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Corduene

Corduene[nb 1] Armenian: Կորճայք, romanizedKorchayk; Greek: Κορδυηνή, romanizedKordyene; Hebrew: קרטיגיני[1] romanized: Kartigini) was an ancient historical region, located south of Lake Van, present-day eastern Turkey.

60 BC Kingdom of Corduene

Many believe that the Kardouchoi—mentioned in Xenophon’s Anabasis as having given his 10,000 troops a mauling as they retreated from Persia in 401 BCE—were the ancestors of the Kurds.[2]

According to the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Gordyene is the ancient name of the region of Bohtan (now Şırnak Province).[3] It is mentioned as Beth Qardu in Syriac sources and is described as a small vassal state between Armenia and Parthian Empire in the mountainous area south of Lake Van in modern Turkey[4] Corduene must also be sought on the left bank of the Tigris. Corduene is documented as a fertile mountainous district, rich in pasturage.[3][5]

The Kingdom of Gordyene emerged from the declining Seleucid Empire and for most of its history, it was a province of the Roman Empire[6] and acknowledged the sovereignty of Rome.[7] From 189 to 90 BC, it enjoyed a period of independence. The people of Gordyene were known to have worshiped the Hurrian sky god Teshub.[8]

Origins

According to Arshak Safrastian, the Medes and Scythians mentioned in classical Greek literature existed only as preconceived notions. Equating the Carduchi with the Gutians, he adds that the moment the Ten Thousand began to skirt the lower slopes of the Hamrin Mountains, they were in contact with the tribes of Gutium which are presented here as Medes or Scythians.[9] A direct Gutian connection, however, is unlikely, as the Gutians were not Indo-Iranians and only known to have lived in southern Mesopotamia.[10]

Carduchoi in Xenophon

A people called the Carduchoi (Καρδοῦχοι) are mentioned in Xenophon's Anabasis. They inhabited the mountains north of the Tigris in 401 BC, living in well-provisioned villages. They were enemies to the king of Persia,[11] as were the Greek mercenaries with Xenophon, but their response to thousands of armed and desperate strangers was hostile. They had no heavy troops who could face the battle-hardened hoplites, but they used longbows and slings effectively, and for the Greeks the "seven days spent in traversing the country of the Carduchians had been one long continuous battle, which had cost them more suffering than the whole of their troubles at the hands of the king [of Persia] and Tissaphernes put together."[12]

They have been also mentioned as Gordi by Hecataeus of Miletus c. 520 BC.

Korduk' in Armenian sources

The region of Corduene was called Korduk' in Armenian sources. In these records, unlike in the Greek ones, the people of Korduk' were loyal to Armenian rule and the rulers of Korduk' are presented as members of the Armenian nobility. A prince of Korduk' served in the counsel of the Armenian king Trdat and helped to defend Armenia's southern borders. Additionally, it seems that there was the early presence of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Korduk'.[13]

Corduene in Jewish sources

This region is traditionally identified with the landing site in Deluge mythology. In the targumim, Noah's landing place after the flood is given as 'Qadron' or 'Qardu'.[14][15] Jacob Neusner identifies the targumim's locations with Corduene.[16] According to the Aggadah, Noah landed in Corduene in Armenia.[citation needed] The early 3rd century BCE Babylonian writer Berossus was also of the opinion that Xisthros[needs context] landed with his ship in Corduene.[17] Josephus cited the evidence of Berossus as proof that the Flood was not a myth and also mentioned that the remains of the Ark were still visible in the district of Carron,[dubious ] presumably identical with Korduene.[18] Jewish sources trace the origins of the people of Corduene to the marriage of Jinns of King Solomon with 500 beautiful Jewish women.[19][20][21][22][23]

Corduene in Roman sources

 
Castle of Pinaca (or Finik), northwest of Cizre

According to the Greek historian and geographer Strabo, the region of Gorduene (Γορδυηνῆ, or Γoρδυαῖα ὄρη, "Gordyaean Mts") referred to the mountains between Diyarbakır and Muş.[24][25] He recorded its main cities as Sareisa, Satalca and Pinaca (northwest of Bezabde), and considered its inhabitants (Gordyaeans) as descendants of the ancient Carduchians. According to him, the inhabitants had an exceptional repute as master-builders and as experts in the construction of siege engines and for this reason Tigranes used them in such work; he also notices the country for its naphtha resources.[26] Ammianus Marcellinus visited this region while on a diplomatic visit to the satrap of Corduene.[27] Eretrians who were exiled and deported by the Persians to Mesopotamia, were said to have taken up their dwelling in the region of Gordyene.[28]

According to Strabo the Gordyaeans received their name from Gordys son of Triptolemus, who assisted in searching after Io, and then settled in Gordyaea district of Phrygia.[29]

