georgia s deputy foreign minister proposed that Georgia would be willing to exchange other territory for the remainder of David Gareja because of its historical and cultural significance to the Georgians 146 147 Baku disapproves of this land swap 148 and in April 2007 Azerbaijan s deputy foreign minister Khalaf Khalafov told a press conference in Baku that it was out of the question for Azerbaijan to give up its claims to the borderlands including David Gareja Khalafov then stated that the monastery was home to the Caucasian Albanians who are believed to have been the earliest inhabitants of Azerbaijan 149 Georgian art historian Dimitri Tumanishvili dismissed this claim and stated that the complex is covered in the work of Georgian masters There are Georgian inscriptions everywhere dating back to the sixth century he said There are no traces of another culture there After that I don t think you need any further proof 150 See alsoArsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania Arts of Caucasian Albania Artsakh Church of Caucasian Albania ShirvanNotes See sample of script with letters that resemble other alphabets specifically Georgian 19 letters Ethiopian 14 letters and Armenian 10 letters in The Albanian Script The Process How Its Secrets Were Revealed by Zaza Aleksidze and Betty Blair Nevertheless despite being one of the chief vassals of Sasanian Shahanshah the Albanian king had only a semblance of authority and the Sassanid marzban military governor held most civil religious and military authority Footnotes Hewsen 2001 p 41 a b c d e f Toumanoff Cyril The Arsacids Encyclopaedia Iranica excerpt Whatever the sporadic suzerainty of Rome the country was now a part together with Iberia East Georgia and Caucasian Albania where other Arsacid branched reigned of a pan Arsacid family federation Culturally the predominance of Hellenism as under the Artaxiads was now followed by a predominance of Iranianism and symptomatically instead of Greek as before Parthian became the language of the educated a b Shnirelman V A 2001 The value of the Past Myths Identity and Politics in Transcaucasia Osaka National Museum of Ethnology pp 79 Yet even at the time of Caucasian Albania and later on as well the region was greatly affected by Iran and Persian enjoyed even more success than the Albanian language a b Benjamin W Fortson Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction John Wiley and Sons 2009 pg 242 Middle Persian was the official language of the Sassanian dynasty Walker Christopher J 2000 Mountainous Karabagh In John Wright Richard Schofield Suzanne Goldenberg eds Transcaucasian Boundaries London Taylor amp Francis p 145 ISBN 9781135368500 Armenian culture became important in Caucasian Albania and by the eight century Armenian appears to have been spoken throughout much of the region a b c d e f g h Robert H Hewsen Ethno History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians in Samuelian Thomas J Ed Classical Armenian Culture Influences and Creativity Chicago 1982 pp 27 40 a b c d e f g h i Bosworth Clifford E Arran Encyclopaedia Iranica a b James Stuart Olson An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires ISBN 0 313 27497 5 History of Armenia composed by abbot Chamchian Mikayel Պատմութիւն Հայոց History of Armenia Venice 1786 p 131 A Yanovskiy About the Ancient Caucasian Albania A Yanovskij O drevnej Kavkazskoj Albanii Zhurnal MNL 1864 ch II s 180 S V Yushkov On question of the boundaries of ancient Albania Moscow 1937 p 137 S V Yushkov K voprosu o granicah drevnej Albanii Istoricheskie zapiski AN SSSR t I M 1937 s 137 Ghevond Alishan Aghuank Ղևոնդ Ալիշան Աղուանք Venice Bazmavep 1970 N 11 12 p 341 The History of Aluank by Moses of Kalankatuyk Book I chapter IV Moses Kalankatuatsi History of country of Aluank Chapter IV Vostlit info Retrieved 2012 05 06 Darmesteter s translation and notes Avesta org Retrieved 2012 05 06 Darmesteter James trans ed Vendidad Zend Avesta I SBE 4 Oxford University Press 1880 p 3 p 5 n 2 3 a b V Minorsky Caucasica IV Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Vol 15 No 3 1953 p 504 Anon Armenian Geography Աշխարհացոյց Sec IV Asia The lands of Greater Asia Balayan Vahram 2005 Zovig Balian Gayane Hairapetyan ed Artsakh History Yerevan Armenia Scientific Council of the Institute of History of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia pp 55 56 ISBN 99930 2 078 8 C J F Dowsett The Albanian Chronicle