History of Armenia (book) explained

The History of Armenia (Պատմութիւն Հայոց,), attributed to Movses Khorenatsi, is an early account of Armenia, covering the legendary origins of the Armenian people as well as Armenia's interaction with Sassanid, Byzantine and Arsacid empires down to the 5th century.

It contains unique material on ancient Armenian legends, and such information on pagan (pre-Christian) Armenian as has survived. It also contains plentiful data on the history and culture of contiguous countries. The book had an enormous impact on Armenian historiography. In the text, the author self-identifies as a disciple of Saint Mesrop, and states that he composed his work at the request of Isaac (Sahak), the Bagratuni prince who fell in battle in 482.

Authorship

See main article: Moses Khorenatsi. The exact time period during which Movses lived and wrote has been the subject of some debate among scholars since the nineteenth century, with some scholars dating him to the seventh to ninth centuries rather than the fifth.[1]

Contents

The book is divided into three parts:

Patriarchs

This first book contains 32 chapters, from Adam to Alexander the Great.List of the Armenian patriarchs according to Moses:

These cover the 24th to 9th centuries BC in Moses' chronology, indebted to the Chronicon of Eusebius. There follows a list of legendary kings, covering the 8th to 4th centuries BC:

These gradually enter historicity with Tigran I (6th century BC), who is also mentioned in the Cyropaedia of Xenophon (Tigranes Orontid, traditionally 560–535 BC; Vahagn 530–515 BC), but Aravan to Vahé are again otherwise unknown.

chapter 1: letter to Sahak

chapter 5: from Noah to Abraham and Belus

chapters 10–12: about Hayk

chapter 13: war against the Medes

chapter 14: war against Assyria, 714 BC

chapters 15–16: Ara and Semiramis

chapters 17–19: Semiramis flees from Zoroaster to Armenia and is killed by her son.

chapter 20: Ara Kardos and Anushavan

chapter 21: Paruyr, first king of Armenia at the time of Ashurbanipal

chapter 22: kings from Pharnouas to Tigran

chapter 23: Sennacherib and his sons

chapters 24–30: about Tigran I

chapter 31: descendants of Tigran down to Vahé, who is killed in resistance against Alexander

chapter 32: Hellenic wars

Middle period (332 BC – AD 330)

92 chapters, from Alexander the Great to Tiridates III of Armenia.

Arsacid period (330–428)

68 chapters, from the death of Tiridates III to Gregory the Illuminator.

Editions and translations

NumberYearPlacePublisherComment
11695AmsterdamTovmas VanandetsiThe first publishing; "editio princeps
21736LondonWilliam and George Whistonwith a Latin translation; "Historiae Armeniacae"[2]
31752VeniceAnton Bortoli"History of the Armenians"[3]
41827VeniceThe Armenian Mechitarist Fathers of Venice
51841L. de FlorivarItalian and French translations
61843VeniceThe Armenian Mechitarist Fathers of Venice
71845ParisThe Armenian Mechitarist Fathers of Venice
81864Venice
91881Tiflis
101881Tiflis
111913Tiflisfacsimile ed., intro. by R. W. Thomson, 1981 Caravan Books,
121910s (?)Tiflis

Under Soviet rule the book was published many times.

See also

References

  1. Topchyan, Aram. The Problem of the Greek Sources of Movsēs Xorenacʻi's History of Armenia. Leuven: Peeters Publishers, 2006, pp. 5–14, notes 21–22, 31–33.
  2. Web site: Hakob Meghapart project – 1725 – 1750 . 2009-09-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110531152859/http://www.nla.am/meghapart/English/1750.htm . 2011-05-31 . dead .
  3. Web site: Hakob Meghapart project – 1750 – 1775 . 2009-09-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110531152908/http://www.nla.am/meghapart/English/1775.htm . 2011-05-31 . dead .

External links