Pompey and Corduene

 
Roman dependency of Corduene (as of 31 BC)
 
Castle of Pinaca (or Finik), northwest of Cizre

Both Phraates III and Tigranes the Great laid claim to this province. However, it was conquered by the Roman troops under Pompey. The local population (called Gordyeni) did not defend the Armenian rule since according to Plutarch, Tigranes had demolished their native cities and had forced them into exile in Tigranocerta.[30] In 69 BC, Zarbienus, the king of Corduene, was secretly planning for a revolt against Tigranes. He was negotiating with Appius Claudius for Roman help. However the plan was revealed and he was killed by Tigranes. After this, Lucullus raised a monument to Zarbienus and then he took over the region of Corduene.[31] He took part in the funeral of Zarbienus, offered royal robes, gold and the spoils (taken from Tigranes), and called him his companion and confederate of the Romans.[32]

After Pompey's success in subjugating Armenia and part of Pontus, and the Roman advance across the Euphrates, Phraates was anxious to have a truce with the Romans. However, Pompey held him in contempt and demanded back the territory of Corduene. He sent envoys, but after receiving no answer, he sent Afranius into the territory and occupied it without a battle. The Parthians who were found in possession were driven beyond the frontier and pursued even as far as Arbela in Adiabene.[33] According to an inscription dedicated to the temple of Venus, Pompey gave protection to the newly acquired territory of Gordyene.[34]

Armenian presence

 
Map showing Corduene as a vassal Kingdom of Armenian Empire.

Tigran retained Gordyene and Nisibis, which Pompeius withheld from the Parthians.[35] Gordyene belonged to Urartu for about 200 years and to Armenia for about 250 years.[36]

While the Parthian dynasty was being weakened by dynastic feuds Tigranes extended his power by the annexation of Sophene and the Submission of Gordyene under its prince.[37]

Districts of Cordyene under Armenian period were:

Korduq (or Korduk), Kordiq Nerkin, Kordiq Verin, Kordiq Mijin, Tshauk, Aitvanq, Vorsirank (or Orsirank), Aigarq, Motolanq, Kartuniq, Albag.

Diocletian and Corduene

Corduene was conquered again by Diocletian in the 3rd century and the Roman presence in the region was formally recognized in a peace treaty signed between Diocletian and the Persians. Diocletian then raised an army unit from this region under the title Ala XV Flavia Carduenorum, naming it after his Caesar Constantine the Great.[38]

Following the defeat of Narseh, the Sassanid King, at the hands of the Romans in 296, a peace treaty was signed between the two sides, according to which the steppes of northern Mesopotamia, with Singara and the hill country on the left bank of the Tigris as far as Gordyene (Corduene), were also ceded to the victors (Romans).[39]

The name of the province appears again in the account of the campaign between the Persians led by Shapur II and the Romans led by Julian the Apostate (and after Julian's death, by Jovian). The Romans started to retreat through Corduene after they could not besiege Ctesiphon.[40]

Shapur's campaign against Corduene

 
Korduene in northern and northeastern Mesopotamia; map from the Encyclopaedia Biblica

In the spring of 360, Shapur II staged a campaign to capture the city of Singara (probably modern Shingar or Sinjar northwest of Mosul). The town fell after a few days of siege. From Singara, Shapur directed his march almost due northwards, and leaving Nisibis unassailed upon his left, proceeded to attack the strong fort known indifferently as Pinaca (Phaenicha) or Bezabde. This was a position on the east bank of the Tigris, near the point where that river quits the mountains and debouches upon the plain; though not on the site, it may be considered the representative of the modern Jezireh (Cizre in southeastern Turkey), which commands the passes from the low country into the Kurdish mountains. It was much valued by Rome, was fortified in places with a double wall, and was guarded by three legions and a large body of Kurdish archers. Shapur sent a flag of truce to demand a surrender, joining with the messengers some prisoners of high rank taken at Singara, lest the enemy should open fire upon his envoys. The device was successful; but the garrison proved staunch, and determined on resisting to the last. After a long siege, the wall was at last breached, the city taken, and its defenders indiscriminately massacred.[41]

In 363, a treaty was signed in which Jovian ceded five provinces beyond the Euphrates including Corduene and Arzanene and towns of Nisibis and Singara to the Sassanids. Following this treaty, Greeks living in those lands emigrated due to persecution of Christians at the hands of Shapur and the Zoroastrians.[42]

Corduene was a bishop's see since at least 424.[43]

In the 6th and 7th centuries

In 578, the Byzantine emperor Flavius Mauricius Tiberius Augustus defeated the Sassanid army led by Chosroes I, and conquered Corduene and incorporated it once again in the Roman empire. The Roman army also liberated 10,000 Christian captives of the Sassanids.[44] According to Khwarizmi, Arabs conquered the area along with Nisbis and Tur Abdin in 640.[45]

