Battle of Avarayr
{{Short description|Battle between Christian Armenians and the Sasanian Empire (451 CE)}}
{{coord|39|20|20|N|45|3|26|E|display=title|region:IR_type:event}}
{{inline|date=October 2023}}
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Battle of Avarayr
| partof =
| image = Vartanantz.jpg
| image_size = 275
| caption = A 15th-century Armenian miniature depicting the battle
| date = 26 May 451{{Cite web|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/avarayr-a-village-in-armenia-in-the-principality-of-artaz-southeast-of-the-iranian-town-of-maku|title = Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica}}{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A09WDwAAQBAJ&q=avarayr+451+june&pg=PA185 |title = The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity|isbn = 9780192562463|last1 = Nicholson|first1 = Oliver|date = 2018-04-19| publisher=Oxford University Press }}
| place = Avarayr Plain, Canton of Artaz, Vaspurakan, Greater Armenia
(modern-day Chors, Chaypareh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran)
| coordinates =
| territory =
| result = Sasanian victorySusan Paul Pattie, Faith in History: Armenians Rebuilding Community (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997), p. 40.
| combatants_header =
| combatant1 = Sasanian Empire
Pro-Sasanian Armenians
| combatant2 = Christian Armenians
| commander1 = Vasak of Syunik
Mushkan Niusalavurt
| commander2 = Vardan Mamikonian{{KIA}}
Ghevond VanandetsiThe Golden Age: Minor Writers, The Heritage of Armenian Literature, Vol. 1, ed. Agop Jack Hacikyan (Wayne State University Press, 2000), 360.
| units1 =
| units2 =
| strength1 = 300,000 Sasanians
60,000 Armenian loyalists
Unknown number of elephants
| strength2 = 66,000 Armenians{{cite journal |last= Babessian |first= Hovhannes|date= 1965|title= The Vartanantz Wars|journal= The Armenian Review|volume= 18 |pages= 16–19}}
(Perhaps exaggerated){{cite book |last=Payaslian |first=Simon |title=the history of Armenia from origins to present |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |date=2007 |isbn=0-230-60064-6 }} p. 44
| casualties1 = 3,544 dead{{cite book |last=Elishe |author-link=Elishe |lang=ru |date=1971 |script-title=ru:О Вардане и войне Армянской |trans-title=About Vardan and Armenian War |publisher=изд-во Армянской ССР |place=Yerevan }} pp. 110-111
| notes =
| campaignbox =
}}
The Battle of Avarayr ({{langx|hy|Ավարայրի ճակատամարտ|Avarayri chakatamart}}) was fought on 26 May 451 on the Avarayr Plain in Vaspurakan between a Christian Armenian army under Vardan Mamikonian and Sassanid Persia. It is considered one of the first battles in defense of the Christian faith.{{cite book|last= Agadjanian|first= Alexander|title=Armenian Christianity Today: Identity Politics and Popular Practice|chapter=Six: Elements of the Armenian Ethno-Religious Genealogy|publisher=Routledge|year=2014|isbn=978-1472412713}}{{page needed|date=January 2025}} Although the Persians were victorious on the battlefield, it was a pyrrhic victory. The Armenians were allowed to continue practising Christianity freely.{{cite web|last1=Thomson|first1=Robert W.|authorlink1=Robert W. Thomson|title=Avarayr |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/avarayr-a-village-in-armenia-in-the-principality-of-artaz-southeast-of-the-iranian-town-of-maku|website=Encyclopædia Iranica|date=August 17, 2011|quote=So spirited was the Armenian defence, however, that the Persians suffered enormous losses as well. Their victory was pyrrhic and the king, faced with troubles elsewhere, was forced, at least for the time being, to allow the Armenians to worship as they chose.}}{{cite book|author=Susan Paul Pattie|title=Faith in History: Armenians Rebuilding Community |publisher= Smithsonian Institution Press |year= 1997 |page= 40 |isbn = 1560986298|quote=The Armenian defeat in the Battle of Avarayr in 451 proved a pyrrhic victory for the Persians. Though the Armenians lost their commander, Vartan Mamikonian, and most of their soldiers, Persian losses were proportionately heavy, and Armenia was allowed to remain Christian.}}
