HISTORY OF ARMENIA.
By
FREDERIC MACLER
LYING across the chief meeting-place
of Europe and Asia, Armenia suffered immeasurably more from the conflict of two
civilizations than it profited by their exchange of goods and ideas. If the
West penetrated the East under pressure from Rome, Byzantium, or crusading
Europe, if the East moved westwards, under Persian, Arab, Mongol, or Turk, the
roads used were too often the roads of Armenia.
This was not all. East and West
claimed and fought for control or possession of the country. Divided bodily
between Rome and Persia in pre-Christian times, an apple of discord between
Persia and the Byzantine Empire during the early part of the Middle Ages,
Armenia for the rest of its national history was alternately the prey of
Eastern and Western peoples. When the Armenian kingdom was strong enough to
choose its own friends, it turned sometimes to the East, sometimes to the West.
It drew its culture from both. But, belonging wholly neither to West nor to
East, it suffered consistently at the hands of each in turn and of both
together.
The stubborn pride of the Armenians
in their national Church prevented them from uniting permanently either with
Christendom or with Islam. Though driven by eastern pressure as far west as
Cilicia, where it was in touch with the Crusaders, Armenia never held more than
a doubtful place in the state-system of medieval Europe. Sooner than sink their
identity in Greek or Roman Church, the Armenians more than once chose the
friendship of infidels. On the other hand, whether as neighbours or as enemies, as allies or as conquerors, the races of the East could never
turn the Armenians from their faith. When Armenia ceased to exist as a State,
its people kept alive their nationality in their Church. As with the Jews,
their ecclesiastical obstinacy was at once their danger and their strength: it
left them friendless, but it enabled them to survive political extinction.
Isolated by religion, Armenia was
also perpetually divided against itself by its rival princes. Like the Church,
the numerous princely houses both preserved and weakened their country. They
prevented the foundation of a unified national State. But a large Power
stretching perhaps from Cappadocia to the Caspian borders, and disabled by
ill-defined frontiers, could never have outfaced the hostility of Europe and Asia.
A collection of small principalities, grouped round rocky strongholds
difficult of access, had always, even after wholesale conquest, a latent
faculty of recovery in the energy of its powerful families. The Arabs could
have destroyed a single royal line, but, slaughter as they might, Armenia was
never leaderless: they could not exterminate its nobility. The political
history of Armenia, especially during the first half of the Middle Ages, is a
history of great families. And this helps to explain the puzzling movement of
Armenian boundaries—a movement due not only to pressure from outside, but also
to the short-lived uprising, first of one prince, then of another, amidst the ruin,
widespread and repeated, of his country.
Periods of Armenian history
During the triumph of Rome and for
many generations of Rome's decline Armenia was ruled by a national dynasty
related to the Arsacides, kings of Parthia (B.C. 149–A.D. 428). The country had
been for many years a victim to the wars and diplomacy of Persia and Rome when
in A.D. 386-7 it was partitioned by Sapor III and the Emperor Theodosius. From
387 to 428 the Arsacid kings of Armenia were vassals of Persia, while the
westernmost part of their kingdom was incorporated in the Roman Empire and
ruled by a count.
The history of the thousand years
that followed (428-1473) is sketched in this chapter. It may be divided into
five distinct periods. First came long years of anarchy, during which Armenia
had no independent existence but was the prey of Persians, Greeks, and Arabs (428-885).
Four and a half centuries of foreign domination were then succeeded by nearly
two centuries of autonomy. During this second period Armenia was ruled from
Transcaucasia by the national dynasty of the Bagratuni. After 1046, when the
Bagratid kingdom was conquered by the Greeks, who were soon dispossessed by the
Turks, Greater Armenia never recovered its political life.
Meanwhile the third period of
Armenia's medieval history had opened in Asia Minor, where a new Armenian State
was founded in Cilicia by Prince Ruben, a kinsman of the Bagratuni. From
1080-1340 Rubenian and Hethumian princes ruled Armeno-Cilicia, first as lords or
barons (1080-1198), then as kings (1198-1342). During this period the Armenians
engaged in a successful struggle with the Greeks, and in a prolonged and losing
contest with the Seljuqs and Mamluks. Throughout these years the relations
between the Armenian rulers and the Latin kingdoms of Syria were so close that
up to a point the history of Armeno-Cilicia may be
considered merely as an episode in the history of the Crusades. This view is
strengthened by the events of the fourth period (134-1373), during which
Cilicia was ruled by the crusading family of the Lusignans.
When the Lusignan dynasty was overthrown by the Mamluks
in 1375, the Armenians lost their political existence once more. In the fifth
and last period of their medieval history (1375-1473), they suffered the horrors
of a Tartar invasion under Tamerlane and finally passed under the yoke of the
Ottoman Turks.
Persians and Greeks in Armenia
When Ardashes,
the last Arsacid vassal-king, was deposed in 428, Armenia was governed directly
by the Persians, who already partly controlled the country. No strict
chronology has yet been fixed for the centuries of anarchy which ensued
(428-885), but it appears that Persian rule lasted for about two centuries
(428-633). Byzantine rule followed, spreading eastward from Roman Armenia, and
after two generations (633-693) the Arabs replaced the Greeks and held the
Armenians in subjection until 862.
In this long period of foreign rule,
the Armenians invariably found a change of masters a change for the worse. The
Persians ruled the country though a succession of Marzpans, or military
commanders of the frontiers, who also had to keep order and to collect revenue.
With a strong guard under their own command, they did not destroy the old
national militia nor take away the privileges of the nobility, and at first
they allowed full liberty to the Katholikos and his bishops. As long as the
Persians governed with such tolerance, they might fairly hope to fuse the
Armenian nation with their own. But a change of religious policy under Yezdegerd II and Piroz roused the
Armenians to defend their faith in a series of religious wars lasting until the
end of the sixth century, during which Vardan with
his 1036 companions perished for the Christian faith in the terrible battle of
Avaraïr (454). But, whether defeated or victorious, the Armenians never
exchanged their Christianity for Zoroastrianism.
On the whole, the Marzpans ruled
Armenia as well as they could. In spite of the religious persecution and of a
dispute about the Council of Chalcedon between the Armenians and their
fellow-Christians in Georgia, the Armenian Church more than held its ground,
and ruined churches and monasteries were restored or rebuilt towards the
opening of the seventh century. Of the later Marzpans some bore Armenian names.
The last of them belonged to the Bagratuni family which was destined to sustain
the national existence of Armenia for many generations against untold odds. But
this gleam of hope was extinguished by the fall of the Persian Empire before
the Arabs. For when they conquered Persia, Armenia turned to Byzantium, and was
ruled for sixty years by officials who received the rank of Curopalates and
were appointed by the Emperor (633-693). The Curopalates, it appears, was
entrusted with the civil administration of the country, while the military
command was held by an Armenian General of the Forces.
Though the Curopalates, too, seems
to have been always Armenian, the despotic yoke of the Greeks was even harder
to bear than the burden of religious wars imposed by the Persians. If the
Persians had tried to make the Armenians worship the Sacred Fire, the Greeks
were equally bent on forcing them to renounce the Eutychian heresy. As usual,
the Armenians refused to yield. The Emperor Constantine came himself to Armenia
in 647, but his visit did nothing to strengthen Byzantine authority. The
advance of the Arabs, who had begun to invade Armenia ten years earlier under Abd-ar-Ratim, made stable government impossible, for,
sooner than merge themselves in the Greek Church, the Armenians sought Muslim
protection. But the Arabs exacted so heavy a tribute that Armenia turned again
to the Eastern Empire. As a result, the Armenians suffered equally from Greeks
and Arabs. When they paid tribute to the Arabs, the Greeks invaded and
devastated their land. When they turned to the Greeks, the Arabs punished their
success and failure alike by invasion and rapine. Finally, at the close of the
seventh century, the Armenian people submitted absolutely to the Caliphate. The
Curopalates had fled, the General of the Forces and the Patriarch (Katholikos) Sahak IV were prisoners in Damascus, and some of the
Armenian princes had been tortured and put to death.
The Arab Conquest
A period of unqualified tyranny
followed. The Arabs intended to rivet the chains of abject submission upon
Armenia, and to extort from its helplessness the greatest possible amount of
revenue. Ostikans, or governors, foreigners almost without exception, ruled the
country for Baghdad. These officials commanded an army, and were supposed to collect
the taxes and to keep the people submissive. They loaded Armenia with heavy
imposts, and tried to destroy the princely families by imprisoning and killing
their men and confiscating their possessions. Under such treatment the
Armenians were occasionally cowed but usually rebellious. Their national
existence, manifest in rebellion, was upheld by the princes. First one, then
another, revolted against the Muslims, made overtures to the enemies of
Baghdad, and aspired to refound the kingdom of
Armenia.
Shortly after the Arab conquest, the
Armenians turned once more to their old masters, the Greeks. With the help of
Leo the Isaurian, Smbat (Sempad) Bagratuni defeated
the Arabs, and was commissioned to rule Armenia by the Emperor. But after a
severe struggle the Muslims regained their dominion, and sent the Arab
commander Qasim to punish the Armenians (704). He
carried out his task with oriental ferocity. He set fire to the church of
Nakhijevan, into which he had driven the princes and nobles, and then pillaged
the country and sent many of the people into captivity.
These savage reprisals were typical
of Arab misrule for the next forty years, and after a peaceful interval during
which a friendly Ostikan, Marwan, entrusted the
government of Armenia to Ashot Bagratuni, the reign of terror started afresh
(758). But, in defiance of extortion and cruelty, insurrection followed
insurrection. Local revolts, led now by one prince, now by another, broke out.
On one occasion Mushegh Mamikonian drove the Ostikan
out of Dwin, but the Armenians paid dear for their success. The Arabs marched
against them 30,000 strong; Mushegh fell in battle,
and the other princes fled into strongholds (780). Though in 786, when Harun ar-Rashid was Caliph, the
country was for the time subdued, alliances between Persian and Armenian
princes twice ripened into open rebellion in the first half of the ninth
century. The Arabs punished the second of these unsuccessful rebellions by
wholesale pillage and by torture, captivity, and death (c. 850).