of Mxit ar Gos Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Vol 21 No 1 3 1958 p 475 In Albania Xacen part of the old province of Arcax had preserved its independence and we know that it was partly at the request of one of its rulers Prince Vaxtang that Mxit ar composed his lawbook a b c d Hewsen 2001 pp 40 41 Strabo had no knowledge of any city in Albania although in the 1st century AD Pliny mentions the initial capital of the kingdom Qabala The name of the city has been pronounced in many different ways including Gabala Kabalaka Shabala and Tabala a b in Armenian Yeremyan Suren T Հայաստանը ըստ Աշխարհացույցի Armenia According to the Ashkharhatsuyts Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1963 p 34 a b c d e Minorsky Vladimir A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th 11th Centuries Cambridge 1958 a b c d e f g h Chaumont M L Albania Encyclopaedia Iranica Archived from the original on 2007 03 10 Abi Ali Ahmad ibn Umar ibn Rustah al A laq Al Nafisah Tab ah 1 Bayrut Dar al Kutub al ʻIlmiyah 1998 pg 96 98 a b Istoriya Vostoka V 6 t T 2 Vostok v srednie veka M Vostochnaya literatura 2002 ISBN 5 02 017711 3 History of the East In 6 volumes Volume 2 Moscow publishing house of the Russian Academy of sciences East literature At this time the multi ethnic population of left bank Albania was increasingly adopiting the Persian language Mainly this applies to the cities of Aran and Shirvan as the two main regions on the territory of Azerbaijan began to be called in the 9th 10th centuries With regard to the rural population it would seem that they mostly retained for a long time their old languages related to the modern Daghestanian languages especially Lezgin Russian text Pestroe v etnicheskom plane naselenie levoberezhnoj Albanii v eto vremya vse bolshe perehodit na persidskij yazyk Glavnym obrazom eto otnositsya k gorodam Arana i Shirvana kak stali v IX H vv imenovatsya dva glavnye oblasti na territorii Azerbajdzhana Chto kasaetsya selskogo naseleniya to ono po vidimomu v osnovnom sohranyalo eshe dolgoe vremya svoi starye yazyki rodstvennye sovremennym dagestanskim prezhde vsego lezginskomu Caucasian Albanian Script The Significance of Decipherment by Dr Zaza Alexidze Azer com Retrieved 2012 05 06 Minorsky Vladimir 1953 504 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Missing or empty title help Ronald G Suny What Happened in Soviet Armenia Middle East Report No 153 Islam and the State Jul Aug 1988 pp 37 40 Kuznetsov Igor Udis in Russian vehi net Stuart James 1994 An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires Greenwood Publishing Group p 27 ISBN 0 313 27497 5 J Gippert W Schulze Some Remarks on the Caucasian Albanian Palimpsests Iran and the Caucasus 11 2007 Rather we have to assume that Old Udi corresponds to the language of the ancient Gargars cf Movses Kalankatuac i who tells us that Mesrob Mastoc 362 440 created with the help of the bishop Ananian and the translator Benjamin an alphabet for the guttural harsh barbarous and rough language of the Gargarac ik a b K V Trever Ocherki po istorii i kulture Kavkazskoj Albanii M L 1959 Kak izvestno v V v Mesrop Mashtoc sozdavaya albanskij alfavit v osnovu ego polozhil gargarskoe narechie albanskogo yazyka sozdal pismena gargarskogo yazyka bogatogo gorlovymi zvukami Eto poslednee obstoyatelstvo pozvolyaet vyskazat predpolozhenie chto imenno gargary yavlyalis naibolee kulturnym i vedushim albanskim plemenem Peter R Ackroyd The Cambridge history of the Bible Cambridge University Press 1963 Vol 2 p 368 The third Caucasian people the Albanians also received an alphabet from Mesrob to supply scripture for their Christian church This church did not survive beyond the conquests of Islam and all but few traces of the script have been lost and there are no remains of the version known Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank translated from Old Armenian by Sh V Smbatian Yerevan Matenadaran Institute of Ancient Manuscripts 1984 Koriun The life of Mashtots Ch 16 Joseph L Wieczynski George N Rhyne The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History Academic International Press 1976 ISBN 0 87569 064 5 ISBN 978 0 87569 064 3 Thomson Robert W 1996 Rewriting Caucasian History The Medieval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian Chronicles Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 826373 2 Alexidze Zaza Discovery and Decipherment of Caucasian