Parisos (original) (raw)
P'arisos was a city, fortress, and monastery located in the upper basin of the Shamkir river, near the present-day Azerbaijani village of Qalakənd. The ruins of P'arisos are located on a crag on the left bank of a stream also historically called P'arisos, which is itself a tributary of the Shamkir. P'arisos was also the name of the surrounding district, which comprised the Shamkir basin, and of a kingdom whose capital was here. The kingdom of P'arisos became the most important principality in the eastern Armenian highlands during the 10th century.
Property | Value |
---|---|
dbo:abstract | P'arisos was a city, fortress, and monastery located in the upper basin of the Shamkir river, near the present-day Azerbaijani village of Qalakənd. The ruins of P'arisos are located on a crag on the left bank of a stream also historically called P'arisos, which is itself a tributary of the Shamkir. P'arisos was also the name of the surrounding district, which comprised the Shamkir basin, and of a kingdom whose capital was here. The kingdom of P'arisos became the most important principality in the eastern Armenian highlands during the 10th century. The fortress-city of P'arisos was probably founded in the 9th century. It succeeded the nearby fortress Gardman, further downstream on the Shamkir, as the capital of the Shamkir basin. P'arisos was in a somewhat more difficult to access location than Gardman. The name P'arisos is etymologically connected with P'arnēs, which was the name of the district before P'arisos itself was founded. Both names are related to the name of the Iranian tribe called the Parrasioi (Greek: Παρράσιοι) mentioned by Strabo as one of the main groups in the region. The district largely overlapped with the earlier Gardman. There was also a monastery called P'arisos, which was located somewhere nearby. In one list of Albanian catholicoi, there are two prelates mentioned from the P'arisos monastery, while all the others have only one listed; this implies that the P'arisos monastery had "a high degree of institutionalization", higher than anywhere else in the eastern Armenian regions. The kingdom of P'arisos originated in the early 10th century with the prince , who was the grandson of Atrnerseh and great-grandson of Sahl Smbatean. The rulers of P'arisos appear to have inherited Sahl Smbatean's claim of sovereignty over all of Caucasian Albania. The kingdom of P'arisos came to dominate the highlands around Lake Sevan, the highest part of the Armenian plateau, and its control of several major trade routes made it well-connected with the surrounding Caucasus and Caspian regions. One important route went through the valley, which Sahak Sewaday conquered; this route connected the Kura and Araxes river systems which formed "the main axes" of Georgia and Armenia, respectively. The rulers of P'arisos also controlled the two major passes over the Lesser Caucasus mountains: the P'arisos pass and the Sot'k' pass. The consolidation of power in P'arisos, as well as other small Christian principalities in the region, is related to the relative peace in the region during the early 10th century that led to "rapid development of the economy of Armenia and of the international trade across the South Caucasus". Sahak Sewaday's grandson, , was called "the great and glorified prince of Albania" by Stephen Orbelian. Ishkhanun Sewaday had four sons: Yovhannes (aka ), Grigor, Artnerseh, and Pilippē. First, Senek'erim and Grigor reigned as co-rulers. Around 968, Senek'erim was crowned "king of Albania" and received regalia from both Byzantine and Islamic dignitaries: he received "a mantle and magnificent decorations" from a "Persian king", likely the Sallarid emir of Azerbaijan, and "a crown of rare beauty and royal purple attire" from David III of Tao in his capacity of Byzantine magistros. Senek'erim's coronation represents "a culminating moment in the history of the ruling house of P'arisos". However, in 1003/4, according to Stepanos Asoghik, both Senek'erim and Grigor died. They may have died during a raid led by Fadl ibn Muhammad, the Shaddadid emir of Arran, who is known to have been active in Sot'k' and Khachen around this time. According to Stepanos Asoghik, the kingdom of P'arisos was completely destroyed and divided between Fadl and Gagik I of Armenia. However, the kingdom of P'arisos survived and is attested in later sources. It appears that by the time Stepanos had finished his book in 1004/5, he hadn't heard further updates from the eastern regions; meanwhile, Artnerseh and Pilippē survived, perhaps staying in one of the district's many castles, and they appear to have inherited their brothers' joint kingship. They are probably the "Albanian kings Artnerseh and Pipē" mentioned in a letter by the vardapet Tiranun in response to their questions about exegesis, which is preserved in various Armenian manuscripts containing theological works. Tiranun's response, which likely took place not long after the brothers became kings, refers to the two being in "an hour of extreme dangers", perhaps an indication of political upheaval at that time. The kingdom of P'arisos possibly survived until the middle of the 11th century. It was succeeded in the region by the Principality of Khachen. (en) |
dbo:thumbnail | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Jorgat_harasm.gif?width=300 |
dbo:wikiPageID | 71776319 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageLength | 7717 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1110743970 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Principality_of_Khachen dbr:Qalakənd dbr:David_III_of_Tao dbr:Prelate dbc:Medieval_Armenia dbc:Medieval_Azerbaijan dbr:Gagik_I_of_Armenia dbc:Gadabay_District dbr:Arran_(Caucasus) dbc:Former_regions_of_Armenia dbc:Historical_regions_in_Azerbaijan dbr:Lesser_Caucasus dbr:Stephen_Orbelian dbr:Strabo dbc:Former_populated_places_in_Azerbaijan dbr:Magistros dbr:Caucasian_Albania dbr:Gardman dbr:Atrnerseh dbr:Stepanos_Asoghik dbr:Armenian_highlands dbc:Caucasian_Albania dbr:Lake_Sevan dbr:Sallarid_dynasty dbr:Sotk dbr:Kura_(river) dbr:Catholicos dbr:Shamkirchay dbr:Sahl_Smbatean dbr:Fadl_ibn_Muhammad dbr:Exegesis dbr:Vardapet dbr:Araxes dbr:Shaddadid dbr:Khachen dbr:Attire dbr:Ishkhanun_Sewaday dbr:Joroy_Get dbr:Sahak_Sewaday dbr:Senekerim_of_Parisos dbr:File:Jorgat_harasm.gif |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Historical_regions_of_Armenia dbt:Reflist dbt:Rp dbt:Historical_regions_of_Caucasian_Albania |
dct:subject | dbc:Medieval_Armenia dbc:Medieval_Azerbaijan dbc:Gadabay_District dbc:Former_regions_of_Armenia dbc:Historical_regions_in_Azerbaijan dbc:Former_populated_places_in_Azerbaijan dbc:Caucasian_Albania |
rdfs:comment | P'arisos was a city, fortress, and monastery located in the upper basin of the Shamkir river, near the present-day Azerbaijani village of Qalakənd. The ruins of P'arisos are located on a crag on the left bank of a stream also historically called P'arisos, which is itself a tributary of the Shamkir. P'arisos was also the name of the surrounding district, which comprised the Shamkir basin, and of a kingdom whose capital was here. The kingdom of P'arisos became the most important principality in the eastern Armenian highlands during the 10th century. (en) |
rdfs:label | Parisos (en) |
owl:sameAs | wikidata:Parisos https://global.dbpedia.org/id/Gi3Rq |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Parisos?oldid=1110743970&ns=0 |
foaf:depiction | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Jorgat_harasm.gif |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Parisos |
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of | dbr:Kingdom_of_Parisos |
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:Qalakənd dbr:Artsakh_(historical_province) dbr:Sahakanuysh dbr:Kingdom_of_Parisos |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Parisos |