Armenian Principalities
As the long period of gloom, faintly
starred by calamitous victories, passed into the ninth century, the Arab oppression
slowly lightened. The Abbasid Empire was drawing to its fall. While the Arabs
were facing their own troubles, the Armenian nobility were founding principalities.
The Mamikonian family, it is true, died out in the middle of the ninth century
without founding a kingdom. Yet, because they had no wide territories, they
served Armenia disinterestedly, and though of foreign origin could claim many
of the national heroes of their adopted country: Vasak, Mushegh, and Manuel, three generals of the Christian Arsacides; Vardan, who died for the faith in the religious wars; Vahan the Wolf and Vahan Kamsarakan, who fought the Persians; David, Grigor, and Mushegh, rebels
against Arab misrule. The Arcruni and the Siwni, who had also defended Armenia against the Arabs,
founded independent states in the tenth century. The Arcruni established their kingdom (Vaspurakan) round the
rocky citadel of Van, overlooking Lake Van (908). Later, two different branches
of their family founded the two states of the Reshtuni and the Antsevatsi. The Siwni kingdom (Siunia) arose in the latter half of the
century (970). Many other principalities were also formed, each claiming
independence, the largest and most important of them all being the kingdom of
the Bagratuni.
Like the Mamikonians,
the Bagratuni seem to have come from abroad. According to Moses of Chorene, they were brought to Armenia from Judaea by Hratchea, son of Paroir, in B.C.
600. In the time of the Parthians, King Valarsaces gave to Bagarat the
hereditary honour of placing the crown upon the head
of the Armenian king, and for centuries afterwards Bagarat's family gave leaders to the Armenians. Varaztirots Bagratuni was the last Marzpan of the Persian
domination, and the third Curopalates of Armenia under the Byzantine Empire.
Ashot (Ashod) Bagratuni seized the government when
the Arabs were trying to dislodge the Greeks in the middle of the seventh
century, and foreshadowed the later policy of his family by his friendliness
towards the Caliph, to whom he paid tribute. He fell in battle, resisting the
Greeks sent by Justinian II. Smbat Bagratuni, made general of the forces by
Justinian, favoured the Greeks. Escaping from
captivity in Damascus, it was he who had defeated the Arabs with the help of
Leo the Isaurian, and governed the Armenians from the fortresses of Taïkh. In
the middle of the eighth century, another Ashot reverted to the policy of his
namesake, and was allowed by Marwan, the friendly
Ostikan, to rule Armenia as "Prince of Princes." In consequence he
refused to rebel with other Armenian princes when the Arab tyranny was renewed,
and for his loyalty was blinded by his compatriots. Of his successors, some
fought against the Arabs and some sought their friendship; Bagratuni princes
took a leading part on both sides in the Armeno-Persian
rebellions suppressed by the Arabs in the first half of the ninth century.
The Bagratuni Dynasty
The Bagratuni were also wealthy.
Unlike the Mamikonians, they owned vast territories,
and founded a strong principality in the country of Ararat. Their wealth, their
lands, and their history made them the most powerful of Armenian families and
pointed out to them a future more memorable than their past. Midway in the
ninth century, the power of the Bagratuni was inherited by Prince Ashot. The
son of Smbat the Confessor, he refounded the ancient
kingdom of Armenia and gave it a dynasty of two centuries' duration. Under the
rule of these Bagratuni kings Armenia passed through the most national phase of
its history. It was a conquered province before they rose to power, it became
more European and less Armenian after their line was extinct. Like Ashot
himself, his descendants tried at first to control the whole of Armenia, but
from 928 onwards they were obliged to content themselves with real dominion in
their hereditary lands and moral supremacy over the other princes. This second
and more peaceful period of their rule was the very summer of Armenian civilization.
Ashot had come into a great
inheritance. In addition to the provinces of Ararat and Taïkh, he owned Gugarkh and Turuberan, large
properties in higher Armenia, as well as the towns of Bagaran,
Mush, Kolb, and Kars with all their territory. He could put into the field an
army of forty thousand men, and by giving his daughters in marriage to the
princes of the Arcruni and the Siwni he made friends of two possible rivals. For many years his chief desire was to
pacify Armenia and to restore the wasted districts, and at the same time to
earn the favour of the Caliphate. In return, the
Arabs called him "Prince of Princes" (859) and sent home their
Armenian prisoners. Two years later Ashot and his brother routed an army,
double the size of their own, led into Armenia by Shahap,
a Persian who was aiming at independence. Ashot's politic
loyalty to the Arabs finally moved the Caliph Mutamid to make him King of Armenia (885-7), and at the same time he likewise received
a crown and royal gifts from the Byzantine Emperor, Basil the Macedonian. But
Armenia was not even yet entirely freed from Arab control. Tribute was paid to
Baghdad not immediately but through the neighbouring Ostikan of Azarbaijan, and
the coronation of Armenian kings waited upon the approval of the Caliphs.
The Katholikos : Ashot I: Smbat I
During his brief reign of five
years, Ashot I revived many of the customs of the old Arsacid kingdom which had
perished four and a half centuries earlier. The crown, it seems, was handed
down according to the principle of primogeniture. The kings, though nearly
always active soldiers themselves, do not appear to have held the supreme
military command, which they usually entrusted to a "general of the
forces," an ancient office once hereditary in the Mamikonian family, but
in later times often filled by a brother of the reigning king. In Ashot's time, for instance, his brother Abas was generalissimo, and after Ashot's death was
succeeded by a younger brother of the new king.
The Katholikos was, after the king,
the most important person in Armenia. He had been the only national
representative of the Armenians during the period of anarchy when they had no king,
and his office had been respected by the Persians and used by the Arabs as a
medium of negotiation with the Armenian princes. Under the Bagratid kings, the
Katholikos nearly always worked with the monarchy, whose representatives it was
his privilege to anoint. He would press coronation upon a reluctant king, would
mediate between kings and their rebellious subjects, would lay the king's needs
before the Byzantine court, or would be entrusted with the keys of the
Armenian capital in the king's absence. Sometimes in supporting the monarchy he
would oppose the people's will, especially in a later period, when, long after
the fall of the Bagratuni dynasty, King and Katholikos worked together for
religious union with Rome against the bitter hostility of their subjects.
Ashot made good use of every
interval of peace by restoring the commerce, industry, and agriculture of his
country, and by repopulating hundreds of towns and villages. For the sake of
peace he made alliances with most of the neighbouring kings and princes, and
after travelling through his own estates and through Little Armenia, he went to
Constantinople to see the Emperor Leo the Philosopher, himself reputedly an
Armenian by descent. The two monarchs signed a political and commercial treaty,
and Ashot gave the Emperor an Armenian contingent to help him against the
Bulgarians.
Ashot died on the journey home, and
his body was carried to Bagaran, the old city of
idols, and the seat of his new-formed power. But long before his death, his
country's peace, diligently cherished for a lifetime, had been broken by the
Armenians themselves. One after another, various localities, including Vanand and Gugarkh, had revolted,
and although Ashot had been able to restore order everywhere, such disturbances
promised ill for the future. The proud ambition of these Armenian princes had
breathed a fitful life into a conquered province only to sap the vitality of an
autonomous kingdom.
Under Smbat I (892-914) the lesser
princes did more mischief than under his father Ashot because they made common
cause with the Arabs of Azarbaijan, who hated Armenia. For more than twenty
years Smbat held his kingdom against the persistent attacks, now separate, now
connected, of the Ostikans of Azarbaijan and of the Armenian princes, and for
more than a generation he and his son looked perforce to the Greeks as their
only source of external help.
Armenia and Azarbaijan
As soon as Smbat had defeated his
uncle Abas, who had tried to seize the throne in the
first year of his reign, he turned to face Afshin, Ostikan of Azarbaijan.
Afshin protested against the renewal of the Greco-Armenian alliance and twice
invaded Armenia. On the first occasion Smbat not only forced the Arabs to
retire by a display of his strength, but made conquests at their expense. He
seized Dwin, the capital of the Arab emirs, and sent the Musulman chiefs
captive to the Emperor Leo (894). A year later Dwin was almost entirely
destroyed by an earthquake. The second time the Arabs invaded Armenia, Smbat,
though taken by surprise, cut their army to pieces at the foot of Mount Aragatz (or Alagoz). Afshin then
provoked rebellion among the Armenian princes, but without seriously weakening
Smbat. At last, through Armenian treachery, Smbat was defeated by Abroad,
Ostikan of Mesopotamia, who had invaded the province of Taron.
Afshin took advantage of this reverse to invade Armenia for the third time.
Smbat retired to Taikh, but Kars, the refuge of the
queen, capitulated to Afshin, who took Smbat's son as hostage and his daughter
as wife. Not long after, Afshin died, and the hostages were given back (901).
Smbat took this opportunity to obtain from the Caliph both exemption from the
authority of the Ostikan of Azarbaijan and also permission to pay the annual
tribute direct to Baghdad (902).
Afshin's feud with Armenia was renewed
by his brother Yusuf. Urging that the separation of Armenia and Azarbaijan gave
dangerous liberty to the Armenians, he invaded the country. Smbat's troops
frightened him into retreat before he had struck a blow, but he soon obtained
help from some Armenian princes who were restive under heavy taxation.
Constrained to retire into the "Blue Fortress" with a handful of men,
Smbat assaulted the Muslim and Christian besiegers with great success, and
after withstanding a year's siege he capitulated only on receiving a promise
that the lives of the garrison should be spared (913). Yusuf broke his promise.
He tortured Smbat for a year, and finally put him to death (914). The Armenian
princes retired into fortresses, and Armenia fell once more under the Arab
yoke. For several years Yusuf sent fresh troops into Armenia and organized the
devastation of the country from his headquarters at Dwin. No crops were sown,
and a terrible famine resulted. It is reported that parents even sold their
children to escape death and that some ate human flesh (918).