List of rulers

  • Zarbienus; early mid-1st century BC: A king of Corduene who made overtures to Appius Claudius when the latter was staying at Antiocheia, wishing to shake off the yoke of Tigranes. He was betrayed and was assassinated with his wife and children before the Romans entered Armenia. When Lucullus arrived he celebrated his funeral rites with great pomp, setting fire to the funeral pile with his own hand, and had a sumptuous monument erected to him.
  • Manisarus; ~ 115 AD: He took control over parts of Armenia and Mesopotamia, in the time of Trajan. The Parthian king Osroes declared war against him, which led to Manisarus siding with the Romans.
  • J̌on / Čon; Only attested in the 5th-century Armenian work Buzandaran Patmut‘iwnk‘. His name may have been an Armenian transliteration of the Roman name Iovinianus.[46]
  • Iovinianus; Attested in 359 by Roman soldier and historian Ammianus Marcellinus (died between 391–400).[47]

Corduene, Carduchi, and the Kurds

 
Map showing kingdoms of Corduene and Adiabene in the last centuries BC. The blue line shows the expedition and then retreat of the ten thousand through Corduene in 401 BC.

Some identify Corduene and Carduchi with the modern Kurds, considering that Carduchi was the ancient lexical equivalent of "Kurdistan".[48] It has been suggested that Corduene was proto-Kurdish[49] or as equivalent to modern-day Kurdistan.[50]

Other modern scholars reject a Kurdish connection.[51][52]

There were numerous forms of this name, partly due to the difficulty of representing kh in Latin. The spelling Karduchoi is itself probably borrowed from Armenian, since the termination -choi represents the Armenian language plural suffix -k'.[53]