Albanian Writing PDF Science org ge Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2011 Encyclopaedia Britannica Middle Persian Sassanian Pahlava and Parthian were doubtlessly similar enough to be mutually intelligible 2003 p 627 Minorsky Vladimir 1958 A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th 11th Centuries Cambridge 1958 Istakhari 1994 Ibrahim Masalek va Mamalek tr As ad ibn Abdullah Tustari Majmueyeh Entesharat Adabi o Tarikho Moqufat Doctor Afshar Tehran On Istakhri Estakhri of the 10th century also states In Azerbeijan Armenia and Arran they speak Persian and Arabic except for the area around the city of Dabil they speak Armenian around that city and in the country of Barda people speak Arranian Original Arabic و لسان اذربيجان و ارمينيه و الران الفارسيه و العربيه غير ان اھل دبيل و حواليھا یتکلمون بالارمنيه و نواحی بردعه لسانھم ارانيه Estakhari Abu Eshaq Ebrahim Masalek va Mamalek Bonyad Moqufat Dr Afshar Tehran 1371 1992 1993 Istoriya Vostoka V 6 t T 2 Vostok v srednie veka M Vostochnaya literatura 2002 ISBN 5 02 017711 3 History of the East In 6 volumes Volume 2 Moscow publishing house of the Russian Academy of sciences East literature The polyethnic population of Albania left bank at this time is increasingly moving to the Persian language Mainly this applies to cities of Aran and Shirvan as begin from 9 10 centuries clarification needed named two main areas in the territory of Azerbaijan With regard to the rural population it would seem mostly retained for a long time their old languages related to modern Daghestanian family especially Lezgin Russian text Pestroe v etnicheskom plane naselenie levoberezhnoj Albanii v eto vremya vse bolshe perehodit na persidskij yazyk Glavnym obrazom eto otnositsya k gorodam Arana i Shirvana kak stali v IX H vv imenovatsya dva glavnye oblasti na territorii Azerbajdzhana Chto kasaetsya selskogo naseleniya to ono po vidimomu v osnovnom sohranyalo eshe dolgoe vremya svoi starye yazyki rodstvennye sovremennym dagestanskim prezhde vsego lezginskomu a b Kuznetsov Igor Udis in Russian vehi net Ronald G Suny What Happened in Soviet Armenia Middle East Report No 153 Islam and the State Jul Aug 1988 pp 37 40 in Russian Caucasian Albania The Eastern Orthodox Encyclopaedia Bruno Jacobs ACHAEMENID RULE IN Caucasus in Encyclopaedia Iranica January 9 2006 Excerpt Achaemenid rule in the Caucasus region was established at the latest in the course of the Scythian campaign of Darius I in 513 12 BCE The Persian domination of the cis Caucasian area the northern side of the range was brief and archeological findings indicate that the Great Caucasus formed the northern border of the empire during most if not all of the Achaemenid period after Darius Hewsen 2001 p 40 Trever K V Ocherki po istorii i kulture kavkazskoj Albanii IV v do n e VII v n e M L 1959 p 144 Encyclopaedia Britannica Article Azerbaijan Walker Christopher J Armenia and Karabagh The Struggle for Unity London Minority Rights Group Publications 1991 p 10 a b Istorija Vostoka V 6 t T 2 Vostok v srednije veka Moskva Vostochnaya Literatura 2002 ISBN 5 02 017711 3 Robert H Hewsen Ethno History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians in Samuelian Thomas J Ed Classical Armenian Culture Influences and Creativity Chicago 1982 Schmitt Rudiger Caspians permanent dead link Encyclopaedia Iranica Hewsen 2001 pp 32 58 Bais Marco 2001 Rome and Caucasian Albania google book in Italian Mimesis ISBN 9788887231953 Retrieved 2012 05 06 permanent dead link a b E V Fedorova Imperatorskij Rim v licah in Russian Ancientcoins narod ru Archived from the original on 2008 04 10 Retrieved 2009 03 16 a b c d e Ilyas Babaev Kakie monety upotreblyali na rynkah Azerbajdzhana in Russian Irs az com Retrieved 2009 03 16 dead link Strabon o Kavkazskoj Albanii in Russian Irs az com Retrieved 2009 03 17 dead link K Aliev K voprosu ob istochnikah Strabona v opisanii drevnej Kavkazskoj Albanii Zh Doklady AN Azerb SSR XVI 1960 No 4 s 420 421 Plutarch The Parallel Lives Pompey 35 Penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 2012 05 06 Plutarch The Parallel Lives Pompey 36 Penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 2012 05 06 Trever K V Ocherki po istorii i kulture kavkazskoj Albanii IV v do n e VII v n e M L 1959 p 145 Chorbajian Levon Donabedian Patrick Mutafian Claude 1994 The Caucasian Knot Zed Books p 54 ISBN 1 85649 288 5 The Caucasian Albania state was established during