But the triumph of Yusuf was short.
In the first year of the Arab occupation, Smbat's son, Ashot II, surnamed Erkath, the Iron, had already avenged his father's death by
routing the invaders and reconquering the fortresses
they held. In 915 the Armenian princes had issued from their strongholds to
declare him king. Several years later he visited Byzantium, where the
Katholikos had interested the court in the troubles of Armenia, and returned
home with a force of Greek soldiers. His reign was one of incessant struggle
against the Arabs and the Armenian princes (915-928).
To thwart the new-born power of
Armenia, Yusuf crowned a rival king and provoked a fierce civil war, which was
finally ended through the mediation of John, the Katholikos. Many other
internal revolts followed, but Ashot suppressed them all, and Yusuf turned
aside to attack the peaceful kingdom of Van. Here, too, he was unsuccessful,
but he appointed a new Ostikan of Armenia. The purpose of this new Ostikan and
of his successor Beshir was to capture the Armenian
king and the Katholikos. But Ashot retired to the island of Sevan,
and built ten large boats. When Beshir marched
against him with a strong army, he manned each boat with seven skilled archers
and sent them against the enemy. Every Armenian arrow found its mark, the Arabs
took to flight, and were pursued with slaughter as far as Dwin by Prince Georg Marzpetuni, Ashot's faithful
supporter. After this epic resistance, Ashot left Sevan in triumph, and took the title "King of the Kings of Armenia" in
token of his superiority to the other Armenian princes. He died in 928.
Friendship between Armenia and the Arabs
Two reigns of perpetual warfare were
followed by nearly a century of comparative peace (928-1020). Ashot's successors were content with more modest aims. At
home they confined their real rule to their own patrimony and exercised only a
moral sway over the other Armenian States. Abroad they sought the favour of the Arabs, rather than that of the Greeks. In
this way alone was it possible to secure a measure of peace.
Ashot II was succeeded by his
brother Abas (928-951), who concluded a treaty with
the Arabs of Dwin and exchanged Arab for Armenian prisoners. He restored towns
and villages and built churches. But when he built the cathedral of Kars, he
brought not peace but a sword to his countrymen. Ber,
King of the Abasgians (Abkhaz), wanted the cathedral
to be consecrated according to Greek rites. On the banks of the Kur, Abas defeated him twice to
cure him of error, and then blinded him for having looked on the building with
impious eyes.
Ashot III (952-977) adopted a conciliatory
policy. When his rebellious brother Mushel founded a
kingdom in Vanand with Kars for its capital (968),
Ashot entered into friendly relations with him. He earned the good will of
Baghdad by defeating a rebel who had thrown Azarbaijan and Mesopotamia into
confusion. Side by side with a prince of the Arcruni family he faced the Emperor John Tzimisces, who came eastward to fight the
Arabs and who seemed to threaten Armenia by pitching his camp in Taron. Baffled by the bold front of Ashot's army, eighty thousand strong, the Emperor demanded and received an Armenian
contingent, and then marched away from the frontier.
By such circumspect action, Ashot III
gave peace to Armenia. He reorganized the army and could put into the field a
host of ninety thousand men. Surpassing his predecessors in the building of
pious foundations, he bestowed great revenues on convents, churches, hospitals,
and almshouses. He made Ani his capital and laid the
foundations of its greatness. He was known as Olormadz,
the Pitiful, for he never sat down to meals without poor and impotent men
about him.
The civilization of Greater Armenia
Ashot's son Smbat II (977-990) was a lover of peace and a great builder like
his father. But he was forced into war with his rebellious uncle Mushel, King of Vanand, and
before his death he angered the Church by marrying his niece.
Under his brother and successor, Gagik I (990-1020), the Armenians enjoyed for a whole
generation the strange experience of unbroken prosperity. Gagik was strong enough to prevent foreigners from attacking him, and to gain the
friendship of the other Armenian princes. Free from war, he used all his time
and energy to increase the moral and material welfare of his people. He
enriched the pious foundations that dated from the time of his brother and
father, and appropriated great revenues to churches and ecclesiastics, taking
part himself in religious ceremonies. In his reign the civilization of Armenia
reached its height. Flourishing in the unaccustomed air of peace, convents and
schools were centres of light and learning;
commercial towns such as Ani, Bitlis, Ardzen, and Nakhijevan, became wealthy marts for the
merchandise of Persia, Arabia, and the Indies. Agriculture shared in the
general prosperity. Goldsmiths, much influenced by Persian models, were hard at
work, and coppersmiths made the plentiful copper of the country into objects of
every description. Enamelling flourished in
neighbouring Georgia, but no Armenian enamel survives to tell whether the art
was practiced in Armenia itself.
Armenian culture was pre-eminently
ecclesiastical. Its literature did include chronicles and secular poems, but
was overwhelmingly religious as a whole. Armenian manuscripts, famous alike for
their antiquity, their beauty, and their importance in the history of writing,
are nearly all ecclesiastical. Most interesting of all in many ways (especially
for the comparison of texts and variant readings) are the numerous copies of
the Gospels. The Moscow manuscript (887) is the earliest Armenian manuscript
actually dated, and two very beautiful Gospels of a later date are those of
Queen Melke and of Trebizond. A collection of
theological and other texts executed between 971 and 981 is their earliest
manuscript written on paper. Other important writings were dogmatic works, commentaries,
and sharakans or sacred songs composed in honour of church
festivals. Armenian art, again, was mainly ecclesiastical, and survives, on the
one hand in the illuminations and miniatures which adorn the sacred texts, and,
on the other, in the ruined churches and convents which still cover the face of
the country. Architecture was military as well as ecclesiastical, but it is
hard not to believe that the people of Ani were
prouder of their galaxy of churches than they were of their fortress, their
walls, and their towers.
In the tenth century, especially
after a branch of the Bagratuni had founded an independent State in Vanand (968), the intellectual focus of Armenia seems to
have been Kars, with its crowd of young Armenian students who came there to
study philosophy, belles-lettres, and theology. But the true centre and most
splendid proof of Armenian civilization was Ani, city
of forty keys and a thousand and one churches. In the eighth century no more
than a village, it slowly grew larger and more populous. Ashot I and Ashot III
were crowned at Ani, and there Ashot III established
the throne of the Bagratuni dynasty. He defended the city with a fortress, and
his queen enriched it with two fine convents, but the most splendid buildings
were added by Smbat II, who also fortified Ani on the
north with a double line of walls and towers and a great ditch of stone. The
citadel was defended on the east and south by the river Akhurian,
and on the west by the Valley of Flowers. Among the magnificent palaces and
temples, richly adorned with mosaics and inscriptions, stood the cathedral,
masterpiece of the famous architect Trdat (Tiridates), built on Persian and Byzantine lines.
This mixture of architectural styles
is typical of the national art of Armenia, which betrays a subtle mingling of
Persian, Arab, and Byzantine influences. The churches of Sevan,
of Digor, of Keghard near Erivan,
even the Armenian church of Paris in the Rue Jean-Goujon,
still symbolize the desperate battle the Armenians had to fight against the
foreigner, and still suggest that the only way of maintaining the unequal
struggle was to turn the encroaching elements to the service of the Armenian
Church, dearest and most inviolable stronghold of Armenian nationality.
Under Gagik I that nationality seemed safe. His reign proved Armenia's capacity for quick
recovery, and promised the country a fair future if peace could be kept. But
the universal grief at Gagik's death was unconscious
mourning for the end of prosperity. It presaged the slow declension of Armenia
from national pride to servitude, and the gradual passing of the royal house
from kingly power to exile and extinction.
Civil war between John-Smbat and his brother 163
Two generations of misfortune
(1020-1079) opened with civil war. Gagik had left two
sons. His successor John-Smbat (1020-1040), timid and effeminate, was attacked
and defeated by his younger and more militant brother Ashot, who was helped by Senekherim Arcruni, King of Vaspurakan (Van). Peace was concluded through the mediation
of the Katholikos Petros Getadartz and Giorgi, King of the Georgians, but only by a
division of territory. John-Smbat kept Ani and its
dependencies, while Ashot took the part of the kingdom next to Persia and
Georgia (Iberia). On the death of either brother the country was to be
reunited under the survivor.
But Ashot was discontented. He
roused the King of Georgia to attack and imprison John-Smbat, who escaped only
by yielding three fortresses to Giorgi. Still
unsatisfied, Ashot feigned mortal illness and begged his brother to pay him a
last visit. Once by Ashot's bedside, John-Smbat saw
the trap and begged for his life. Ashot, deceitful to the end, freed him merely
to hand him over to Prince Apirat, who promised to
kill him at a secret spot. But, visited by sudden remorse, Apirat restored the king to Ani and his throne, and fled
himself to Abul-Aswar, governor of Dwin, to escape
the wrath of Ashot.
Armenia threatened by Greeks and Turks
While Ashot schemed against his
brother, Armenia was threatened on both sides by different enemies, one old,
the other new. The new assailants were the Seljuq Turks, led against Vaspurakan at the opening of John-Smbat's reign by Tughril Beg, whose precursor Hasan had already wasted Mesopotamia. When they had overcome the resistance of Vaspurakan, they advanced into John-Smbat's territory. At
the beginning of his reign John-Smbat had had an army of 60,000, but the
Armenian generalissimo, Vasak Pahlavuni,
had to meet the Turks with a bare five hundred men. Climbing Mount Serkevil to rest, he died there, whether by his own hand,
or by treason, or by a rock falling from the mountain while he prayed, is
unknown. Meanwhile, Tughril Beg left Armenia for the
time and conquered the whole of Persia.