It is speculated that Carduchi spoke an Old Iranian language.[54][55]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ also known as Gorduene, Cordyene, Cardyene, Carduene, Gordyene, Gordyaea, Korduene, Gordian
  1. ^ Efraim Elimelech Urbach, I. Abrahams, The Sages, 1089 pp., Magnes Press, 1979, ISBN 965-223-319-6, p.552
  2. ^ Kurds. Michael M Gunter. p. 5.
  3. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Persia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 211–216.
  4. ^ Parthian City Index
  5. ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), CA´BALEIS, CARAMBIS, CARDU´CHI". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  6. ^ Theodor Mommsen History of Rome – The Establishment of the Military Monarchy Page 24
  7. ^
  8. ^ Olaf A. Toffteen, Notes on Assyrian and Babylonian Geography, The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, pp.323-357, 1907, p.341
  9. ^ A. Safrastian, Kurds and Kurdistan, The Harvill Press, 1948, p. 29
  10. ^ Patton, Laurie L., et al. (2004) The Indo-Aryan Controversy
  11. ^ Anabasis by Xenophon, Book III, chapter V
  12. ^ Anabasis by Xenophon, Book IV, chapter III
  13. ^ Marciak, Mark, Sophene, Gordyene, and Adiabene: Three Regna Minora of Northern Mesopotamia Between East and West, 2017. [1] pp. 212-214
  14. ^ "Targum Jonathan Genesis 8:4". Sefaria.org. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  15. ^ "Targum Onkelos Genesis 8:4". Sefaria.org. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  16. ^ Jacob Neusner, The Jews in Pagan Armenia, Journal of the American Oriental Society, pp.230-240, 1964, p.233
  17. ^ Bernhard Heller, Ginzberg's Legends of the Jews, The Jewish Quarterly Review, pp.51-66, Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, University of Pennsylvania, 1933, p.57
  18. ^ Louis H. Feldman, Josephus' Portrait of Noah and Its Parallels in Philo, Pseudo-Philo's Biblical Antiquities and Rabbinic Midrashim, Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, pp.31-57, 1988, p.47
  19. ^ Baron Patrick Balfour Kinross, Within the Taurus: a journey in Asiatic Turkey, 1970, 191 pages, see p. 89
  20. ^ George Smith, The Cornhill Magazine, Volume 167, 1954, sp. 228
  21. ^ Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser, The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman Culture, Volume 3, Mohr Siebeck, 2002 – 486 pages, s p. 80
  22. ^ Adolf Büchler, Studies in Jewish history, Oxford University Press, 1956, 279 pages, s p. 84
  23. ^ Israel Abrahams, Adolf Büchler, The Foundations of Jewish life: three studies, Arno Press, 1973, 512 pages, s p. 84
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-11-28. Retrieved 2006-11-30.
  25. ^ Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor, ed. (1913–1936). "Kurds and Kurdistan". Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. 4 (1st ed.). Brill. ISBN 9004097902. OCLC 258059134.
  26. ^ LacusCurtius • Strabo's Geography — Book XVI Chapter 1
  27. ^ Ronald Syrme, Anatolica: Studies in Strabo, Oxford University Press, 1995, ISBN 0-19-814943-3, p.30
  28. ^ Strabo, Geography, Book XVI, Chapter 1, p.233-235 [2]
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
  30. ^ The Life of Lucullus, in The Parallel Lives by Plutarch.
  31. ^ T. Frank, Two Suggestions on the Text of Cicero, The American Journal of Philology, pp.459-461, 1937.
  32. ^ Lives 2006-05-19 at the Wayback Machine, Chapter 36, Plutarch.
  33. ^ Cassius Dio — Book 37
  34. ^ G. Gilbert, The List of Names in Acts 2: Roman Propaganda and the Lukan Response, Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol.121, No.3, Autumn 2002, p.514.
  35. ^ The Kingdom of Armenia - Page 205 by Mack Chahin
  36. ^ The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times - Page 15 by Richard G. Hovhannisian
  37. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History - Page 238 by John Anthony Crook, Elizabeth Rawson
  38. ^ E.C. Nischer, The Army Reforms of Diocletian and Constantine and Their Modifications up to the Time of the Notitia Dignitatum, The Journal of Roman Studies, pp.1-55, 1923. (see p.10)
  39. ^ Narses – Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-01-29. Retrieved 2006-01-31.
  41. ^ The Seven Great Monarchies, by George Rawlinson, The Seventh Monarchy, Part A
  42. ^ J. B. Bury, History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene (395 A.D. -800 A.D.), Adamant Media Corp., 2005, ISBN 1-4021-8369-0, p.304
  43. ^ The Acts of Mar Mari the Apostle, page 15, Amir Harrak, Published 2005 BRILL, 110 pages, ISBN 90-04-13050-0
  44. ^ George Frederick Young,East and West Through Fifteen Centuries: Being a General History from B.C. 44 to A.D. 1453, Vol.II, 674 pp., Longman, Green and Co. Publishers, 1916, p.336
  45. ^ A. N. Palmer, Monk and Mason on the Tigris Frontier: The Early History of Tur Abdin, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-521-36026-9, p.158
  46. ^ Marciak 2017, p. 224.
  47. ^ Marciak 2017, pp. 143, 145, 157, 186, 224, 249–250.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-10-18. Retrieved 2006-01-31.
  49. ^ Revue des études arméniennes, vol.21, 1988-1989, p.281, By Société des études armeniennes, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Published by Imprimerie nationale, P. Geuthner, 1989.
  50. ^ A.D. Lee, The Role of Hostages in Roman Diplomacy with Sasanian Persia, Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Vol. 40, No. 3 (1991), pp. 366-374 (see p.371)
  51. ^ Marciak 2017, pp. 220–221.
  52. ^ Victoria Arekelova, Garnik S. Asatryan Prolegomena To The Study Of The Kurds, Iran and The Caucasus, 2009 [3] pp. 82
  53. ^ M.Th. Houtsma, E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936, ISBN 90-04-08265-4, see p.1133
  54. ^ "Introduction to Old Iranian".
  55. ^ M. Chahin, Before the Greeks, p. 109, James Clarke & Co., 1996, ISBN 0-7188-2950-6

Sources

  • Cameron, Hamish (2018). Making Mesopotamia: Geography and Empire in a Romano-Iranian Borderland. Brill. ISBN 978-9004388628.
  • Marciak, Michał (2017). Sophene, Gordyene, and Adiabene: Three Regna Minora of Northern Mesopotamia Between East and West. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004350700.
  • Marciak, Michał (2021). "Gordyene". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Online Edition. Encyclopædia Iranica Foundation.
  • Toumanoff, Cyril (1961). "Introduction to Christian Caucasian History: II: States and Dynasties of the Formative Period". Traditio. Cambridge University Press. 17: 1–106. doi:10.1017/S0362152900008473. JSTOR 27830424. S2CID 151524770. (registration required)

External links

  • , Classical Dictionary of Biography, Mythology and Geography.
  • Geography, Strabo, Book XVI, Chapter 1, Section 24.
  • Kurds and Kurdistan[permanent dead link], see section iii History, subsection A Origins and Pre-Islamic History, Encyclopaedia of Islam.
  • Map of Corduene
  • Map of Gordyene between Assyria and Lake Van
  • Theodor Mommsen History of Rome, The Establishment of the Military Monarchy, Page 53
  • Roman History, by Cassius Dio, Book XXX
  • , Vol. 2, Chapter XXIV, Part IV, The Retreat and Death of Julian], by Edward Gibbon.
  • History of Rome, The Establishment of the Military Monarchy, by Theodor Mommsen, page 24.
  • History of the Later Roman Empire, by J. B. Bury, Chapter IV.
  • The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 7: The Sassanian or New Persian Empire, 1871, by George Rawlinson.