the second to first centuries BC and according to Strabo was made up of 26 tribes It seems that their language was Ibero Caucasian a b Strabo Geography book 11 chapter 14 Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2012 05 06 Tes palai kai tes nyn oikoumenes periegesis sive Dionysii geographia emendata amp locupletata additione scil geographiae hodiernae Graeco carmine pariter donatae cum 16 tabulis geographicis PDF Londini E Typographaeo Mariae Matthews impensis W Churchill Retrieved 2012 05 06 Pahomov E A Rimskaya nadpis I v n e i legion XII fulminata Izv AN Azerb SSR 1949 No 1 Vsemirnaya istoriya Enciklopediya tom 2 1956 gl XIII Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Albania Caucasus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 481 Ehsan Yarshater The Cambridge history of Iran Volume 1 Cambridge University Press 1983 ISBN 0 521 20092 X 9780521200929 p 141 Gignoux Aneran Encyclopaedia Iranica The high priest Kirder thirty years later gave in his inscriptions a more explicit list of the provinces of Aneran including Armenia Georgia Albania and Balasagan together with Syria and Asia Minor Archived November 16 2007 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica The list of provinces given in the inscription of Ka be ye Zardusht defines the extent of the empire under Shapur Britannica com Retrieved 2013 09 03 Gadjiev 2017 pp 122 123 Gadjiev 2017 p 123 Chaumont 1985 pp 806 810 Movses Kalankatuatsi History of Albania Book 2 Chapter VI Vostlit info Retrieved 2012 05 06 Moses Kalankatuatsi History of country of Aluank Chapter XVII About the tribe of Mihran hailing from the family of Khosrow the Sasanian who became the ruler of the country of Aluank Vostlit info Retrieved 2012 05 06 The Cambridge History of Iran 1991 ISBN 0 521 20093 8 ḴOSROW II Encyclopaedia Iranica An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples by Peter B Golden Otto Harrasowitz 1992 ISBN 3 447 03274 X retrieved 8 June 2006 p 385 386 Chapter History in article Azerbaijan Encyclopaedia Britannica online edition 29 June 2023 Hewsen Robert H Armenia a Historical Atlas Chicago University of Chicago Press 2001 map Caucasian Albania Robert H Hewsen Ethno History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians in Classical Armenian Culture Influences and Creativity ed Thomas J Samuelian Philadelphia Scholars Press 1982 p 45 Hewsen Robert H Armenia a Historical Atlas Chicago University of Chicago Press 2001 pp 32 33 map 19 shows the territory of modern Nagorno Karabakh as part of the Orontids Kingdom of Armenia a b Moisej Horenskij Armyanskaya Geografiya VII v Perevod Patkanova K P SPb 1877 str 40 17 Peter R Ackroyd The Cambridge history of the Bible Cambridge University Press 1963 vol 2 p 368 The third Caucasian people the Albanians also received an alphabet from Mesrop to supply scripture for their Christian church This church did not survive beyond the conquests of Islam and all but few traces of the script have been lost Hewsen Robert H Armenia a Historical Atlas Chicago University of Chicago Press 2001 map Armenia according to Anania of Shirak a b c d e Robert H Hewsen Ethno History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians in Classical Armenian Culture Influences and Creativity ed Thomas J Samuelian Philadelphia Scholars Press 1982 Hewsen Robert H The Kingdom of Artsakh in T Samuelian amp M Stone eds Medieval Armenian Culture Chico CA 1983 Walker Christopher J Armenia and Karabagh The Struggle for Unity Minority Rights Group Publications 1991 p 10 Moses Khorenatsi History of the Armenians translated from Old Armenian by Robert W Thomson Harvard University Press 1978 Book II Strabo op cit book XI chapters 14 15 Bude vol VIII p 123 Svante E Cornell Small Nations and Great Powers 2001 p 64 V A Shnirelman Memory wars Myths identity and politics in Transcaucasia Academkniga Moscow 2003 ISBN 5 94628 118 6 a b c d The History of the Caucasian Albanians by Movses Dasxuranc i Translated by Charles Dowsett London Oxford University Press 1961 pp 3 4 Introduction Moses Khorenatsi History of the Armenians translated from Old Armenian by Robert W Thomson Harvard University Press 1978 p Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank translated from Old Armenian by Sh V Smbatian Yerevan Matenadaran Institute of Ancient Manuscripts 1984 p 43 Kirakos Gandzaketsi Kirakos Gandzaketsi s history of the Armenians Sources of the Armenian Tradition