Artaxias I

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Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Artaxias ITemplate:Efn (from Template:Langx) was the founder of the Artaxiad dynasty of Armenia, ruling from 189 BC to 160 BC. Artaxias was a member of a branch of the Orontid dynasty, the earlier ruling dynasty of Armenia. He expanded his kingdom on all sides, consolidating the territory of Greater Armenia. He enacted a number of administrative reforms to order his expanded realm. He also founded a new capital in the central valley of the Araxes River called Artaxata (Artashat), which quickly grew into a major urban and commercial center. He was succeeded by his son Artavasdes I. Modern scholars regard him as the founder of independent Armenian statehood.

Name

The Greek form Artaxias ultimately derives from the Old Iranian name *Script error: No such module "Lang"., which is also the source of Greek Script error: No such module "lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".) and Middle Persian Ardashir.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Armenian form, Script error: No such module "lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".), was borrowed at an early date, possibly during the late Achaemenid period, from Old Persian Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn According to Hrachia Acharian, the immediate source of the Armenian form is the unattested form *Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn The name can be translated as "he whose reign is through truth (asha)."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In his Aramaic inscriptions, Artaxias refers to himself with the epithet "the Good," which, in Gagik Sargsyan's view, should be understood as "the Pious," corresponding to the Greek epithet Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn In modern Armenian historiography, he is sometimes referred to by the epithets "the Pious" (Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "lang".) and "the Conqueror" (Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "lang".).[1]

Background

Armenia was ruled by members of the Orontid dynasty, probably of Iranian origin, starting from the 5th century BC.Template:Sfn At the end of the 3rd century BC, the Seleucid king Antiochus III the Great (Template:Reign) appointed Artaxias and Zariadres as Script error: No such module "Lang". (military governors) of Greater Armenia and Sophene, respectively. Strabo reports that Artaxias and Zariadres were Antiochus's generals.Template:Sfn However, the discovery of boundary stones with Aramaic inscriptionsTemplate:Efn in Armenia in which Artaxias proclaims himself to be an "Orontid king" and "the son of Zareh (Zariadres)" has proven that Artaxias and Zariadres were not Macedonian generals from outside of Armenia but members of the local Orontid dynasty, albeit probably belonging to different branches than the original ruling house.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Different views exist on the question of whether the Zareh mentioned in Artaxias' Aramaic inscriptions is identical with the Zariadres who became ruler of Sophene according to Strabo. Michał Marciak argues that identifying Zariadres of Sophene with the Zareh of the inscriptions seems to be "the most straightforward interpretation."Template:Sfn Diakonoff et al. suggested that his father Zariadres may have been a descendant of the kings of Sophene.[2]

File:Heinrich Kiepert. Imperia Persarum et Macedonum. 1903 (CA).jpg
A map of Artaxiad Armenia and surrounding regions in the 2nd century BC (Heinrich Kiepert, 1903)

Strabo's information that the last ruler of Armenia prior to Artaxias' arrival had been named Orontes (the most common name of the rulers of the Orontid dynasty) corresponds with the semilegendary account of the later Armenian historian Movses Khorenatsi, who writes that the Armenian king preceding Artaxias was Eruand (i.e., Orontes), who was defeated and killed in his war with Artaxias for the throne of Armenia. Also matching with this evidence are two inscriptions found at the Orontid capital of Armavir which mention a king named Orontes and lament the death of an Armenian ruler killed by his own soldiers.Template:Sfn While there are still questions about the dating of the Armavir inscriptions,Template:Sfn this evidence has been used to support the view that Artaxias, a local dynast, overthrew the Orontid king Orontes IV (Template:Reign) at the instigation of Antiochus III.Template:Sfn Movses Khorenatsi presents the following account of Artaxias' battle with Orontes, which, in Robert W. Thomson's view, is an adaptation of the battle between Alexander and Darius in the Alexander Romance:Template:Sfn Artaxias marched into Armenia through Utik and defeated Orontes' army at Eruandavan, located near the northern Akhurian River. Orontes then took refuge in his capital, Eruandashat, which was besieged by Artaxias' ally Smbat, later joined by Artaxias. The city was taken, and Orontes was killed by a soldier.Template:Sfn

Soon after Antiochus was defeated by the Romans at the Battle of Magnesia in 191/190 BC, Artaxias and Zariadres revolted against the Seleucids and declared themselves independent kings in Greater Armenia and Sophene.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 188 BC, Artaxias and Zariadres were recognized by the Roman Senate as independent rulers.Template:Sfn

Reign

File:Artaxias boundary stone Teghut.jpg
Boundary stone from Teghut, Tavush with an Aramaic inscription, erected under ArtaxiasTemplate:Sfn