The battle is seen as one of the most significant events in Armenian history.{{cite journal|last=Hakobyan|first=Науk|title=Ավարայրի ճակատամարտը (պատմաքննական տեսություն) [The Avarayr Battle (historical-critical review)]|journal=Patma-Banasirakan Handes|date=2003|issue=1|pages=40–67|url=http://hpj.asj-oa.am/3903/|language=hy}} The commander of the Armenian forces, Vardan Mamikonian, is considered a national hero and has been canonized by the Armenian Apostolic Church.{{cite book|title=Armenian literature: comprising poetry, drama, folklore, and classic traditions|year=2007|publisher=Indo-European Pub.|location=Los Angeles|isbn=9781604440003|author=Robert Armot, Alfred Aghajanian|page=5}}{{cite book|last=Suny|first=Ronald Grigor|title=Looking toward Ararat Armenia in modern history|year=1993|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington|isbn=9780253207739|page=[https://archive.org/details/lookingtowardara00rona/page/4 4]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/lookingtowardara00rona/page/4}}
Background
{{more citations needed section|date=May 2017}}
The Kingdom of Armenia under the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia was the first nation to officially convert to Christianity, in 301 under Tiridates III. In 428, Armenian nobles petitioned Bahram V to depose Artaxias IV.Introduction to Christian Caucasian History:II: States and Dynasties of the Formative Period, Cyril Toumanoff, Traditio, Vol. 17, 1961, Fordham University, 6. As a result, the country became a Sassanid dependency with a Sassanid governor. The Armenian nobles initially welcomed Persian rule, provided they were allowed to practise Christianity; but Yazdegerd II, concerned that the Armenian Church was hierarchically dependent on the Latin- and Greek-speaking Christian Church (aligned with Rome and Constantinople rather than the Aramaic-speaking and Persian-backed Church of the East) tried to compel the Armenian Church to abandon Rome and Byzantium in favour of the Church of the East or simply convert to Zoroastrianism. He summoned the leading Armenian nobles to Ctesiphon, and pressured them into cutting their ties with the Orthodox Church as he had intended.Ronald Grigor Suny, The Making of the Georgian Nation (Indiana University Press, 1994), 23.
The unsteadiness of the empire was ever-increasing under Yazdegerd II, who had an uneasy relationship with the aristocracy and was facing a great challenge by the Kidarites in the east.{{sfn|Sauer|2017|p=192}} Yazdegerd II needed the cooperation of the aristocracy so that he could have an organized government to combat the external and internal issues endangering the empire.{{sfn|Sauer|2017|p=192}} His policy of integrating the Christian nobility into the bureaucracy led to a major rebellion in Armenia.{{sfnm|Sauer|2017|1p=192|2a=Daryaee, "Yazdegerd II"}} The cause of the rebellion was the attempt by his minister Mihr-Narseh to impose the Zurvanite variant of Zoroastrianism in Armenia.{{sfn|Sauer|2017|p=192}} His intentions differed from those of Yazdegerd II.{{sfn|Sauer|2017|p=193}} As a result, many of the Armenian nobles (but not all) rallied under Vardan Mamikonian, the supreme commander (sparapet) of Armenia.{{sfn|Avdoyan|2018}} The Armenian rebels tried to appeal to the Romans for help, but to no avail.{{sfn|Hewsen|1987|p=32}} Meanwhile, another faction of Armenians, led by the marzban (governor) Vasak Siwni allied themselves with the Sasanians.{{sfn|Avdoyan|2018}}
Battle
The 66,000-strong Armenian army took Holy Communion before the battle. The army was a popular uprising, rather than a professional force, but the Armenian nobility who led it and their respective retinues were accomplished soldiers, many of them veterans of the Sassanid dynasty's wars with Rome and the nomads of Central Asia. The Armenians were allowed to maintain a core of their national army led by a supreme commander (sparapet) who was traditionally of the Mamikonian noble family. The Armenian cavalry was, at the time, practically an elite force greatly appreciated as a tactical ally by both Persia and Byzantium. In this particular case, both officers and men were additionally motivated by a desire to save their religion and their way of life. The Persian army, said to be three times larger, included war elephants and the famous Savārān, or New Immortal, cavalry. Several Armenian noblemen with weaker Christian sympathies, led by Vasak Siuni, went over to the Persians before the battle, and fought on their side; in the battle, Vardan won initial successes, but was eventually slain along with eight of his top officers.{{cn|date=June 2025}}