New York 1986 p 67 Viviano Frank The Rebirth of Armenia National Geographic Magazine March 2004 John Noble Michael Kohn Danielle Systermans Georgia Armenia and Azerbaijan Lonely Planet 3 edition May 1 2008 p 307 Agatangelos Istoriya Armenii Istoriya sv Grigoriya i obrasheniya Armenii v hristianstvo per s drevnearm K S Ter Davtyana i S S Arevshatyana izd vo Nairi Er 2004 rus as in the text Oni sut izbrannye ishhany knyazya namestniki kraenachalniki tysyackie desyatitysyackie strany armyanskoj doma Torgomova Str 796 Adonts Nikoghaios Armenia in the Period of Justinian The Political Conditions based on the Naxarar System Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon 1970 p 34 41 N Adonc Dionisij Frakijskij i armyanskie tolkovateli Pg 1915 181 219 a b Agop Jack Hacikyan Gabriel Basmajian Edward S Franchuk The Heritage of Armenian Literature Wayne State University Press December 2002 pp 94 99 Ulubabian Bagrat Studies in the History of the Eastern Province of Armenia 5th 7th Centuries Yerevan 1981 pp 55 58 a b Armenian Names Armenian name Archived from the original on 2012 03 17 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Ս Ավագյան Հայկական անուններ Երևան Լույս հրտ 1982 p 15 a b Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank translated from Old Armenian by Sh V Smbatian Yerevan Matenadaran Institute of Ancient Manuscripts 1984 p 27 Moses Khorenatsi History of the Armenians translated from Old Armenian by Robert W Thomson Harvard University Press 1978 Viviano Frank The Rebirth of Armenia National Geographic Magazine March 2004 p 18 a b Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank Book I chapters 27 28 and 29 Book II chapter 3 a b Chorbajian Levon Donabedian Patrick Mutafian Claude The Caucasian Knot The History and Geo Politics of Nagorno Karabagh NJ Zed Books 1994 Albanian episode Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank translated from Old Armenian by Sh V Smbatian Yerevan Matenadaran Institute of Ancient Manuscripts 1984 Elegy on the Death of Prince Juansher Gasanov Magomed On Christianity in Dagestan Iran amp the Caucasus Vol 5 2001 80 Movses Kalankatuatsi History of Albania Book 2 Chapter LII Vostlit info Archived from the original on 2013 05 31 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Gasanov 80 Movses Kaghankatvatsi The History of the Country of Albania III VIII XI Chorbajian Caucasian Knot pp 63 64 a b Thomas De Waal The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press USA 2010 p 108 a b V A Shnirelman Vojny pamyati Mify identichnost i politika v Zakavkaze M IKC Akademkniga 2003 Yo av Karny Highlanders A Journey to the Caucasus in Quest of Memory NY Farrar Straus and Giroux 2001 pp 376 chapter Ghosts of Caucasian Albania Karny writes The quest for Azerbaijan s antiquity had actually begun well before Soviet collapse and reached its climax in the late 1980s The fierce debates it generated had an eerily existential rather than scholarly quality They were conducted along the lines of I am therefore you are not or better You were not therefore I am The debates locked horns with an intensity that outsiders find bizarre and futile Thomas De Waal The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press USA 2010 pp 107 108 characterization as bizarre on page 107 De Waal Thomas 2004 Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War pp 152 153 143 Svante Cornell Small nations and great powers Routledge December 1 2000 p 50 Philip L Kohl Clare P Fawcett Nationalism politics and the practice of archaeology Cambridge University Press February 23 1996 p 152 153 Ronald Grigor Suny Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies 1996 Ben Fowkes Ethnicity and ethnic conflict in the post communist world Palgrave Macmillan May 3 2002 p 30 V A Shnirelman Vojny pamyati Mify identichnost i politika v Zakavkaze M IKC Akademkniga 2003 In the book Schnirelmann mentions some Armenian authors such as B Ulubabian and A Mnatsakanian who created theories about Caucasian Albania which he finds unpersuasive and possibly politically motivated Yo av Karny Highlanders A Journey to the Caucasus in Quest of Memory NY Farrar Straus and Giroux 2001 pp 371 400 chapter Ghosts of Caucasian Albania Thomas De Waal The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press USA 2010 p 107 a b Esayi Hasan Jalaeants Author George A Bournoutian Translator Brief History of the Aghuank Region Patmut iwn Hamarot Aghuanits Erkri