Coordinates: 37°33′00″N 43°23′00″E / 37.5500°N 43.3833°E / 37.5500; 43.3833

corduene, armenian, Կորճայք, romanized, korchayk, greek, Κορδυηνή, romanized, kordyene, hebrew, קרטיגיני, romanized, kartigini, ancient, historical, region, located, south, lake, present, eastern, turkey, kingdom, many, believe, that, kardouchoi, mentioned, xe. Corduene nb 1 Armenian Կորճայք romanized Korchayk Greek Kordyhnh romanized Kordyene Hebrew קרטיגיני 1 romanized Kartigini was an ancient historical region located south of Lake Van present day eastern Turkey 60 BC Kingdom of Corduene Many believe that the Kardouchoi mentioned in Xenophon s Anabasis as having given his 10 000 troops a mauling as they retreated from Persia in 401 BCE were the ancestors of the Kurds 2 According to the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica Gordyene is the ancient name of the region of Bohtan now Sirnak Province 3 It is mentioned as Beth Qardu in Syriac sources and is described as a small vassal state between Armenia and Parthian Empire in the mountainous area south of Lake Van in modern Turkey 4 Corduene must also be sought on the left bank of the Tigris Corduene is documented as a fertile mountainous district rich in pasturage 3 5 The Kingdom of Gordyene emerged from the declining Seleucid Empire and for most of its history it was a province of the Roman Empire 6 and acknowledged the sovereignty of Rome 7 From 189 to 90 BC it enjoyed a period of independence The people of Gordyene were known to have worshiped the Hurrian sky god Teshub 8 Contents 1 Origins 2 Carduchoi in Xenophon 3 Korduk in Armenian sources 4 Corduene in Jewish sources 5 Corduene in Roman sources 6 Pompey and Corduene 7 Armenian presence 8 Diocletian and Corduene 9 Shapur s campaign against Corduene 10 In the 6th and 7th centuries 11 List of rulers 12 Corduene Carduchi and the Kurds 13 See also 14 Notes 15 Sources 16 External linksOrigins EditAccording to Arshak Safrastian the Medes and Scythians mentioned in classical Greek literature existed only as preconceived notions Equating the Carduchi with the Gutians he adds that the moment the Ten Thousand began to skirt the lower slopes of the Hamrin Mountains they were in contact with the tribes of Gutium which are presented here as Medes or Scythians 9 A direct Gutian connection however is unlikely as the Gutians were not Indo Iranians and only known to have lived in southern Mesopotamia 10 Carduchoi in Xenophon EditA people called the Carduchoi Kardoῦxoi are mentioned in Xenophon s Anabasis They inhabited the mountains north of the Tigris in 401 BC living in well provisioned villages They were enemies to the king of Persia 11 as were the Greek mercenaries with Xenophon but their response to thousands of armed and desperate strangers was hostile They had no heavy troops who could face the battle hardened hoplites but they used longbows and slings effectively and for the Greeks the seven days spent in traversing the country of the Carduchians had been one long continuous battle which had cost them more suffering than the whole of their troubles at the hands of the king of Persia and Tissaphernes put together 12 They have been also mentioned as Gordi by Hecataeus of Miletus c 520 BC Korduk in Armenian sources EditThe region of Corduene was called Korduk in Armenian sources In these records unlike in the Greek ones the people of Korduk were loyal to Armenian rule and the rulers of Korduk are presented as members of the Armenian nobility A prince of Korduk served in the counsel of the Armenian king Trdat and helped to defend Armenia s southern borders Additionally it seems that there was the early presence of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Korduk 13 Corduene in Jewish sources EditThis region is traditionally identified with the landing site in Deluge mythology In the targumim Noah s landing place after the flood is given as Qadron or Qardu 14 15 Jacob Neusner identifies the targumim s locations with Corduene 16 According to the Aggadah Noah landed in Corduene in Armenia citation needed The early 3rd century BCE Babylonian writer Berossus was also of the opinion that Xisthros needs context landed with his ship in Corduene 17 Josephus cited the evidence of Berossus as proof that the Flood was not a myth and also mentioned that the remains of the Ark were still visible in the district of Carron dubious discuss presumably identical with Korduene 18 Jewish sources trace the origins of the people of Corduene to the marriage of Jinns of King Solomon with 500 beautiful Jewish women 19 20 21 22 23 Corduene in Roman sources Edit Castle of Pinaca or Finik northwest of Cizre According to the Greek historian and geographer Strabo the region of Gorduene Gordyhnῆ or Gordyaῖa ὄrh Gordyaean Mts referred to the mountains between Diyarbakir and Mus 24 25 He recorded its main cities as Sareisa Satalca and Pinaca northwest of Bezabde and considered