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mw m Zoroastrianism . zn Armenia by }ames R. Russe/1 Harvard Iranian Series Richard N. Frye Editor Volume Five Zoroastrianism zn Armenia by james R. Russe/1 Harvard Iranian Series Volume Five Richard N. Frye Editor Published by Harvard Univemty Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civtlizations and National Association for Armenian Studies and Research 1987 Published by Harvard University Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations and National Association for Armenian Studies and Research 175 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 Distributed by Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts, London, England ISBN 0-674-96850-6 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 87-181-47 This publication has been aided by subventions from James Russell and The Persian Heritage Foundation. ©1987 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College The production of this book was prepared at: PUBLICATIONS 468 Mt. Auburn Street. P.O.Box 302. Watertown, Massachusetts 02172, U.S.A. Tel: (617) 924-4420 ManufaciUred by Publisher\ Choice Book Mfg. Co. Mars, Pennsylvania 16046 Editor's Foreword This is the first publication in the series of a study rather than a text or translation of source material. Little has been written on the pre-Christian culture and religion of Armenia, and for the most part years ago; so a new investigation of the subject is indeed significant. As usual, the text is the responsibility of the author, for the editor only makes suggestions which may or may not be accepted. Since the subject is of interest not only to those concerned with ancient Iran but especially to students of Armenian matters, the aid of the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research in the publication of this volume was not only most welcome but appropriate. TABLE 0Ғ CONTENTS Page Acknowledgements............................................iii Preface ................................................... v Introduction ............................................... 1 Chapter 1. The Armenian Ethnogenesis............................. 25 2. Armenia from the Median Conquest to the Rise of the Artaxiads...................................... 39 3. Artaxiad Armenia .................................... 73 U. Armenia under the Parthians and Sasanians .............. 113 5. Aramazd............................................. 153 6. Vahagn............................................. 7. Anahit and ........................................... 235 8. Mihr............................................... 2бі 9. Tir................................................. 289 10. Sp an dar amet - s an dar amet...............................323 11. Torkc ............................................... З61 12. Hawrot and Mawrot.................................... 375 13. Captive Powers...................................... 399 1^4. Evil Spirits and Creatures........................... ^37 15. The Fire-cult........................................ 16. Children of the Sun.................................. 515 Abbreviations of Terms and of Works Frequently Cited...........51*! Transliterations ............................................ 5^7 Select Bibliography ........................................ 5^9 Maps.......................................................555 Index.....................................................559 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This work is the revision of a thesis submitted for the degree of Ph.D. in Religious Studies (Zoroastrianism) at the School of Oriental Studies of the University of London, 1982, supported by a generous grant from the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal. The Commit­ tee for Cultural Relations with Armenians Abroad (SPCYUKK°) of the Government of the Armenian S.S.R. generously supplied many books and journals, for which I am most grateful; my venerable teacher Miss Vartarpi Tarpinian of Garin (Erzurum), Armenia, provided books and oral reminiscences of great value. My teacher Mrs. Maritza Tsaggos read chapters of the thesis and offered many useful suggestions. My friend Miss Roberta Ervine typed a large portion of the draft manu­ script and offered useful references. Professor Mary Boyce supervised the thesis; I owe to her an im­ mense debt of gratitude for her constant encouragement, profound learn­ ing, and tireless help. Many revisions suggested by her and by Professor Sir Harold Bailey are incorporated into the present volume. My parents, Joseph and Charlotte Russell,. have given me unstinting material and moral support at every stage of this work. My grandfather, Mr. S. A. Russell, has through a most generous subvention made this publication possible. In the years since the defense of the thesis I have been fortunate to become closely acquainted with the practices of the living Parsi community in India, thanks mainly to the hospitality of my friend Khojeste Mistree, Director of the Zoroastrian Studies Trust, Bombay, and this added knowledge has contributed to the revision of some passages. The present manuscript was typed by Virginia Brown, and I thank her and Muriel Bennett for their meticulous labor. This book addresses a wide and controversial topic: the practice of the religion of the great Iranian prophet Zarathushtra amongst the pre-Christian Armenians. Such an audacious undertaking must have its shortcomings, and these are mine, of course, not my teachers'. Suffice it to say here that I have hoped to enrich, not to diminish, the cul­ tural heritage of the Armenians by describing their ancient faith in a iii great and venerable prophetic revelation and their adherence to a highly moral, uplifting religious code. Cannot a residue of such a proud heritage have given them the courage, centuries later, to with­ stand the pressures of Islam to which so many of their