Mushegh I Mamikonian

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Template:Good article Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Mushegh I MamikonianTemplate:Efn (also spelled Mushel; d. 377/8) was an Armenian military officer from the Mamikonian family who occupied the hereditary office of sparapet (generalissimo) of the Kingdom of Armenia under the Arsacid kings Pap (Template:Reign) and Varazdat (Template:Reign). He took part in the Armenian resistance against the forces of the Sasanian monarch Shapur II (Template:Reign), notably taking part in the Battle of Bagavan, where the Iranian forces were defeated. He was the regent of Armenia under the young and inexperienced Varazdat, who eventually suspected him of posing a danger to his rule, and thus had him executed, in 377/8.

Mushegh may be identical with the Artabanes mentioned in the works of the contemporary Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus.

Background

Mushegh was a son of the Armenian sparapet (generalissimo) Vasak I Mamikonian.Template:Sfn The Mamikonian family controlled the northwestern Tayk province near the Iberian border.Template:Sfn They also hereditarily held the office of sparapet,Template:Sfn which was the most important office after that of the king.Template:Sfn Vasak was the leader of the pro-Roman party in Armenia which supported King Arshak II (Template:Reign). However, with the death of Roman emperor Julian at the Battle of Samarra in 363, Roman forces withdrew from Armenia, thus exposing it to the Sasanian Empire. This eventually forced Arshak II, as well as many Armenian nobles, such as Vasak, to leave for the Iranian court to pledge their allegiance to the Sasanian King of Kings (Script error: No such module "Lang".) Shapur II (Template:Reign). However, Arshak II's refusal to accept Shapur II's demands resulted in his imprisonment in the Castle of Oblivion, while Vasak was tortured to death.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn With the elimination of Arshak II (who, according to Faustus of Byzantium, soon committed suicide, or, per Ammianus Marcellinus, was put to death),Template:Sfn Shapur II sent his forces into Armenia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Biography

File:Armenian4thcenturies.gif
Map of Armenia and its surroundings in the late 4th century (based on a map in Robert H. Hewsen's Armenia: A Historical Atlas, see there for explanatory notes)Template:Sfn

Arshak II's widow, Queen Parandzem, organized a resistance and sent a delegation under Mushegh to the Romans to ask for help on the behalf of Arshak II's son Pap. The Romans, however, were reluctant to engage in a war and support Armenia, which had been devastated by the Iranian forces.Template:Sfn In the winter of 369/370, Parandzem was killed by Iranian forces, while numerous sites, including the capital of Artaxata, were destroyed.Template:Sfn Pap fled to Roman territory, and later returned in 371 with help from the Roman emperor Valens (Template:Reign), and Pap ascended the Armenian throne.Template:Sfn In the same year, a combined Armenian-Roman army defeated the Iranians at the Battle of Bagavan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Mushegh, who took part in the battle, wounded the Albanian king Urnayr (a vassal of Shapur II), but allowed him to escape.Template:Sfn The 5th-century Armenian historian Faustus gives a large amount of credit for the victory to Mushegh.Template:Sfn

File:Silver drachm of Shapur II, struck circa 309–320.jpg
Coin of the Sasanian shahanshah Shapur II (Template:Reign)

With this victory, many of the Armenian nakharars (magnates) who had previously defected to Shapur II in 360s, were now under Mushegh's control.Template:Sfn Mushegh, however, was greatly criticized by Pap for sparing Urnayr. However, they ultimately reconciled, with Pap providing Mushegh with many gifts, honors and villages.[1]

File:Valens114cng.jpg
Coin of the Roman emperor Valens (Template:Reign)

When Urnayr returned to Albania, he sent a message to Mushegh thanking him for sparing his life, and also informed him of a surprise attack planned by Shapur II.[2] According to Faustus, Mushegh assembled all the Armenian troops, which numbered about 90,000.[2] According to Ian Hughes, "If P'awstos' numbers are correct, it would appear that for this conflict the entire army of Armenia was gathered to fight Shapur, leaving all other borders undefended – a risk that Pap and Mushegh were willing to take in face of the Persian threat."Template:Sfn Mushegh was also reinforced by a Roman force led by Terentius. The Iranian army—led by Shapur II himself—was defeated and routed at the border near Ganzak.[2][3] Mushegh and Terentius then left the hayr mardpet (grand chamberlain) Cylaces (Glak) with an army of 30,000 to protect the border. Cylaces soon sent messengers to Shapur, promising to betray Pap, Mushegh, and Terentius to the Iranians. However, this ploy was discovered by Pap, who had Cylaces assassinated.[4]