Outcome
File:Gyumri 8 July 2017 (3).jpg, Armenia]]
Nine generals, including Vardan Mamikonian, were killed, with a large number of the Armenian nobles and soldiers meeting the same fate.{{sfn|Hewsen|1987|p=32}} The Sasanians, however, had also suffered heavy losses due to the resolute struggle by the Armenian rebels.{{sfn|Hewsen|1987|p=32}} Yazdegerd II dismissed Vasak Siwni and allowed religious freedom in Armenia.{{sfn|Sauer|2017|pp=192-193}} Although tensions continued until 510 when a kinsman of Vardan Mamikonian, Vard Mamikonian, was appointed marzban by Yazdegerd II's grandson, Kavad I ({{reign|488|531}}).{{sfn|Nersessian|2018}}
See also
References
{{Reflist|3}}
Further reading
- {{cite book|author=Eḷishē|author-link=Elishe|title=History of Vardan and the Armenian War|others=Translation and commentary by R. W. Thomson |location=Cambridge, Mass.|publisher=Harvard University Press|year=1982|ref=none}}
- {{cite book|title=Visions of Ararat: Writings on Armenia|year=1997|first=Christopher J. |last=Walker|author-link=Christopher J. Walker|page=3|publisher=I.B. Tauris|isbn=9781860641114|location=London|ref=none}}
- {{cite book|first=Abdolhossein |last=Zarrinkoob|author-link=Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob|script-title=fa:روزگاران: تاريخ ايران از آغاز تا سقوط سلطنت پهلوى|title=Rūzgārān: tārīkh-i Īrān az āghāz tā suqūt saltanat Pahlavī|trans-title=Times: history of Iran from the beginning to the fall of the Pahlavi kingdom|language=fa|publisher=Sukhan|year=1999|isbn=964-6961-11-8|ref=none}}
- {{Cite book |last=Libaridian |first=Gerard J.|author-link=Gerard Libaridian |title=Modern Armenia: People, Nation, State |year=2004 |publisher=Transaction Publishers |isbn=978-0-7658-0205-7 |location=New Brunswick, N.J.|ref=none}}
- {{cite book|chapter=Period of the Marzbans – Battle of Avarair|author-link=Vahan Kurkjian|last=Kurkjian|first=Vahan M. |title=A History of Armenia|chapter-url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Asia/Armenia/_Texts/KURARM/20*.html|year=1958|publisher=Armenian General Benevolent Union of America}}
- {{ODLA |last1=Avdoyan |first1=Levon |title=Avarayr, Battle of (Awarayr) |url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198662778.001.0001/acref-9780198662778-e-569}}
- {{cite encyclopedia |last=Hewsen |first=R. |title=Avarayr |author-link=Robert H. Hewsen |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/avarayr-a-village-in-armenia-in-the-principality-of-artaz-southeast-of-the-iranian-town-of-maku |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. III, Fasc. 1 |pages=32 |year=1987 }}
- {{ODLA |last1=Nersessian |first1=Vrej |authorlink=Vrej Nersessian |title=Persarmenia |url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198662778.001.0001/acref-9780198662778-e-3646}}
- {{cite book |last=Sauer |first=Eberhard |title=Sasanian Persia: Between Rome and the Steppes of Eurasia |location=London and New York |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4744-0102-9 |url={{google books |id=djRWDwAAQBAJ |plainurl=y}}}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20170316204516/https://www.armenianchurch-ed.net/feasts/st-vartan-the-warrior/the-battle-of-vartanantz St Vartan's life] on Armenianchurch.net
- [http://www.stgregoryarmenian.org/armenian-history/the-vartanank-war-interregnum The Vartanank War The interregnum (428–861)] by Levon Zekiyan
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Category:5th century in Armenia
Category:Battles involving Armenia
Category:Battles involving the Sasanian Empire