its inhabitants Gordyaeans as descendants of the ancient Carduchians According to him the inhabitants had an exceptional repute as master builders and as experts in the construction of siege engines and for this reason Tigranes used them in such work he also notices the country for its naphtha resources 26 Ammianus Marcellinus visited this region while on a diplomatic visit to the satrap of Corduene 27 Eretrians who were exiled and deported by the Persians to Mesopotamia were said to have taken up their dwelling in the region of Gordyene 28 According to Strabo the Gordyaeans received their name from Gordys son of Triptolemus who assisted in searching after Io and then settled in Gordyaea district of Phrygia 29 Pompey and Corduene Edit Roman dependency of Corduene as of 31 BC Castle of Pinaca or Finik northwest of Cizre Both Phraates III and Tigranes the Great laid claim to this province However it was conquered by the Roman troops under Pompey The local population called Gordyeni did not defend the Armenian rule since according to Plutarch Tigranes had demolished their native cities and had forced them into exile in Tigranocerta 30 In 69 BC Zarbienus the king of Corduene was secretly planning for a revolt against Tigranes He was negotiating with Appius Claudius for Roman help However the plan was revealed and he was killed by Tigranes After this Lucullus raised a monument to Zarbienus and then he took over the region of Corduene 31 He took part in the funeral of Zarbienus offered royal robes gold and the spoils taken from Tigranes and called him his companion and confederate of the Romans 32 After Pompey s success in subjugating Armenia and part of Pontus and the Roman advance across the Euphrates Phraates was anxious to have a truce with the Romans However Pompey held him in contempt and demanded back the territory of Corduene He sent envoys but after receiving no answer he sent Afranius into the territory and occupied it without a battle The Parthians who were found in possession were driven beyond the frontier and pursued even as far as Arbela in Adiabene 33 According to an inscription dedicated to the temple of Venus Pompey gave protection to the newly acquired territory of Gordyene 34 Armenian presence Edit Map showing Corduene as a vassal Kingdom of Armenian Empire Tigran retained Gordyene and Nisibis which Pompeius withheld from the Parthians 35 Gordyene belonged to Urartu for about 200 years and to Armenia for about 250 years 36 While the Parthian dynasty was being weakened by dynastic feuds Tigranes extended his power by the annexation of Sophene and the Submission of Gordyene under its prince 37 Districts of Cordyene under Armenian period were Korduq or Korduk Kordiq Nerkin Kordiq Verin Kordiq Mijin Tshauk Aitvanq Vorsirank or Orsirank Aigarq Motolanq Kartuniq Albag Diocletian and Corduene EditCorduene was conquered again by Diocletian in the 3rd century and the Roman presence in the region was formally recognized in a peace treaty signed between Diocletian and the Persians Diocletian then raised an army unit from this region under the title Ala XV Flavia Carduenorum naming it after his Caesar Constantine the Great 38 Following the defeat of Narseh the Sassanid King at the hands of the Romans in 296 a peace treaty was signed between the two sides according to which the steppes of northern Mesopotamia with Singara and the hill country on the left bank of the Tigris as far as Gordyene Corduene were also ceded to the victors Romans 39 The name of the province appears again in the account of the campaign between the Persians led by Shapur II and the Romans led by Julian the Apostate and after Julian s death by Jovian The Romans started to retreat through Corduene after they could not besiege Ctesiphon 40 Shapur s campaign against Corduene Edit Korduene in northern and northeastern Mesopotamia map from the Encyclopaedia Biblica In the spring of 360 Shapur II staged a campaign to capture the city of Singara probably modern Shingar or Sinjar northwest of Mosul The town fell after a few days of siege From Singara Shapur directed his march almost due northwards and leaving Nisibis unassailed upon his left proceeded to attack the strong fort known indifferently as Pinaca Phaenicha or Bezabde This was a position on the east bank of the Tigris near the point where that river quits the mountains and debouches upon the plain though not on the site it may be considered the representative of the modern Jezireh Cizre in southeastern Turkey which commands the passes from the low country into the Kurdish mountains It was much valued by Rome was fortified in places with a double wall and was guarded by three legions and a large body of Kurdish archers Shapur sent a flag of truce to demand a surrender joining with the messengers some prisoners of high rank taken at Singara lest the enemy should open fire upon his envoys The device was