According to Faustus, Mushegh reclaimed several of Armenia's former territories after the battles with the Persians, including the southern principalities of Arzanene and Corduene, which had been ceded to the Persians by Jovian in 363.Template:Sfn[5]Template:Sfn Faustus writes that Mushegh brutally punished the provinces that had revolted against the monarchy, forcing the pro-Persian Script error: No such module "lang". to submit to royal authority.[6] Mushegh is also said to have campaigned against the neighboring kingdoms of Iberia and Albania to restore the Kura River as Armenia's northeastern border.[7] However, the actual extent of Mushegh's reconquests is uncertain and likely exaggerated by Faustus.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

File:General (Sparapet) Mushegh Mamikonian (right), the King Pap and Armenian cavalry soldiers. Miniature from the 16th century..jpg
A 16th-century miniature depicting King Pap (left) and sparapet Mushegh (right, holding sword)

Peace was subsequently made between Iran and Rome, with Armenia becoming a protectorate of the latter once more.Template:Sfn However, in 374 or 375, Pap was murdered at the behest of Valens due to his disobedience towards the Roman emperor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Romans then installed another Arsacid named Varazdat on the Armenian throne, with Mushegh becoming his regent.Template:Sfn In 377, Valens was forced to call his forces in Armenia back to wage war with the Goths, which quickly resulted in the destabilization of Armenia.Template:Sfn Varazdat, who was young and impressionable, was by convinced by a group of Armenian nobles that Mushegh posed a danger to his rule, and had played a part in Pap's murder. Varazdat therefore had Mushegh killed at a banquet and appointed his tutor (dayeak) Bat Saharuni as the new sparapet, in violation of tradition.Template:Sfn[8] Mushegh's family and relatives put his body on a high tower, believing that the spirits (aralez) would descend and bring him back to life.[9]

According to historian Hakob Manandian's interpretation, Mushegh and the pro-Roman party had lost faith in the viability of the Arsacid monarchy and decided to solidify Roman presence in the country at the expense of monarchical authority, specifically through the establishment of Roman fortified settlements throughout Armenia.Template:Sfn Manandian argues that this policy would have ultimately resulted in Armenia's annexation by Rome, and that Varazdat's enmity with Mushegh was the result of the pro-Roman party's policy and the king's efforts to preserve royal authority.Template:Sfn

File:The murder of Mushegh Mamikonian during a feast by the order of King Varazdat (low q).jpg
The murder of Mushegh Mamikonian during a feast by the order of Varazdat, 19th century depiction by Fusso

After Mushegh's murder, his kinsman Manuel Mamikonian returned from captivity in Iran and drove Varazdat out of the country to avenge Mushegh.Template:Sfn Manuel spared the life of the young king, but killed Bat Saharuni.[10] Manuel then placed Varazdat's young cousins Arshak and Vagharshak on the throne.Template:Sfn

Mushegh may be identical with the Artabanes mentioned in the works of the contemporary Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus. Both were military officers; both are said to have led the negotiations with Valens which resulted in Pap's return to Armenia; and both were accused of treason. However, Mushegh was murdered after Pap's death, while Artabanes was killed by Pap's orders on suspicion of treason.Template:Sfn

Lenski believes that Artabanes may be identified with aspects of two of the Mamikonian sparapets mentioned by Faustus for this period: Mushegh and Vahan Mamikonian, the Apostate.Template:Sfn Similarly, Robert Bedrosian suggests that in Faustus's account, Artabanes is split into the figures of Mushegh and Vahan, with the former remaining loyal to the monarchy and the latter collaborating with the Persians, thus "spreading the responsibility" for Artabanes's duplicitous actions.Template:Sfn Bedrosian explains the difference in timing of the deaths of Mushegh and Artabanes as a reflection of Faustus's biases; in Faustus's account, Mushegh cannot be killed by Pap, a true Arsacid ruler, so the murder is instead attributed to his successor Varazdat, whom Faustus describes as illegitimate.Template:Sfn

Notes

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References

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  1. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Four, Chapter 4
  2. a b c Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Four, Chapter 5
  3. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapter 5
  4. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapter 6
  5. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapters 8–19
  6. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapters 8–20
  7. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapters 13–15
  8. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapter 35
  9. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapter 36
  10. Faustus of Byzantium, History of the Armenians, Book Five, Chapter 37

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Bibliography

Ancient works

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Modern works

Further reading

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