On the west, Armenia was threatened
once again by the Byzantine Empire. The Turkish advance, instead of inducing
the Greeks to help Armenia, revived in them their old ambition of conquest,
with fatal results not only to the Armenians but to themselves. During the
reign of John-Smbat this ambition was twice fed by Armenian policy. Conquered
and then left by Tughril Beg, Senekherim of Vaspurakan gave up his kingdom to Basil II (1021)
in exchange for the town of Sebastea (Siwas) rather than wait to offer a second vain resistance
to the Turks on their inevitable return. Two years later Basil entered Georgia
to repress a revolt in which John-Smbat had been secretly implicated. In fear
of the Emperor's wrath John-Smbat violated the treaty he had made with his
brother, and through the agency of the Katholikos Petros Getadartz he gave in writing a promise that after his
own death Basil should inherit Ani. Basil was well
pleased. But some years later his successor Constantine VIII summoned to his
death-bed an Armenian priest named Kirakos, and
handed him the inequitable document, saying: "Bear this letter to thy king
and tell him from me that like other mortals I find myself on the threshold of
Eternity, and I would not extort the possession of another. Let him take back
his kingdom and give it to his sons." The mischief might have ended here
but for the treachery of the priest, who kept the letter in his own possession
and finally sold it for a large sum to Michael IV (1034). Much as his dishonesty
cost the Emperor, it was to cost Armenia more.
As soon as John-Smbat was dead,
Michael sent an embassy to claim Ani and its
dependencies. His chance of success was good, because Ani was divided by two factions. One, led by the generalissimo Vahram Pahlavuni, wished to crown Gagik,
the fourteen-year-old nephew and heir of John-Smbat; the other intended to give
the crown to Vest Sarkis Siwni,
the regent, or failing him to the Emperor Michael. For the moment, party
differences were sunk in unanimous denial of Byzantine claims, but Vest Sarkis destroyed this short-lived amity by seizing the
State treasure and several strongholds. Vahram's party won a fairer renown by defeating the Greeks, who were sent by the Emperor
to take by force what his embassy had failed to win by persuasion. One after
another three Greek armies invaded Armenia; each spread desolation far and wide
without conquering Ani. Michael then sent a fourth
army to besiege Ani while the King of the Albanians (Aluans) invaded the north-east province of Armenia on
behalf of the Greeks. Vahram broke up the invading
army by a bold attack. The Greeks, terrified by the fury of the Armenians, fled
in disorder, leaving twenty thousand dead and wounded beneath the walls of the
town. This victory enabled Vabram to crown Gagik II (1042-1046). With a mere handful of men the
boy-king recovered the State treasure and the citadel of Ani from Vest Sarkis, whom he cast into prison.
Unhindered for the moment by Greek interference or Armenian treachery, Gagik drove out the Turks and began to restore order in the
country. But unfortunately for himself and for his people, he was generous
enough to forgive Vest Sarkis and to raise him to honour. Posing as the king's friend, this traitor worked to
alienate the Armenian princes from Gagik and to
encourage the hostile intention of Constantine Monomachus,
successor to Michael V.
Constantine Monomachus betrays Gagik II
Constantine copied the Armenian
policy of Michael. Failing to secure Ani by
negotiation, he sent an army to seize it. Gagik defeated the Greeks and forced them to retire. Like Michael, Constantine then
sent a larger army, and at the same time urged Abul-Aswar,
governor of Dwin, to harass the Armenians on the east. But Gagik disarmed Abul-Aswar by gifts, and after a short
battle put to flight the confident Greeks.
Still Constantine would not give up
hope. Where peace and war had failed, trickery might succeed. Inspired by Vest Sarkis, he asked Gagik to come to
Constantinople to sign a treaty of perpetual peace, swearing on the cross and
the gospels in the presence of Gagik's delegate that
he would be true to his word. Unwilling to go himself, and discouraged by the Vahramians, the king ultimately yielded to the evil counsel
of Vest Sarkis and passed out of Armenia to his ruin.
Before he had spent many days in Constantinople, the Emperor demanded Ani of him, and, when he refused it, imprisoned him on an
island in the Bosphorus.
When the Armenians heard of this
disaster, there was much division among them. Some wanted to deliver Ani to David Anholin of Albania,
others to Bagarat, King of Georgia and Abasgia, but the Katholikos Petros,
to whom Gagik had entrusted the keys, informed the
Emperor that Ani should be his for a consideration.
Once assured of a good price for his shameful merchandise, Petros sent the forty keys of the bartered city to Constantine.
Gagik rebelled against the accomplished fact, but finally abdicated his
throne, receiving in exchange the town of Bizou in
Cappadocia. Here he married the daughter of David, King of Sebastea,
and led the wandering life of an exile. After many years, he learnt one day
that the Metropolitan, Mark of Caesarea, had named his dog Armen in mockery of the Armenians. Gagik could not stomach
the insult, steep it as he must in the bitterness of exile, in hatred of a
rival Church, in contempt for a people he had never encountered but as
conqueror until they overcame him by guile. To avenge the honour of his country's name, he caused the dog and the ecclesiastic to be tied up
together in a sack, and had the animal beaten until it bit its master to death.
For this crime against their metropolitan, three Greek brothers seized Gagik by treachery and hanged him in the castle of Cyzistra (1079). He left two sons and a grandson, but they
did not long survive him. When the last of them had died in prison, the
Bagratuni line was extinct.
Greater Armenia conquered by the Seljuqs
During the exile of their king, the
Armenians fell a prey to Greek and Turk. At first, not knowing of his
abdication, they resisted the Greeks and dispersed the army sent under the
command of the eunuch Paracamus to take possession of Ani. But on hearing that Gagik was never again to enter the country, the Armenians lost all heart, and allowed Paracamus to possess the city. Once masters of
Armenia, the Greeks committed atrocious cruelties. They exiled or poisoned the
princes, replaced Armenian troops by Greek garrisons, and worked for the utter
destruction of the country.
But they had reckoned without the
Turk. Learning of Armenia's weakness, Tughril Beg
returned, and spread ruin and desolation far and wide for several years. He
sacked the fortified town of Smbataberd and tortured
the inhabitants. The rich commercial town of Ardzen shared the same fate (1049). The Greeks at last determined to make an end of
his savagery. Together with Liparid, King of Georgia,
their general Comnenus offered battle to the Turks near Bayber.
But owing to disagreement among the Christians, the Turks were victorious and
carried the King of Georgia into captivity. With no one now to oppose him, Tughril overran most of Armenia except Ani. Vanand resisted in vain, but their failure in the
siege of Manzikert forced the Turks to retire. Tughril fell back, only to wreak his vengeance upon Ardske. His death, like that of the Arab Afshin long
before, brought no relief to Armenia, for like Afshin, he left a brother, Alp Arslan, to complete his work of destruction. Alp Arslan besieged Ani unsuccessfully for a time, but finally overcame its resistance and sacked the
city with unimaginable fury. The river Akhurian ran
red with blood; palaces and temples were set on fire and covered thousands of
corpses with their ruins (1064). The Turks then invited Vanand to submit. Gagik, the king, feigned friendship and
made an alliance with Alp Arslan. But like Senekherim of Van before him, he gave his kingdom to the
Eastern Empire in exchange for a stronghold farther west. In 1065 he
transported his family to the castle of Dzmndav in
Little Armenia. The Greeks, however, could not save Vanand from the Turks, who pushed their conquests as far as Little Armenia. Kars,
Karin, Bayber, Sebastea,
and Caesarea had submitted to Alp Arslan, when the
Emperor Romanus Diogenes opposed him at Manzikert in
1071. The Greeks were defeated, and the Turks led the Emperor into captivity.
By the end of the eleventh century
not a vestige remained of Byzantine dominion over Armenia. The Greeks saw too
late the fatal consequences of their selfish hostility towards a country which
on south and east might have served them as a rampart against their most
dangerous foe.
Character of Armeno-Cilician kingdom
The national history of Greater
Armenia ended with the Turkish conquest and with the extinction of the
Bagratuni line. Little by little, numbers of Armenians withdrew into the Taurus
mountains and the plateau below, but though their country rose again from ruin,
it was only as a small principality in Cilicia. The fruits of Armenian civilization—the
architectural splendour of Ani,
the military strength of Van, the intellectual life of Kars, the commercial
pride of Bitlis and Ardzen—were
no more.
Greater Armenia had been eastern
rather than western, coming into contact with race after race from the east;
with Byzantium alone, half eastern itself, on the west. But the civilization of Armeno-Cilicia was western rather than eastern: its
political interests were divided between Europe and Asia, and its history was
overshadowed by that of the Crusades. To the Crusades the change was
pre-eminently due. Crusading leaders stood in every kind of relationship to the
new Armenian kingdom. They befriended and fought it by turns. They used its
roads, borrowed its troops, received its embassies, fought its enemies, and
established feudal governments near it. For a time their influence made it a
European State, built on feudal lines, seeking agreement with the Church of
Rome, and sending envoys to the principal courts of Christendom.
But the Armenian Church, which had
been the inspiration and mainstay of the old civilization, and the family
ambitions, which had helped to destroy it, lived on to prove the continuity of
the little State of Armeno-Cilicia with the old
Bagratid kingdom. Nationalist feeling, stirred to life by fear of religious
compromise and by the growth of Latin influence at court, was to provoke a
crisis more than once in centuries to come.
Among the Armenian migrants to the
Taurus mountains, during the invasions that followed the abdication of Gagik II, was Prince Ruben (Rupen).
He had seen the assassination of Gagik to whom he was
related, and he determined to avenge his kinsman's death on the Greeks. Collecting
a band of companions, whose numbers increased from day to day, he took up his
stand in the village of Goromozol near the fortress
of Bardsrberd, drove the Greeks out of the Taurus
region, and established his dominion there. The other Armenian princes
recognised his supremacy and helped him to strengthen his power, though many
years were to pass before the Greeks were driven out of all the Cilician towns
and strongholds which they occupied.