successful but the garrison proved staunch and determined on resisting to the last After a long siege the wall was at last breached the city taken and its defenders indiscriminately massacred 41 In 363 a treaty was signed in which Jovian ceded five provinces beyond the Euphrates including Corduene and Arzanene and towns of Nisibis and Singara to the Sassanids Following this treaty Greeks living in those lands emigrated due to persecution of Christians at the hands of Shapur and the Zoroastrians 42 Corduene was a bishop s see since at least 424 43 In the 6th and 7th centuries EditIn 578 the Byzantine emperor Flavius Mauricius Tiberius Augustus defeated the Sassanid army led by Chosroes I and conquered Corduene and incorporated it once again in the Roman empire The Roman army also liberated 10 000 Christian captives of the Sassanids 44 According to Khwarizmi Arabs conquered the area along with Nisbis and Tur Abdin in 640 45 List of rulers EditZarbienus early mid 1st century BC A king of Corduene who made overtures to Appius Claudius when the latter was staying at Antiocheia wishing to shake off the yoke of Tigranes He was betrayed and was assassinated with his wife and children before the Romans entered Armenia When Lucullus arrived he celebrated his funeral rites with great pomp setting fire to the funeral pile with his own hand and had a sumptuous monument erected to him Manisarus 115 AD He took control over parts of Armenia and Mesopotamia in the time of Trajan The Parthian king Osroes declared war against him which led to Manisarus siding with the Romans J on Con Only attested in the 5th century Armenian work Buzandaran Patmut iwnk His name may have been an Armenian transliteration of the Roman name Iovinianus 46 Iovinianus Attested in 359 by Roman soldier and historian Ammianus Marcellinus died between 391 400 47 Corduene Carduchi and the Kurds Edit Map showing kingdoms of Corduene and Adiabene in the last centuries BC The blue line shows the expedition and then retreat of the ten thousand through Corduene in 401 BC Some identify Corduene and Carduchi with the modern Kurds considering that Carduchi was the ancient lexical equivalent of Kurdistan 48 It has been suggested that Corduene was proto Kurdish 49 or as equivalent to modern day Kurdistan 50 Other modern scholars reject a Kurdish connection 51 52 There were numerous forms of this name partly due to the difficulty of representing kh in Latin The spelling Karduchoi is itself probably borrowed from Armenian since the termination choi represents the Armenian language plural suffix k 53 It is speculated that Carduchi spoke an Old Iranian language 54 55 See also EditArk of Nuh or Noah Armenian highlands Mountains of Ararat Moxoene Thamanin Zagros Mountains Mount JudiNotes Edit also known as Gorduene Cordyene Cardyene Carduene Gordyene Gordyaea Korduene Gordian Efraim Elimelech Urbach I Abrahams The Sages 1089 pp Magnes Press 1979 ISBN 965 223 319 6 p 552 Kurds Michael M Gunter p 5 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Persia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 211 216 Parthian City Index Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 CA BALEIS CARAMBIS CARDU CHI www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2017 03 03 Theodor Mommsen History of Rome The Establishment of the Military Monarchy Page 24 The History of the Decline and Fall of The Roman Empire Vol 2 Chapter XXIV Part IV Olaf A Toffteen Notes on Assyrian and Babylonian Geography The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures pp 323 357 1907 p 341 A Safrastian Kurds and Kurdistan The Harvill Press 1948 p 29 Patton Laurie L et al 2004 The Indo Aryan Controversy Anabasis by Xenophon Book III chapter V Anabasis by Xenophon Book IV chapter III Marciak Mark Sophene Gordyene and Adiabene Three Regna Minora of Northern Mesopotamia Between East and West 2017 1 pp 212 214 Targum Jonathan Genesis 8 4 Sefaria org Retrieved 15 May 2020 Targum Onkelos Genesis 8 4 Sefaria org Retrieved 15 May 2020 Jacob Neusner The Jews in Pagan Armenia Journal of the American Oriental Society pp 230 240 1964 p 233 Bernhard Heller Ginzberg s Legends of the Jews The Jewish Quarterly Review pp 51 66 Center for Advanced Judaic Studies University of Pennsylvania 1933 p 57 Louis H Feldman Josephus Portrait of Noah and Its Parallels in Philo Pseudo Philo s Biblical Antiquities and Rabbinic Midrashim Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research pp 31 57 1988 p 47 Baron Patrick Balfour Kinross Within the Taurus a journey in Asiatic Turkey 1970 191 pages see p 89 George Smith The Cornhill Magazine Volume 167 1954 sp 228 Peter Schafer Catherine Hezser The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco Roman Culture Volume 3 Mohr Siebeck 2002 486 pages s p 80 Adolf Buchler Studies in Jewish history Oxford University Press 1956 279 pages s p 84 Israel Abrahams Adolf Buchler The Foundations