After gaining their independence from the Seleucids, Artaxias and Zariadres allied with each other to expand their dominions.Template:Sfn Their conquests were not obstructed by the Seleucids during the reign of Antiochus' successor Seleucus IV (Template:Reign), who decided not to wage any new wars.Template:Sfn The kingdom of Artaxias, originally centered around the Araxes valley, expanded into Iberian land and especially the territory of Media Atropatene, which lost its territories bordering the Caspian Sea.Template:Sfn The Kura River became the northern and northeastern border of Greater Armenia.Template:Sfn Strabo reports that Artaxias also conquered from Atropatene the districts of "Phaunitis" and "Basoropeda," perhaps corresponding to Syunik and Parspatunik,Template:Efn respectively.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, Zariadres conquered Acilisene.Template:Sfn Another territory mentioned by Strabo, read as either Taronitis (i.e., Taron) or Tamonitis (either TmanTemplate:Sfn or TmorikTemplate:Sfn), was conquered either by ZariadresTemplate:Sfn or Artaxias.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

According to Strabo, the unification of these territories under Artaxias and Zariadres led the population of Greater Armenia and Sophene to "speak the same language," i.e., Armenian.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn However, the imperial Aramaic inherited from the Achaemenid Empire continued to be the language of the government and the court.Template:Sfn Like the monarchs of Pontus and Cappadocia, Artaxias and his successors preserved the royal traditions used by the former Achaemenid Empire. At the same time, Greek influence was starting to advance in the country.Template:Sfn Eventually, Aramaic would be phased out and replaced with Greek as the court language.Template:Sfn

File:Bains publics artaxata arménie.jpg
Public baths of Artaxata

According to Movses Khorenatsi, Artaxias ordered the delimitation of villages and farmland; this has been confirmed by the discovery of boundary stones with Aramaic inscriptions in Armenia.Template:Sfn

Artaxias founded the city of Artaxiasata (from Artaxšas-šāt, "the joy of Artaxias," abbreviated to Artaxata in Greek and Artashat in Armenian)Template:Sfn on the left bank of the Araxes River, which served as the capital of Armenia until the 2nd century AD.Template:Sfn Strabo and Plutarch report that the former Carthaginian commander Hannibal took refuge at the Armenian court and played a role in the establishment of the city, although this is unlikely to be true.Template:Sfn Khorenatsi reports that Artaxias resettled residents from Eruandashat and Armavir to Artaxata and transferred the idols of Tir, Anahit, and various other statues from Bagaran. The statue of Tir was placed outside the city near the roads.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The result of these policies led to the quick development of Artaxata, which became an important administrative, commercial, cultural, and religious center. Artaxias also founded the city of Arxata, mentioned solely by Strabo as being "near to the borders of Atropatene", which remains unlocated.Template:Sfn

By 179 BC, Artaxias had become so powerful from his conquests that he was able to act as a mediator in the conflicts of the rulers of Asia Minor,Template:Sfn namely in the war of Pharnaces I of Pontus and Mithridates of Lesser Armenia against the kings of Pergamon, Cappadocia, and Bithynia.Template:Sfn However, his plan to annex Sophene failed.Template:Sfn According to Diodorus Siculus (1st century BC), at some point during the reign of Zariadres' successor Mithrobouzanes, Artaxias proposed to Ariarathes II of Cappadocia to kill the princes of Sophene at their respective courts and partition Sophene between themselves, but this proposal was rejected.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn In 165/4 BC,Template:Sfn Artaxias was defeated and briefly captured by the forces of the Seleucid king Antiochus IV Epiphanes (Template:Reign), apparently recognizing Antiochus' authority to secure his release.Template:Sfn However, this does not appear to have affected his control over Greater Armenia.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn In 161/0 BC, Artaxias managed to help the satrap of Media, Timarchus, who had rebelled against Seleucid rule.Template:Sfn Artaxias died in approximately 160 BC and was succeeded by his son Artavasdes I.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Coinage

File:Coins of Artaxias.png
Top: Coin from the first set in Aramaic, depicting Artaxias on the obverse and an unknown figure on the reverse. Bottom: Coin from the second set in Greek, depicting Artaxias on the obverse and a cornucopia on the reverse

Unlike their predecessors, the Orontids, the majority of the Artaxiad rulers minted coins. Frank L. Kovacs has attributed a number of coins to the reign of Artaxias I, eight with Aramaic and four with Greek inscriptions.Template:Sfn However, Ruben Vardanyan and Karen Vardanyan have attributed most of these coins to the later king Artaxias II.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The first coins depicting Artaxias bear the Aramaic inscription "King Artashes" (Template:Langx) and have depictions of a dog (likely an Armenian Gampr), a bee, the head of an unknown bearded male, an eagle, and the head of Antiochus IV. Later coinage dropped the use of Aramaic and transitioned to Greek inscriptions (Template:Langx). These coins also depicted the cornucopia, grapes, and a club on the reverses. Artaxias is always depicted as bearded and wearing his five peaked Armenian tiara, with the exception of one coin depicting him wearing a Phrygian cap with a fanion and lappets.Template:Sfn