The foundation of Armeno-Cilicia
Cilicia was divided into two
well-marked districts: the plain, rich and fertile but difficult to defend, and
the mountains, covered with forests and full of defiles. The wealth of the
country was in its towns: Adana, Mamistra, and Anazarbus, for long the chief centres of hostility between Greeks and Armenians; Ayas with
its maritime trade; Tarsus and Sis, each in turn the capital of the new Armenian
State; Germanicea or Marash,
and Ulnia or Zeithun. The
mountainous region, difficult of approach, and sprinkled with Syrian, Greek,
and Armenian monasteries, easily converted into strongholds, was the surest
defence of the province, though in addition the countryside was protected by
strong fortresses such as Vahka, Bardsrberd, Kapan, and Lambron.
When Ruben died, after fifteen years
of wise rule (1080-1095), he was able to hand on the lordship of Cilicia to his
son Constantine (1095-1100), who first brought Armeno-Cilicia
into close contact with Europe. Constantine continued his father's work by
capturing Vahka and other fortresses from the Greeks
and thus increasing his patrimony. But he broke new ground by making an
alliance with the Crusaders, who in return for his services in pointing out
roads and in furnishing supplies, especially during the siege of Antioch, gave
him the title of Marquess.
If the principality thus founded in
hostile territory owed its existence to the energy of an Armenian prince, it owed
its survival largely to external causes. In the first place, the Turks were
divided. After 1092, when the Seljuq monarchy split into rival powers, Persia
alone was governed by the direct Seljuq line; other sultans of Seljuq blood
ruled parts of Syria and Asia Minor. Although the Sultans of Iconium or Rum were to be a perpetual danger to Cilicia
from the beginning of the twelfth century onwards, the division of the Turks at
the close of the eleventh century broke for a time the force of their original
advance, and gave the first Rubenians a chance to
recreate the Armenian State. In the second place, the Crusades began. The Latin
States founded in the East during the First Crusade checked the Turks, and also
prevented the Greeks, occupied as they were with internal and external
difficulties, from making a permanent reconquest of
Cilicia. The Latins did not aim at protecting the Armenians, with whom indeed
they often quarrelled. But as a close neighbour to a number of small states, nominally friendly
but really inimical to Byzantium, Armenia was no longer isolated. Instead of
being a lonely upstart principality, it became one of many recognised kingdoms,
all hostile to the Greek recovery of the Levant, all entitled to the moral sanction
and expecting the armed support of the mightiest kings of Europe.
For about twenty-five years after
Constantine's death, his two sons, Thoros I
(1100-1123) and Leo I (1123-1135), ruled the Armenians with great success. As
an able administrator Thoros organized the country,
and would have given his time to building churches and palaces if his enemies
had left him in peace. But he had to fight both Greeks and Turks. He took Anazarbus from the Greeks and repulsed an invasion of Seljuqs
and Turkomans. In his reign the death of Gagik II was at last avenged: Armenian troops seized the
castle of Cyzistra and put to death the three Greek
brothers who had hanged the exiled king. Leo I, who succeeded Thoros, had not the administrative gifts of his
predecessors, but like them he was a brave soldier. He captured Mamistra and Tarsus, the chief towns still in Greek hands,
and was for a time unquestioned master of all Cilicia.
But the Greeks were not permanently
ousted from Cilicia until 1168. Leo's dominion was short-lived, owing to the
failure of his diplomacy. He wove his political designs round the Christian
principality of Antioch. At first he joined with Roger of Antioch against the
Turks; then, quarrelling with Roger, he joined the Turks against Antioch
(1130). In revenge, Roger's successor Bohemond II allied
with Baldwin, Count of Marash, seized Leo by a trick
(1131), and as the price of freedom extorted from him the towns of Mamistra and Adana, a sum of 60,000 piastres,
and one of his sons as hostage. Leo paid the price demanded, but afterwards
retook by force what he had been compelled to yield to treachery.
Meanwhile Antioch attracted the
envious eye of the Emperor John Comnenus. First, he tried to gain it for the
Empire by a marriage project. Failing in this, he fought for it. This time Leo
joined with Antioch against the Greeks, but again he suffered for his choice.
While he was encamped before Seleucia at the head of Latin and Armenian troops,
the Emperor invaded Cilicia, took Tarsus, Mamistra,
and Adana, and had already begun to attack Anazarbus when Leo hurried back to relieve the city. The Emperor despaired of capturing
it until his son Isaac advised him to cover his engines of war with clay to
prevent them from being broken. This device succeeded. Leo retired to the
castle of Vahka, and in spite of help from Antioch
was forced to surrender (1135). Antioch recognised the Emperor's supremacy, and
Leo was put into chains and sent to a Byzantine prison, where he died six years
later (1141). Two of his sons were imprisoned with him. The elder was tortured
and put to death, but Thoros, the younger, survived
to deliver his country.
Thoros II successful against the Greeks
Before deliverance came, the
Armenians were tormented for nine long years by their old enemies, the Greeks
and the Turks. Leo's misfortune gave Cilicia to the Greeks, who pillaged and
destroyed strongholds and towns, convents and churches. The Turks and even the
Latins joined in demolishing the laborious work of the first Rubenians. But when the Turkish Emir Ahmad Malik had seized Vahka and Kapan, the Emperor returned to Cilicia, bringing with him Thoros, son of Leo I. In this campaign, however, the
Emperor was killed while hunting, and the Greek army retreated, while Thoros managed to escape and disclosed his identity to an
Armenian priest.
Thoros II (1145-1168) had to reconquer his kingdom from the Greeks before he
could rule it. At the head of ten thousand Armenians and with the help of his
brothers, Stephane (Sdephane)
and Mleh, who had been at the court of Nur-ad-Din, Sultan of Aleppo, he recaptured the fortresses
of Vahka, Simanakla, and Arindz. One by one all the great cities of the plain opened
their gates. Manuel Comnenus hastened to bring his Hungarian war to a close and
to send his cousin the Caesar Andronicus to oppose Thoros,
who retired to Mamistra on the approach of the Greek
army. The town was without ammunition, and Thoros undertook to recognise the supremacy of the Greeks if
they would respect his paternal rights. Andronicus refused, and threatened to
bind Thoros with his father's fetters. But on a dark,
rainy night Thoros breached the walls of the town and
surprised the enemy at their revels. Andronicus escaped with a handful of men,
but Thoros pursued him as far as Antioch, and then
returned to Mamistra. He held to ransom the Greek
nobles he had captured, and divided the money among his soldiers, telling the
wondering Greeks that he did so in order that his men might one day recapture
them. Among the prisoners was Oshin, Lord of Lambron, father of the famous Nerses Lambronatsi. Oshin paid
twenty thousand pieces of gold as half his ransom, and for the second half left
his son Hethum (Hayton) as
hostage. Thoros had later so great an affection for Hethum that he gave him his daughter in marriage, and
regarding the payment of Oshin's debt as the girl's
dowry he sent them both to Lambron, hoping thus to
win the friendship of Oshin and his family. This hope
was not fulfilled, for Lambron, with its leanings
towards Byzantium, was destined to give much trouble to future rulers of
Armenia.
Manuel's next step was to induce
other rulers to attack Thoros. First he bribed Masud I, Sultan of Iconium, to
oppose him. The Sultan twice invaded Cilicia, only to be repulsed, once by the
sight of Thoros' preparations, once by plague (1154).
The Emperor then turned to the Latins, and excited Reginald of Chatillon, regent of Antioch, to fight against Armenia. Thoros and Reginald fought a bloody but doubtful battle at
Alexandretta, but Reginald, not receiving the Emperor's promised help, made
peace with Thoros and marched against the Greeks. He
made a naval attack on Cyprus and inflicted great injury on its defenceless people. This diversion enabled Thoros to consolidate his power and even to extend it in
the mountainous districts of Phrygia and Isauria.
Manuel was greatly dissatisfied with
the unexpected result. He sent against Thoros another
army, which failed like the first, and then came to Cilicia in person. Warned
in time by a Latin monk, Thoros put his family and
his treasure in the stronghold of Tajki-Gar (Rock of
Tajik), and hid himself in the mountains while the Emperor deprived him of his hardly-won
cities. When peace was finally made through the mediation of Baldwin III, King
of Jerusalem, Thoros was restored to power under the
title of Pansebastos and Manuel kept the two towns of Anazarbus and Mamistra (1159).
The Greeks driven from Cilicia
But the barbarity of the Greeks provoked
fresh hostilities which resulted in their expulsion from the country. While Thoros helped the crusaders against the Sultan of Aleppo,
his brother Stephan retook the towns which the Sultan of Iconium had captured from the Christians. Jealous of Stephane's success, the Emperor's lieutenant, Andronicus Euphorbenus,
invited him to a feast and cast him into a cauldron of boiling water (1163).
Once more a powerful Greek army was sent to Cilicia, but Thoros determined to avenge his brother's death, and, by defeating the invaders in a
great battle near Tarsus, brought to a successful close his life-long struggle
against Byzantium. Greek domination in Cilicia was at an end.
Thoros died regretted by all, leaving a child, Ruben II, to succeed him, and a
brother to undo his work. This brother, Mleh, had
been a Templar and a Catholic, and then became a leader of Turkoman nomads. He spread destruction wherever he went. The young king took refuge with
the Katholikos at Romkla, where he soon died. Mleh openly joined the Sultan Niir-ad-Din,
invaded Cilicia, and did great harm to the Armenians. But he made himself so
unpopular by his cruelty that his own soldiers killed him (1175).
After his death the Armenians filled
his place by his nephew Ruben III (1175-1185), the eldest son of the Stephane who had been cast into boiling water by the
Greeks. Of peaceful disposition, Ruben none the less freed his country from
external attack; but from his Armenian enemies he was only saved by his brother
Leo.
Although the Greeks had been driven
out of Cilicia, some of the Armenian principalities, Lambron among them, still looked upon the Emperor as their suzerain. Hethum of Lambron was related to the
R ubenians by marriage, but he preferred Byzantine to
Armenian supremacy, and asked Bohemond III of Antioch
to help him against Ruben III. Bohemond seized Ruben
by treachery, imprisoned him at Antioch, and marched against the Armenians,
hoping to conquer Cilicia, not for Hethum or the
Emperor, but for himself. Leo, however, repulsed him, and forced him and Hethum to make peace with Ruben. On his release, Ruben devoted
himself to the welfare of his people, who loved him for his liberality and wise
administration. He built towns and convents, and finally retired into a
monastery.
