The Arsacids Dynasty (Arshakuni)
By Levon Zekiyan   " www.padus-araxes.com"
n the decades that followed 60 b.c., Armenia became
one of the cherished targets of the hegemony of Romans and Parthians alike,
who found support from the pro-Romans and pro-Parthians within the local
political setup. A new political situation came about with the campaign
of Corbulo, which ended with the treaty of Rhandeia in 63 b.c. In future,
Armenia was to have its own king who would be appointed by the Parthians
and at the same time be a protege and ally of the Romans. Thus began the
dynasty of the Arsacids(Arshakuni) in Armenia. They were the cadet
branch of the dynasty ruling over Persia. As a token of the alliance, the
first representative of the Arsacids in Armenia, Tiridates (Trdat) I, accepted
to be crowned by Nero in Rome in 66. This was probably the occasion that
was celebrated by the statue of Tiridates that can be seen in the Louvre
in Paris (a gold coin bearing the head of Nero has recently been found in
Armenia).
For a period of only two
years, Armenia became an effective Roman province, after Trajan annexed
it in 114. But his death and the revolt of the Jews in 117 rendered the
plan to dominate the Parthian kingdom ineffective, and Trajan's successor,
Hadrian, preferred to observe the treaty of Rhandeia.
In 224, the international political
scene changed sharply, with the advent of the Sassanids in Persia. Although
the Armenian Arsacids had been able to escape the extermination inflicted
on their Parthian relatives, they nevertheless found an inflexible adversary
in the new ascendant power. The Sassanids' plans for Armenia - political
dominion and cultural-religious assimilation - were only partly fulfilled,
on the political side, with the extinction of the Arsacid dynasty in 428.
Tension ran particularly high on account of Armenia's having been converted
to Christianity during the reign of Trdat III (287-330) by St. Grigor
Lusavoritch (the Illuminator). Military vicissitudes between the Roman
Empire of the East and the Sassanids made it inevitable that Armenia should
be divided into two, and this took place in 387, with a north-to-south demarcation
line that passed through the city of Karin or Theodosiopolis, present-day
Erzerum. Unfortunately, the part that remained to the west of the line,
under Byzantine hegemony, was subjected to cultural-religious pressure no
less forceful than that exerted by the Sassanids.
Indeed, given the religious
community, a not insignificant part of the Armenian population in those
regions was practically Hellenized. The eastern regions, on the other hand,
having remained under Persian control, were able to keep their etlinic-cultural
identity. Apart from the influence of religious and sociopolitical factors
in making this possible, another crucial factor was the invention of the
Armenian alphabet in 406 by vardapet Mesrop Mashtots, who was venerated
like a saint by the Armenian church. The western, regions, under the Byzantine
administration, were also partly affected by this
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