neighbours suc­ cumbed, and to uphold the loys hawatk0? I hope the living Zoroastrian communities of Iran and India will find interest and some encouragement too, in this record of another nation, in many of whose practices the flame of Zoroastrianism still shines brightly: in his diary entry for 19th February, 1891, the Khshnoomist Zoroastrian mystic Behramshah Shroff claimed there was a cave full of Zoroastrian scriptures in Ar­ menia, 'where the ancient Parsis lived' (cited by J. R. Hinnells in his recent study, 'Social Change and Religious Transformation among Bombay Parsis in the Early Twentieth Century,' p. 685 n. 1+0) . We have not yet found the books, but the people were there. (On the cave of Mithra at Van, of which Shroff's report may be a distant echo, see Ch. 8.) I dedicate this book to Professor Mary Boyce, to my parents, to my grandfather, and to the memory of my beloved grandmother Bertha Russell zikhronah le-beraJchan. PREFACE From the time of the conquest of Assyria and Urartu by the Medes to the fall of the Sasanian Empire to the Muslim Arabs some thirteen centuries later, Armenian culture developed under the linguistic, poli­ tical, and religious influence of successive Iranian empires. For most of this period the dominant religion of the Iranians was Zoroastrianism, and there exists abundant evidence that this religion was practised also by Armenians from the time of the Achaemenians. The religion waned in Armenia after the conversion of the Arm. Arsacid court to Christianity early in the fourth century, and most information on the old religion must be culled from hostile Christian texts of the fifth century and later. Classical writers such as Xenophon, Strabo, and Tacitus stress Armenia's ties to Iran, however, including common religious beliefs and practices. There is some evidence also in pre-Islamic Iranian texts. Some features of Zoroastrian practice in Armenia can be reconstructed from archaeological remains, and the ethnographic material of recent times testifies to the survival of Zoroastrian beliefs. Like their co-religionists in Iran, ancient Arm. Zoroastrians be­ lieved in a supreme God, Ahura Mazda (Aramazd), the Creator of all that is good, who is helped by the supernatural beings of His own creation, by righteous men, and by other good creations against the hostile, separate, uncreated Destructive Spirit, Angra Mainyu (Haramani), whose demonic hosts, destructive assaults, sins and diseases have polluted this world. Through an active, ethical life of piety, charity, truth, cultivation of the earth and veneration for the holy creations, particu­ larly fire, whose light and warmth embody Divine righteousness, man •** . struggles towards the great renovation of the world, Fraso.kereti (Hrasakert), when evil will be defeated and obliterated. There was probably some local diversity in Armenian religion, though attempts by the Artaxiads to impose political unity involved religious centralisation as well. The Zoroastrian cult drew from the Armenian heritage of Indo-European, Asianic, and Semitic religion; Arm. Zoroastrianism was, perhaps, distinctive, but it was not a mere V syncretism. The Armenians generally, though not universally, opposed the iconoclastic and other reforms of ArdesTr I and his successors and the attempts Ъу the latter, particularly Yazdagird II, to re-impose Zoroastrianism on the newly-Christianised nation. But remnants of the Good Religion survived down to recent times. INTRODUCTION: THE LAND OF ARMENIA The rugged volcanic highland called the Armenian plateau occupies an area of some 300,000 square kilometres, at a median elevation of 150O-I8OO metres, on the same latitude as the Balkan peninsula; in its widest extent, Greater Armenia (Arm. Meс HaykC) stretched from 37 -^О E. Long, and from 37-5"-Ul.ş'N. Lat. The Plateau forms part of a mountain system including the Anatolian plateau to the west and the Iranian pla­ teau to the east; both are lower than Armenia. The country's soils vary from desert and semi-desert to forest and mountain meadow. In sub-Alpine regions, the soil on the north side of a mountain may be rich chernozem, while the soil on the southern side is rocky and poor for lack of precipitation. Wind and water erosion and centuries of invasion, pillage and neglect have denuded many mountains once rich in forests. But Armenian orchards still provide the apricot, praised in Rome as the prunus Armeniacus, and the Armenian words for plum, apple and mulberry (salor, xn.jor, tCutC) are found in Assyrian, attesting to the cultivation and trade of Armenian agricultural produce in ancient times. Xenophon, who passed the winter in an Armenian village during the retreat of his mercenary army, described in the Anabasis the varied and abundant Armenian fare, much of it dried or pickled for the winter, as today; he and his men enjoyed Armenian beer. Armenia has a conti­ nental climate, being cut off by high mountains from large bodies of water, and winter is long and severe, with an average temperature of -15°C. in January; temperatures of -1*3.5°C. have been recorded in Kars. Summer is brief and hot, with temperatures of 26-28°C. (but only 20 C. on the high plateaux). Spring and autumn are the gentlest seasons of the year in Armenia.'*' Armenia may be viewed as the centre of a great cross defined by 2 the Black Sea on the northwest, the Caspian on the northeast, the Mediterranean in the southwest, and the Persian Gulf in the southeast: at the strategic crossroads of the ancient world and lying athwart crucial trade routes, in proximity to important maritime centres. The 1

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National Association for Armenian Studies and Research. 1987 .. separate origin in Armenia and Iran, or as the common heritage of many different civilisations of grccutcyun, Erevan, 1982, 63, appears to depict the ground plan.
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