European connections of Leo the Great
Ruben's successor was his brother
Leo II (1185-1219), surnamed the Great or the Magnificent, already known as his
country's defender, and destined to raise the lordship or barony of Armeno-Cilicia to the status of a kingdom. His long reign
of thirty-four years fully justified his change of style, for he gave his
country a stability and prosperity that were unparalleled in its annals.
His first work was to free the
Armenians from Muslim pressure. He conquered Rustam,
Sultan of Iconium, who suddenly invaded Cilicia, and
two years after his accession he drove back the united forces of the Sultans of
Aleppo and Damascus (1187). When he was once more at peace he built fortresses
on the frontiers and filled them with well-trained garrisons. With Cilicia he
incorporated Isauria, which had been seized by the Seljuqs
of Rum.
In diplomacy, his sovereign purpose
was to obtain the help of Western Europe against the Greeks and Muslims. He
sought the friendship of the European princes by means of marriage-alliances.
His niece Aliza was married to Raymond, son of Bohemond of Antioch; and he himself married Isabella of
Austria. Later, he repudiated Isabella and married Sibylla,
daughter of Amaury of Lusignan,
King of Cyprus. Long before his second marriage he had made a friend of
Frederick Barbarossa, who at the outset of his ill-starred Crusade asked for
Leo's help in return for the promise of a crown. Leo quickly sent abundant
provisions and ammunition to the Crusaders, and when the imperial army entered Isauria he himself went with the Katholikos to greet the
Emperor. They never met, for Barbarossa had been drowned on the way, bathing in
the Calicadnus.
After some years, Frederick's son
Henry VI and Pope Celestine III sent the promised crown to Leo, and, at the
feast of the Epiphany in 1198, he was consecrated in the cathedral of Sis by
the Katholikos Grigor VII Apirat in the presence of the Archbishop of Mayence, Conrad
of Wittelsbach, Papal legate and representative of
the Emperor. The Eastern Emperor Alexius Angelus also sent Leo a crown in
confirmation of Armenian authority over Cilicia, so long disputed by the
Greeks.
Leo was anxious to include the Pope
among his European friends. Many letters passed between the Popes on the one
side and the Katholikos and King of Armenia on the other with a view to uniting
the Roman and Armenian Churches. But the Armenian authorities, willing
themselves to make concessions to Rome, were opposed by the Armenian people,
who strenuously defended their Church against the authority of the Papacy. In
the end, the sole result of attempted reconciliation was an embitterment of
religious feeling.
King by the consent of Europe, Leo
made his country a European State. He chose a new seat for his government,
removing it from Tarsus to Sis, where he entertained German, English, French,
and Italian captains, who came to serve under the Armenian banner. In defining
the relations of the princes to the royal house, in establishing military and
household posts, in creating tribunals, and in fixing the quota of taxes and
tribute, he copied to a great extent the organisation of the Latin princes of
Syria. One of the fruits of his alliance with Bohemond of Antioch was the adoption of the Assises of Antioch
as the law of Armeno-Cilicia.
In addition, Leo encouraged
industry, navigation, and commerce. He cultivated commercial relations with the
West, and by granting privileges to Genoese and Venetian merchants he spread
Cilician trade throughout Europe. Mindful, too, of the good works of his
forefathers, he founded orphanages and hospitals and schools, and increased the
number of convents, where skilled calligraphists and miniaturists added lustre to the prosperity of his reign.
Leo's reputation, founded on
peaceful achievement, is all the greater because he attained it in spite of
intermittent wars. Of his own will he entered on a long succession-struggle in
Antioch to defend the rights of his young kinsman, Ruben-Raymond, against the
usurpation of an uncle, Bohemond IV the One-Eyed,
Count of Tripolis, who had seized the government of
Antioch with the help of Templars and Hospitallers. Leo recaptured Antioch and restored
Ruben-Raymond to power. Bohemond returned, drove out
his nephew a second time, and bribed the Sultan of Iconium, Rukn-ad-Din, to invade Cilicia. Though deserted at
the last minute by the Templars, for whose services
he had paid twenty thousand Byzantine pounds, Leo forced the Seljuqs to retire
with serious losses, and turned again to Antioch. While he was preparing to
besiege the town, he referred the succession question to Innocent III, who
entrusted its solution to the King of Jerusalem and the Patriarchs of Jerusalem
and Antioch. The dispute seemed about to end peacefully when one of the
cardinals sent by the Pope was corrupted by the enemy to anathematize Leo and
Armenia. The anathema was publicly repelled by John Medzabaro the Katholikos; and Leo, too furious to wait for the decision of the
arbitrators, continued the siege of Antioch and captured the town (1211). After
a triumphal entry, he reinstated Ruben-Raymond once more, and left Antioch for
Cilicia, where he sequestrated the property of the Templars and drove them out of the country.
The other wars of Leo's reign were
not of his choosing. Without provocation, the Sultan of Aleppo, Ghiyath-ad-Din Ghazi, son of Saladin, sent an embassy to
demand that Leo should do homage or fight. Leo had the envoys taken for diversion
into the country for a few days while he marched on the sultan, who was
peacefully awaiting the return of his embassy. The sultan's army fled before
the sudden attack of the Armenians, and he was obliged to pay Leo a larger
tribute than he had hoped to extort for himself.
Leo's last war, waged against his
other old enemy, Iconium, was not so successful. Too
ill to fight himself, he sent the baïle Adam and the grand-baron Constantine against Izz-ad-Din
Kai-Kaus I, who had laid siege to the fortress of Kapan. Adam withdrew from the campaign after a quarrel with
his colleague, and, by a feigned retreat and sudden volte face, the Turks defeated the Armenians and continued their
interrupted siege of Kapan. But on hearing that Leo
was ravaging Iconian territory, the sultan made haste
to return to his own country and to make peace with Armenia (1217).
Succession problems after Leo's death
Two years later Leo died, to the
sorrow of his people. He had made Armenia strong and respected, but even in his
reign the old ambitions of the princes were abreast of opportunity. When Leo
was away in Cyprus, visiting the relatives of his queen, Hethum of Lambron revolted and invaded the king's territory.
Leo was strong enough to seize and imprison the rebel and his two sons on his
return, but the revolt showed that Leo's power rested on the perilous
foundation of his own personality, and could not withstand the strain applied
to it immediately after his death.
Leo left no son. He had once adopted
Ruben-Raymond of Antioch as heir to the Cilician throne, but he repented of his
choice on proving the youth's incapacity. In the end, he left the crown to his
daughter Zabel under the regency of two Armenian
magnates. One of the regents was soon killed, but his colleague, the
grand-baron Constantine, became for a time the real ruler of the country.
Though never crowned himself, he made and unmade Armenian kings for the next
six years (c.1220-1226).
His first act was to discrown Ruben-Raymond of Antioch, who with the help of
crusaders had entered Tarsus and proclaimed himself king. Constantine defeated
the invaders at Mamistra, and imprisoned Ruben at
Tarsus, where he died. He then gave the crown to Philip of Antioch (1222), to
whom, with the consent of the Armenian princes and ecclesiastics, he had
married Zabel. But the new king was a failure. He had
promised to conform to the laws and ceremonies of Armenia, but on the advice of
his father, Bohemond the One-Eyed, Prince of Antioch,
he soon broke his word, and began to favour the
Latins at the expense of the Armenians. He sent in secret to his father the
royal ornaments of Armenia and many other national treasures, and then tried to
flee with Zabel. Constantine caught and imprisoned
him, and demanded the return of the stolen heirlooms from Bohemond as the price of Philip's safety. Bohemond preferred
to let his son die in a foreign prison.
For the third time Constantine
decided the fate of the Armenian crown. With the approval, not of the lady but
of the Armenian magnates, he married Zabel to his own
son Hethum (Hayton). After
founding a dynasty of his own blood, he discrowned no
more kings, but with Hethum's consent he undertook to
reorganize the Cilician State, deeply rent by the succession question and shorn
of part of Isauria by watchful Iconium.
Nevertheless, for the sake of peace, Constantine made an alliance with the
Sultan of Iconium, and conciliated the principality
of Lambron which had revolted in the reign of Leo the
Great. Later on in Hethum's reign Constantine again
governed Cilicia in his son's absence.
Armenian alliance with the Mongols
The change of dynasty brought with
it a change in policy. Cilicia was no longer molested by the Greeks; and the Seljuqs
of Iconium, though troublesome for some years to
come, were losing power. The paramount danger to the Armenians, as to the Seljuqs
themselves, came from the Mamluks of Egypt, and the crucial question for
Armenian rulers was where to turn for help against this new enemy. After more
than a century's experience the Armenians could not trust their Latin neighbours as allies. Hethum I
(1226-1270), though anxious to keep their good will, and with his eyes always
open to the possibility of help from the West, put his trust not in the
Christians but in the heathen Mongols, who for half a century were to prove the
best friends Armenia ever had.
At the beginning of Hethum's reign, the Mongols were overrunning Persia,
Armenia, and Asia Minor, but they did good service to the Armenians by conquering
the Seljuqs of Iconium and depriving them of most of
their Syrian and Cappadocian territories. Hethum made a defensive and offensive alliance with Bachu, the Mongol general, and in 1244 became the vassal of
the Khan Ogdai. Ten years later he did homage in
person to Mangu Khan, and cemented the friendship
between the two nations by a long stay at the Mongol court.
Meanwhile the Seljuqs, who had
incited Lambron to revolt early in the reign, took
advantage of Hethum's absence to invade Cilicia under
the Sultan Izz-ad-Din Kai-K-aus II. Hethum defeated the Turks on his return, seized
several important towns, and recovered the whole of Isauria.