of Jewish life three studies Arno Press 1973 512 pages s p 84 Strabon Book 11 Archived from the original on 2006 11 28 Retrieved 2006 11 30 Houtsma Martijn Theodoor ed 1913 1936 Kurds and Kurdistan Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 4 1st ed Brill ISBN 9004097902 OCLC 258059134 LacusCurtius Strabo s Geography Book XVI Chapter 1 Ronald Syrme Anatolica Studies in Strabo Oxford University Press 1995 ISBN 0 19 814943 3 p 30 Strabo Geography Book XVI Chapter 1 p 233 235 2 GORDYS Greek Mythology Index Archived from the original on 2008 01 18 Retrieved 2008 03 27 The Life of Lucullus in The Parallel Lives by Plutarch T Frank Two Suggestions on the Text of Cicero The American Journal of Philology pp 459 461 1937 Lives Archived 2006 05 19 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 36 Plutarch Cassius Dio Book 37 G Gilbert The List of Names in Acts 2 Roman Propaganda and the Lukan Response Journal of Biblical Literature Vol 121 No 3 Autumn 2002 p 514 The Kingdom of Armenia Page 205 by Mack Chahin The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times Page 15 by Richard G Hovhannisian The Cambridge Ancient History Page 238 by John Anthony Crook Elizabeth Rawson E C Nischer The Army Reforms of Diocletian and Constantine and Their Modifications up to the Time of the Notitia Dignitatum The Journal of Roman Studies pp 1 55 1923 see p 10 Narses Britannica Online Encyclopedia Structure of the Res Gestae The Ammianus Marcellinus Online Project Archived from the original on 2006 01 29 Retrieved 2006 01 31 The Seven Great Monarchies by George Rawlinson The Seventh Monarchy Part A J B Bury History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene 395 A D 800 A D Adamant Media Corp 2005 ISBN 1 4021 8369 0 p 304 The Acts of Mar Mari the Apostle page 15 Amir Harrak Published 2005 BRILL 110 pages ISBN 90 04 13050 0 George Frederick Young East and West Through Fifteen Centuries Being a General History from B C 44 to A D 1453 Vol II 674 pp Longman Green and Co Publishers 1916 p 336 A N Palmer Monk and Mason on the Tigris Frontier The Early History of Tur Abdin Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 36026 9 p 158 Marciak 2017 p 224 Marciak 2017 pp 143 145 157 186 224 249 250 Kurds The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2001 07 Archived from the original on 2006 10 18 Retrieved 2006 01 31 Revue des etudes armeniennes vol 21 1988 1989 p 281 By Societe des etudes armeniennes Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian Published by Imprimerie nationale P Geuthner 1989 A D Lee The Role of Hostages in Roman Diplomacy with Sasanian Persia Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Vol 40 No 3 1991 pp 366 374 see p 371 Marciak 2017 pp 220 221 Victoria Arekelova Garnik S Asatryan Prolegomena To The Study Of The Kurds Iran and The Caucasus 2009 3 pp 82 M Th Houtsma E J Brill s first encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 ISBN 90 04 08265 4 see p 1133 Introduction to Old Iranian M Chahin Before the Greeks p 109 James Clarke amp Co 1996 ISBN 0 7188 2950 6Sources EditCameron Hamish 2018 Making Mesopotamia Geography and Empire in a Romano Iranian Borderland Brill ISBN 978 9004388628 Marciak Michal 2017 Sophene Gordyene and Adiabene Three Regna Minora of Northern Mesopotamia Between East and West BRILL ISBN 978 9004350700 Marciak Michal 2021 Gordyene In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Online Edition Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation Toumanoff Cyril 1961 Introduction to Christian Caucasian History II States and Dynasties of the Formative Period Traditio Cambridge University Press 17 1 106 doi 10 1017 S0362152900008473 JSTOR 27830424 S2CID 151524770 registration required External links EditCorduene or Gordyene Classical Dictionary of Biography Mythology and Geography Geography Strabo Book XVI Chapter 1 Section 24 Kurds and Kurdistan permanent dead link see section iii History subsection A Origins and Pre Islamic History Encyclopaedia of Islam Map of Corduene Map of Gordyene between Assyria and Lake Van Theodor Mommsen History of Rome The Establishment of the Military Monarchy Page 53 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Roman History by Cassius Dio Book XXX The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol 2 Chapter XXIV Part IV The Retreat and Death of Julian by Edward Gibbon History of Rome The Establishment of the Military Monarchy by Theodor Mommsen page 24 History of the Later Roman Empire by J B Bury Chapter IV The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World Vol 7 The Sassanian or New Persian Empire 1871 by George Rawlinson Coordinates 37 33 00 N 43 23 00 E 37 5500 N 43 3833 E 37 5500 43 3833 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Corduene amp oldid 1129827203, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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