Mazda Publishers July 2009 Introduction pp 9 21 George A Bournoutian Rewriting History Recent Azeri Alterations of Primary Sources Dealing with Karabakh Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies 1992 1993 Volume 6 See discussion of Ziya Bunyadov in Thomas De Waal Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War 2004 pages 152 153 143 Thomas De Waal Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War 2004 p 152 Robert Hewsen Armenia A Historical Atlas Chicago University of Chicago Press 2001 p 291 Thomas De Waal Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War 2004 p 153 143 a b Glava 10 Urekavank Nepredskazuemoe proshloe July 11 2005 via news bbc co uk Farida Mamedova Razrushiv zahoronenie Agadede armyane v ocherednoj raz pytayutsya posyagnut na istoriyu Azerbajdzhana Day Az daily January 06 2006 in Russian Archived November 17 2009 at the Wayback Machine Quotation And it is known that on whole planet exactly the Armenian people is distinguished by the absence of spiritual and other human values in Russian Buniyatov Ziya Concerning the events in Karabakh and Sumgait Elm No 19 May 13 1989 p 175 Excerpts of this text can be found in Levon Chorbajian Patrick Donabedian Claude Mutafian The Caucasian Knot The History and Geopolitics of Nagorno Karabagh London Zed Books 1994 pp 188 189 ISBN 1 85649 288 5 Yo av Karny Highlanders A Journey to the Caucasus in Quest of Memory NY Farrar Straus and Giroux 2001 p 376 Pickman Sarah June 30 2006 Tragedy on the Araxes Archaeology org Retrieved April 16 2007 Smith Adam T et al A copy of the letter PDF Archaeology org Thomas De Waal The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press USA 2010 pp 107 108 Thomas De Waal The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press USA 2010 pp 107 108 Diana Petriashvili and Rovshan Ismayilov 2006 11 03 Georgia Azerbaijan Debate Control of Ancient Monastery s Territory Eurasia net Archived from the original on 2008 02 22 Retrieved 2011 01 31 Michael Mainville 2007 05 03 Ancient monastery starts modern day feud in Caucasus Middle East Times Idrak Abbasov and David Akhvlediani 2007 03 29 Monastery Divides Georgia and Azerbaijan Institute for War and Peace Reporting Edilashvili Nino 2007 04 12 Border Dispute Breaks Harmony between Azerbaijan and Georgia The Georgian Times Archived from the original on 2007 07 08 Idrak Abbasov and David Akhvlediani 2007 03 29 Monastery Divides Georgia and Azerbaijan Institute for War and Peace Reporting ReferencesHewsen Robert H 2001 Armenia A Historical Atlas Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226332284 Marco Bais Albania caucasica ethnos storia territorio attraverso le fonti greche latine e armene Mimesis Edizioni Roma 2001 ISBN 88 87231 95 8 in Italian Movses Kalankatuatsi The History of Aluank Translated from Old Armenian Grabar by Sh V Smbatian Yerevan 1984 in Russian Koriun The Life of Mashtots translated from Old Armenian Grabar by Bedros Norehad Movses Kalankatuatsi History of Albania Translated by L Davlianidze Tatishvili Tbilisi 1985 in Georgian Movses Khorenatsi The History of Armenia Translated from Old Armenian Grabar by Gagik Sargsyan Yerevan 1990 in Russian Ilia Abuladze About the discovery of the alphabet of the Caucasian Albanians Bulletin of the Institute of Language History and Material Culture ENIMK Vol 4 Ch I Tbilisi 1938 Chaumont M L 1985 Albania Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol I Fasc 8 pp 806 810 Gadjiev Murtazali 2017 Construction Activities of Kavad I in Caucasian Albania Iran and the Caucasus Brill 21 2 121 131 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20170202 Gadjiev Murtazali 2020 The Chronology of the Arsacid Albanians From Caucasian Albania to Arran The East Caucasus Between Antiquity and Medieval Islam C 300 Bce 1000 Ad Ed By Rodert G Hoyland Piscataway Gorgias Press 2020 P 29 35 Gorgias Press 29 35 Toumanoff C 1986 Arsacids vii The Arsacid dynasty of Armenia Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol II Fasc 5 pp 543 546 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caucasian Albania About the Caucasian Albania section 10 Caucasian History Caucasian Albania An International Handbook Edited by Jost Gippert and Jasmine Dum Tragut 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caucasian Albania amp oldid 1211051520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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