His triumph gave him brief leisure.
The rest of his reign was filled with a struggle against the Mamluks, whose
northward advance was fortunately opposed by the Mongols. Hethum and the Khan's brother Hulagu joined forces at Edessa
to undertake the capture of Jerusalem from the Mamluks. The allies defeated Nasir, Sultan of Aleppo, and divided his lands between
themselves, but all hope of further success vanished with the Khan's death. Hulagu hastened back to Tartary on receiving the news,
leaving his son Abagha in charge of an army of 20,000
(1259). Baibars, Sultan of Egypt, took the
opportunity to enter Syria, and defeated the Mongols more than once. He seized
Antioch from the Christians and invaded Armenia with a large army. One of Hethum's sons was slain, the other (afterwards Leo III) was
taken captive. The Mamluks wasted part of Cilicia, disinterred the bones of
Armenian kings, and retraced their steps with numerous captives and much
plunder. All that Hethum could do was to ransom his
son by sacrificing the castle of Derbessak and by
dismantling two other fortresses on the frontier. He entrusted to Leo the
government of the country, and after a turbulent reign of forty-four years
retired into a monastery.
War with the Mamluks and Seljuqs
Leo III (1270-1289) had to face the
same problems that had troubled his father—internal revolt and the enmity of
Egypt and Iconium. In addition he was scourged by
personal illness and by a visitation of plague and famine. Taking advantage of
disaffection among the Armenian princes, who had revolted unsuccessfully
against Leo, Baibars invaded Cilicia with an army of
Turks and Arabs. Leo was deserted and fled to the mountains, leaving the
country defenseless. Sis repulsed the invaders, but Tarsus capitulated. Its
magnificent buildings were set on fire, thousands of its people were massacred,
and thousands more led into captivity (1274). This disaster was followed by
famine and plague. Leo himself fell ill; his two sons died.
Scarcely healed of his sickness, the
king had to face a second Mamluk invasion. But this time the Armenian princes
rallied to him, and as usual saved their country from final catastrophe. The
Mamluks were caught in a trap, and suffered losses so great that the corpses of
the dead prevented the living from taking flight. Baibars,
gravely wounded by an arrow, reached Damascus to die (1276).
The Khan Abagha sent delegates to congratulate Leo on his victory, and to propose that he
should add Turkey (Rum or Asia Minor) and several Mesopotamian towns to his
Cilician kingdom. Leo wisely refused this offer of a vast realm, but he agreed
to the Khan's other proposal of addressing letters to the Pope and the kings of
the West to ask them to join the Mongols for the capture of the Holy Land from
the Mamluks. On 25 November 1276 John and James Vassal, the messengers of Abagha Khan, announced to Edward I of England their approaching
arrival in the West with letters from the Mongol Emperor and the King of
Armenia.
After defeating the Seljuqs of Iconium (1278), who had invaded Armenian territory while
the Armenians were repulsing the Mamluks, Leo was bound by his alliance to go
to the help of the Mongols, who were again at war with the Mamluks. The
Armenians joined the Mongol army under Mangu Timur without mishap, and met the Mamluks, led by Saif-ad-Din Qalaun al-Alfi, at Hims on the Orontes
(1281). The Mamluks would have been defeated but for the inexplicable conduct
of Mangu Timur, which gave
the day to the sultan, already at the point of flight. As a result, Leo barely
escaped to Armenia with thirty horsemen. The Mongols returned to face the anger
of their Khan, who beheaded both the generals and forced the soldiers to wear
women's clothes. After this disaster the Mongols were hostile to Armenia for
two years, because Abagha's successor hated the
Christians. But on the accession of another Khan in 1284, the Mongols resumed
their old friendship with the Armenians, and Leo was able to spend the last
five years of his reign in works of peace.
Unstable government of Hethum II
Prosperity vanished with Leo's
death. Under his son Hethum II the One-Eyed
(1289-1305), Armenia was in a peculiarly difficult position. The Mamluk rulers
of Syria and Palestine were bent on annihilating Armenia, the last bulwark of
Christendom. Hethum had no reliable allies. The
Mongols were not only losing power, but were turning towards Islam. The
Christians of the West were broken reeds, for the time of great impulses and
united effort was past, even if the Armenian people had not opposed religious
agreement with Rome. Hethum himself weakened Cilicia
by his fitful sovereignty. The author of a national chronicle in verse, he
preferred the part of monk to that of king, and long refused to be crowned. He
abdicated three times, once to enter a monastery, once to turn Franciscan, once
to become "Father of the King" to his nephew Leo IV. At a fourth
juncture abdication was thrust upon him. As a result he ruled Cilicia for
little more than half the time that elapsed between his accession in 1289 and
his death in 1307. From 1290 to 1291, and again from 1294 to 1296, he entrusted
the government to his brother Thoros III. Thoros in his turn became a monk, and when Hethum went with him to Constantinople to see their sister Ritha he left a third brother Smbat (Sempad)
to rule Armenia in his absence (1296-1297). This time he did not intend to
abdicate, but Smbat had himself crowned at Sis with the consent of Ghazan Khan, the Mongol ruler of Persia, and married a
Tartar princess. On Hethum's return, Smbat drove him
and Thoros out of Cilicia. They appealed in vain to
the khan and to their kinsfolk in Cyprus and Constantinople. Smbat seized them
near Caesarea in Cappadocia and imprisoned them in the High Fortress (Bardsrberd), where Thoros was put
to death and Hethum blinded and left in chains
(1298). This coup d’état was reversed by a fourth brother Constantine, who
dethroned and imprisoned Smbat. When, however, the Armenians wished to
reinstate Hethum, who was slowly recovering his
sight, Constantine repented of his loyalty and tried to release Smbat. But,
with the help of Templars and Hospitallers, Hethum in his turn seized his brothers and sent them
to Constantinople (1299). After this experience he did not abdicate again for
six years.
Such unstable government did not help
the Armenians to resist the Mamluks. But Hethum was a
good soldier when the militant side of his nature was uppermost, and until
1302, when the Tartar alliance was lost, he defended Cilicia with moderate
success. It was the threat of invasion by Ashraf, the
successor of Qalaun, that finally decided him to be
crowned (1289). He sent troops to guard the frontiers and appealed for help to Arghun Khan and to Pope Nicholas III. Nothing but vague
promises from Philip the Fair came of these appeals, but indirectly Cilicia was
saved by the Christians, who at the Pope's instigation laid siege to
Alexandria. After taking Romkla, the seat of the
Katholikos, and massacring its inhabitants, the sultan hurried back to Egypt
with the Katholikos in his train, and Hethum gained
peace and the release of the Katholikos at the price of several fortresses
(1289-1290).
Some years later, during the
contention between Hethum and his brothers, Susamish, viceroy of Damascus, prepared to invade Cilicia
at the head of a Mamluk army. Hethum scattered his
troops and handed him over to Ghazan Khan. After this
success, Hethum and the khan took the offensive, and
tried to seize Syria and Palestine from the Mamluks. But the khan suddenly
returned to Persia to repress the revolt of his kinsman Baidu,
and left his troops under the command of Qutlughshah.
Although Hethum and Qutlughshah were at first successful, they were finally, after losing many men in the
Euphrates, compelled to retreat.
Loss of the Mongol alliance
Ghazan Khan had promised on leaving Hethum that he
would come back to undertake the conquest of the Holy Land for the Christians,
but in 1302 he died. His successor, Uljaitu, far from fulfilling that promise,
turned Musulman and forswore the ancient alliance with Armenia. The Mongols
made war on the Armenians and spent a year reducing Cilicia to a heap of ruins.
Turks and Mamluks then invaded the country three times, and levelled the ruins left standing by the Mongols. Again Hethum was roused to action. As the enemy were about to depart laden with plunder, he
attacked them and killed or captured nearly seven thousand of their men. The
Sultan of Egypt made peace; and for a time the Turks disappeared from Cilicia.
All through Hethum's reign, the defence of Cilicia depended upon the military qualities of himself
and of his people alone. He made the most of his diplomatic opportunities, but
with no appreciable result. He tried hard to keep the Mongol alliance, but even
before 1302 the khan could not help him against Ashraf and would not help him against his brother Smbat. He made marriage alliances
with Constantinople and Cyprus, giving his sister Mariam in marriage to Michael IX, son of the Emperor Andronicus, and marrying another
sister Zabel to Amaury,
brother of the King of Cyprus. After the loss of the Mongol alliance, he
redoubled the efforts of his predecessor to earn Western help by religious
concession. The Katholikos Grigor VII Anavarzetsi prepared a profession of faith in nine
chapters, and proposed to introduce into the Armenian Church various changes of
ritual conforming to the Roman usage. Before anything further was done, the
Katholikos died and Hethum resigned the crown to his
nephew Leo IV (1305-1307). In 1307 Leo and his uncle summoned the princes and
the ecclesiastics to the First Council of Sis. There, owing to the king's
insistence, the profession of faith drafted by the late Katholikos was read and
adopted. But when the people knew of it, their fury overleapt the bounds of
loyalty and patriotism. In their anger they roused Bilarghu the Mongol against Hethum and Leo. Already in
Cilicia, Bilarghu treacherously invited the king and
his uncle to Anazarbus, where he put them to death
with the princes of their persuasion (13 August 1307).
All hope of gaining Western aid in
return for religious concession was once more deferred. The only tangible fruit
of Hethum's advances to the Latins had been the help
given him by the Templars and Hospitallers against his rebellious brothers. Tried and found wanting time after time, the
rulers of the West were nevertheless Armenia's only possible friends. Like Hethum, his successor Oshin'
(1307-1320) worked steadily for their co-operation. Like Hethum,
he made marriage alliances, sought religious accommodation, sent despairing
appeals for help. And like Hethum he was left to
defend Armenia himself.