Family

According to an epic tradition related by Movses Khorenatsi, Artaxias married Satenik, daughter of the king of the Alans, as part of a peace treaty after Artaxias defeated the invading Alans on the banks of the Kura River.Template:Sfn However, it is generally believed that the real historical basis for the story came from the invasion of Armenia by the Alans in the 1st century AD, during the reign of Tiridates I.Template:Sfn

Artaxias' known sons were his successors, Artavasdes I and Tigranes I.Template:Sfn Four other sons are attested only in Movses Khorenatsi's history: Mazhan, who was appointed priest of Aramazd in Ani; Vroyr, who was appointed hazarapet; Tiran, who was given command of the southern part of the army; and Zareh, who was appointed commander of the northern part of the army.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Legacy

File:Artashes I by Mkrtum Hovnatanian.png
A modern westernized image of Artaxias by Mkrtum Hovnatanian (1836)[3]
File:Artashat, Artashes.jpg
A 2001 statue of Artaxias in modern-day Artashat.[4]

Historical assessment

Artaxias is recognized as "the first king of independent Armenia",Template:Sfn "the first truly independent king of the Armenians,"[5] and "the founder of the Armenian monarchy".[6] Hakob Manandian wrote that Artaxias was "the first true organizer" of Greater Armenia, which became an expansive state during his reign and emerged as "one of the major powers of the Near East".Template:Sfn Kamilla Trever wrote that "the process of the formation of Armenian statehood was completed" under Artaxias, with his kingdom becoming "the first large and independent state formation on the territory of Armenia."Template:Sfn Babken Arakelyan described him as "the founder of a unified, ethnically homogeneous, and stable Armenian state".[7] David Marshall Lang regarded Artaxias and Zariadres as "the architects of Armenia’s greatness" in terms of "political organization and statecraft, in culture and religious institutions."[8] Igor M. Diakonoff et al. describe him as an "outstanding statesman",[2] while A. E. Redgate argued that Artaxias was "an ambitious monarch of international stature."[9]

In the Armenian folk epic

Artaxias features prominently in the Armenian folk epic referred to in scholarship as Script error: No such module "lang".. Movses Khorenatsi drew from this folk epic when writing about Artaxias and other Armenian kings in his history. The epic about Artaxias is based on historical events, but contains significant anachronisms and conflations of different figures and their deeds. For example, in the epic (and thus also in Khorenatsi's history) the invasion of Armenia by the Alans is placed in Artaxias' time, when it actually occurred in the 1st century AD, under Tiridates I.Template:Sfn The account of Artaxias' early life in the epic follows a pattern seen also in other epic traditions: Artaxias, who is a son of the Armenian king Sanatruk,Template:Efn is the sole survivor of the massacre of his family by King Orontes; he is saved by his tutor Smbat Bagratuni and taken to live with shepherds (as in stories about Cyrus the Great and Ardashir I); he then returns to reclaim his kingdom with Persian help.Template:Sfn

The epic relates how Artaxias married the Alan princess Satenik after fighting with the Alans, which is narrated in detail by Khorenatsi. Part of the epic also deals with Artaxias' conflict with the nobleman Argavan,Template:Efn which is caused by his greedy son Artavazd (mainly based on the later Artavasdes II, not the actual successor of Artaxias I),Template:Sfn and the conflict between Artaxias' sons.Template:Sfn In the epic, Artaxias curses his son Artavazd from the grave to be taken away by the spirits known as Script error: No such module "Lang". and imprisoned for eternity.Template:Sfn Some verses from the epic regarding the death of Artaxias are preserved in the Letters of the 11th-century Armenian scholar Grigor Magistros.Template:Sfn

Modern cultural depictions

In 1848, the Armenian playwright Template:Ill wrote a play in Classical Armenian titled Artashes ev Satenik (Artashes and Satenik).Template:Sfn The 19th-century Armenian poet Bedros Tourian wrote a play about Artaxias titled Script error: No such module "lang". (Artashes the Conqueror), which was first performed in 1870. It was written on the basis of Khorenatsi's history.Template:Sfn Artaxias has been depicted in painting by Mkrtum Hovnatanian (1836).[3] In 2001, a statue of Artaxias by Vanush Safaryan was erected in the central square of modern-day Artashat.[4]

References

Notes

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Citations

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Sources

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Further reading

External links

  • Coinage attributed to Artaxias I on Leu Numismatik: [1] [2] [3]
Artaxias I
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check King of Armenia
189 BC – 160 BC Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

Template:Armenian kings Template:Authority control