Overtures to the West. Nationalist reaction
Isabel of Lusignan,
daughter of King Hugh III, was his first wife, and her successor was Joan of
Anjou, niece of King Robert of Naples and daughter of Philip I of
Anjou-Taranto, known as Philip II, Latin Emperor of the East. Besides marrying
into two Western families, Oshin tried to solve the
religious problem. In 1316 he summoned to Adana an assembly which examined and
adopted the ecclesiastical settlement made at Sis nine years before. The king
and the Katholikos Constantine II had the dogma of the Procession of the Holy
Ghost proclaimed in conformity with Catholic teaching. But once more the angry
people frustrated the will of their rulers, and only the overwhelming peril
from the Mamluks could dull the edge of religious discord. As appeals for help
sent to John XXII and to Philip of Valois were fruitless, the burden of
defending Cilicia fell upon Oshin. He had expelled Bilarghu and his Mongols from the country at the beginning
of his reign, avenging on them the death of his kinsmen. After this he had
found time to build strongholds and churches, especially in Tarsus, where he
restored and strengthened the famous ramparts, and built the magnificent church
now known as Kalisa-jami(=church-mosque). But in the
middle of his religious troubles the Mamluks again threatened Cilicia, and he
spent the last years of his reign defending the country single-handed. For
twenty years after his death (1320-1340) Armenia struggled unavailingly against
the rising power of the Mamluks.
The minority of Oshin's son Leo V (1320-1342) produced a nationalist crisis. The long-continued
friendship of Armenian rulers with the Latins, their adoption of Latin
institutions, and their intermarriage with Latin families, had made their court
more Latin than Armenian; while their friendly discussions with the Papacy had
strengthened the cause of the Uniates, who worked for
a complete union of the Armenian Church with Rome. But Leo's minority gave the
nationalists their chance. The government was in the hands of a council of
regency composed of four barons, Leo himself being under the guardianship of Oshin of Gorigos. Oshin married Leo's mother, exiled the king's Lusignan cousins, and married him to his own daughter in
order to counteract Latin influences. When Leo came to power, however, he undid Oshin's work. He married a Spanish wife connected
with the Lusignans (Constance of Aragon, widow of
Henry II of Lusignan), recalled his cousins, and
finally put Oshin to death. During his reign Cilicia
was confined to its ancient boundaries, but though the country's defences were in ruins and the princes were occupied with
political and ecclesiastical disputes, Leo immersed himself in religious
discussions.
Meanwhile Nasir,
Sultan of the Mamluks, on hearing that Europe was preparing for a new crusade,
made an alliance with the Tartars and Turkomans for
the conquest of Armenia. Devastated and plundered by successive armies of
Tartars, Turkomans, and Mamluks, Cilicia was once
more saved from complete destruction by a few heroic Armenians. They hid in
passes through which the enemy had to march, and massacred several thousand
Mamluks. The sultan agreed to a fifteen years' truce on condition that the
Armenians paid to the Egyptians an annual tribute of 50,000 florins, half the
customs and revenue from the maritime trade of Ayas,
and half the sea-salt. In return, the sultan undertook to rebuild Ayas and the other fortresses at his own expense, and not
to occupy any stronghold or castle in Cilicia with his troops.
At last, about 1335, Philip VI of
France decided to go to the help of the Armenians, and Nasir resolved to conquer them. The net result of the two decisions might have been
foreseen. On the one hand, Leo received 10,000 florins from Philip with, a few
sacks of corn from the Pope; on the other, Armenia was invaded and conquered by
the Mamluks. Leo fled to the mountains (1337); but after forcing him to swear
on Bible and Cross never again to enter into relations with Europe, Nasir left him to rule what was left of his country until
his death in 1342. He was the last of the Rubenian-Hethumian rulers, who thus left Armenia as they had found it, a prey to the foreigner.
Failure and exile of Leo VI
For a generation after Leo's death
(1342-1373), Armenia was ruled by Latin kings. Two of them were Lusignan princes connected by mariage with the Hethumian dynasty, and the other two were
usurpers not of royal blood.
The Lusignans derived their claim to the Armenian crown from the marriage of Zabel, sister of Hethum II, to Amaury of Tyre, brother of Henry
II of Cyprus (1295). John and Guy, two sons of this marriage, were in the
service of the Emperor at Constantinople when Leo V died. Some months after
Leo's death, John, the younger, was called upon to administer the Cilician
kingdom, not as king, but as bale or regent. At his suggestion, the elder
brother Guy left Constantinople and accepted the crown of Armeno-Cilicia
in 1342.
Crowned by the Katholikos according
to Armenian rites, Guy acted at first as an Armenian patriot, refusing to pay
tribute to the Sultans of Egypt and Turkey. But when Egyptian invasions
followed, Guy not only adopted the time-honoured custom of appealing for help to the Pope (Clement VI) and of promising to
effect if possible the union of the Armenian Church with Rome, but surrounded
himself with Latin princes to whom he entrusted the defence of towns and
fortresses. The Pope actually sent a thousand horsemen and a thousand pieces of
Byzantine silver, but the Armenians, resenting Guy's Latinizing policy,
assassinated him with his brother Bohemond and the
Western knights who had come to his aid (1344). His other brother John had died
a natural death a few months earlier.
The next king, the usurper
Constantine IV, son of Baldwin, marshal of Armenia, was more successful (1344-1363).
With the help of Theodates of Rhodes and Hugh of
Cyprus he repulsed an Egyptian invasion with great slaughter, leaving Ayas alone in the enemy's hands. He hoped that the news of
his success would move Europe to help him, but when his embassy returned
empty-handed from Venice, Paris, London, and Rome, he marched without allies
against the Mamluks, drove them from the country, and captured Alexandretta
from them (1357). As a result of his victory and of his efforts to subdue the
religious discord, Armenia was at peace for the rest of his life.
Constantine IV was succeeded by a
second usurper, Constantine V, son of a Cypriot serf who had become an Armenian
baron. Elected king because of his wealth, he offered the crown to Peter I,
King of Cyprus, but when Peter was assassinated in 1369 Constantine kept the
throne himself. Four years later, the Armenians put him to death, and during
the anarchy which followed they entrusted the government to the widow of
Constantine IV, Mary of Gorigos, who had already
played an active part in Armenian politics before the king's assassination.
The last King of Armenia was Leo VI
of Lusignan (1373, d. 1393). His father was John,
brother of King Guy, and his grandmother was Zabel,
sister of Hethum II. He himself had been imprisoned
with his mother Soldane of Georgia by Constantine IV,
who had wished to destroy the royal Armenian line. His reign was not a success.
All his efforts to avert the long-impending doom of Cilicia were powerless. He
fought energetically against the Mamluks, but was led captive to Cairo (1375).
There he appointed as almoner and confessor John Dardel,
whose recently-published chronicle has thrown unexpected light upon the last
years of the Cilician kingdom. In 1382 the king was released and spent the rest
of his life in various countries of Europe. He died in 1393 at Paris, making
Richard II of England his testamentary executor, and his epitaph is still
preserved in the basilica of Saint-Denis. After his death, the Kings of Cyprus
were the nominal Kings of Armenia until 1489, when the title passed to Venice.
Almost at the same time (1485), by reason of the marriage (1433) of Anne of Lusignan with Duke Louis I of Savoy, the rulers of Piedmont
assumed the empty claim to a kingdom of the past.
During the exile of Leo VI, Greater
Armenia was enduring a prolonged Tartar invasion. After conquering Baghdad
(1386), Tamerlane entered Vaspurakan. At Van he
caused the people to be hurled from the rock which towers above the city; at Ernjak he massacred all the inhabitants; at Siwas he had the Armenian garrison buried alive. In 1389 he
devastated Turuberan and Taron;
in 1394 he finished his campaign at Kars, where he took captive all the people
whom he did not massacre, and passed on into Asia Minor. By the beginning of
the fifteenth century the old Armenian territory had been divided among its
Muslim conquerors — Mamluks, Turks, and Tartars. Yusuf, Sultan of Egypt, ruled Sassun; the Emir Erghin governed Vaspurakan from Ostan; and
Tamerlane's son, Miran Shah, reigned at Tabriz. These
Musulman emirs made war upon one another at the expense of the Armenian
families who had not migrated to Asia Minor on the fall of the Bagratid
kingdom. By the close of the fifteenth century Cilicia, too, was finally
absorbed into the Ottoman Empire.
Armenia under Muslim rule
Kings and kingdom had passed, but
the Armenians still possessed their Church. In the midst of desolation, schools
and convents maintained Armenian art and culture, and handed on the torch of
nationality. Some of the Armenian manuscripts which exist today were written in
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The long religious controversy, of
which the Uniates were the centre, survived the
horrors of the period, and continued to agitate the country. Among the
protagonists were John of Khrna, John of Orotn, Thomas of Medzoph, Gregory
of Tathew, and Gregory of Klath.
In 1438 Armenian delegates attended the Council of Florence with the Greeks and
Latins in order to unify the rites and ceremonies of the Churches.
The most important work of the
Church was administrative. During Tamerlane's invasion the Katholikos had
established the pontifical seat among the ruins of Sis. But towards the middle
of the next century Sis rapidly declined, and it was decided to move the seat
to Echmiadzin in the old Bagratid territory. As Grigor IX refused to leave Sis, a new Katholikos, Kirakos Virapensis, was elected
for Echmiadzin, and from 1441 the Armenian Church was
divided for years between those who accepted the primacy of Echmiadzin and those who were faithful to Sis. Finally, the Katholikos of Echmiadzin became, in default of a king, the head of the
Armenian people. With his council and synod he made himself responsible for the
national interests of the Armenians, and administered such possessions as
remained to them. After the Turkish victory of 1453, Mahomet II founded an
Armenian colony in Constantinople and placed it under the supervision of Joakim, the Armenian Bishop of Brusa,
to whom he afterwards gave the title of "Patriarch" with jurisdiction
over all the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. From that time to this, the Armenian
Patriarch of Constantinople has carried on the work of the Katholikos and has
been the national representative of the Armenian people.
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