Armenia’s Warrior Queen: Why are medieval women largely absent from current discussions of Armenia’s past?

HISTORY TODAY
Sept 9 2021

Why are medieval women largely absent from current discussions of Armenia’s past?

Lewis Read | Published in History Today Volume 71 Issue 9 September 2021
Mausoleum, Aghdzk, Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. The mausoleum, constructed in the mid-late 4th century, once contained the remains of both Christian and pagan kings of the Arshakid dynasty of Armenia. Wiki Commons/Vacio.

During the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, the Republic of Armenia established its first all-women military detachment. This was the latest in a series of developments that won women the right to serve in the Armenian armed forces since military academies first opened their doors to them in 2013. The unit was named the Erato Detachment, after a first-century Armenian queen. The inclusion of historical women in modern Armenian discourse is a relatively new and rare phenomenon and it is in large part the product of work within the field of Armenian studies over the past few years. The absence of historical female figures can ultimately be traced to the ways in which they were represented in the earliest Armenian historical narratives, which continue to play an important role in the collective Armenian memory. 

P‘aranjem, the fourth-century warrior queen, is a complex and enigmatic figure in early Armenian history. A case study of the way in which her story has been recorded provides a perfect example of how some texts marginalise women from the past. While there is a brilliant range of early medieval Armenian literature, it is conditioned by traditional social constraints. The sources are, for example, primarily interested in the nobility (the naxarars), meaning our view of early Armenia is seen through a largely male and elite gaze. But some texts, such as Buzandaran Patmut‘iwnk‘, an anonymous history of the Kingdom of Armenia from AD 330 until its decline and partition in 387contain the stories of figures such as P‘aranjem. 

The roles of men and women in early medieval Armenia were primarily guided by the tenets of awrēnk, which functioned as an unwritten customary law, judging Armenians by their righteous (awrēnk) and unrighteous (anawrēn) behaviour. After the kingdom’s conversion in the early fourth century, these moralising ideals were underpinned by Christian ethics. For Armenian women this was rooted in religious models of obedience, chastity and modesty, while men were valued for their martial ability, leadership and heroismAwrēnk also linked women to the household, certain religious settings and education, whereas men engaged in politics and the legal leadership of the family unit. Those who conformed to traditional roles were praised, but those who transgressed were criticised. Awrēnk was undoubtedly subject to change over time and it is difficult to determine how much bearing it had on everyday life, but it was clearly used by historical writers to frame conformity and transgression. The story of P‘aranjem, a woman who challenged and subverted a number of these expectations, illustrates just how much of an influence awrēnk could have on how a person was written about and remembered.

We are first introduced to P‘aranjem in Buzandaran during the reign of Aršak II of Armenia (AD 350-367/8). The daughter of the lord of Siwnik, P‘aranjem was ‘renowned for her beauty and modesty’ and became the wife of Gnel, the king’s nephew. P‘aranjem’s portrayal is critical of her beauty. According to Buzandaran, as the fame of her ‘loveliness’ grew, Gnel’s cousin, Tirit’, became obsessed with her. Filled with longing, Tirit’ slandered Gnel to Aršak, who was eventually convinced to order Gnel’s execution. Despite the murderous actions being conceived of and carried out by men, it is P‘aranjem who gets the blame. Upon learning of his execution, she exclaims ‘my husband’s death was because of me, my husband was put to death because someone desired me!’ In the eyes of the compiler, P‘aranjem had roused the dangers of carnal desire. Through no fault of her own, her appearance became a dangerous force. 

Aršak subsequently took P‘aranjem as his wife, but she repeatedly spurned her new husband because he was ‘hairy of body’. This rejection marks a turning point. She is suddenly cast as anawrēn – unrighteous – and is subjected to a pointed character assassination. In response, Aršak took a second wife, Olympias. Driven by apparent jealousy, P‘aranjem had her rival murdered. This is a striking change of character: from disconsolate mourner to scheming murderer all within a matter of paragraphs. This somewhat strange switch may well be a product of the moralising tendencies of the compiler. P‘aranjem’s story is used as an example for those who might transgress awrēnk. She had refused to comply with her husband’s wishes and such unrighteous behaviour could only be followed by evil actions

It is the last part of P‘aranjem’s story which is the most remarkable, though. In the context of an ongoing war with Sasanian Persia, Aršak was captured and imprisoned and P‘aranjem, now referred to as the Queen of Armenia, assumed the leadership of the kingdom. According to Buzandaran, she led 11,000 men in a defence against the Sasanians. Besieged in the fortress of Artagers, P‘aranjem held out for 14 months, enduring epidemic and insurmountable odds. Eventually she was forced to surrender, the fortress was captured and P‘aranjem was taken to Persia where she was killed. 

These dramatic events proved a challenge for the compiler of Buzandaran. P‘aranjem had displayed brave leadership, but in so doing she had subverted the expectations of awrēnk. While the compiler praises men for similar acts, exhorting their valour at length, P‘aranjem does not receive the same affirmation. In fact, her actions are not subject to any evaluation and the epic siege is briefly recorded without praise.

The compiler even incorporated a member of the garrison into the narrative to verbally attack the queen. He admonishes the failed rule of the Armenian royal dynasty, telling P‘aranjem that ‘justly, all of this has come on you’. This suggests a woman’s agency outside of her prescribed roles – even in the most exceptional circumstances – was rarely valued or acknowledged. The text cannot, however, change the fact that P‘aranjem had led the kingdom and sacrificed herself for Armenia. This seems to have confused the compiler, who could not find a simple way to categorise her actions. In any case, P‘aranjem had already been classified as anawrēn, which made her irredeemable. As a consequence, her bravery was unacknowledged and she alone was blamed for the failings of an entire dynasty. 

The story of P‘aranjem is both fascinating and frustrating. She displayed bravery and leadership, but she was scrutinised and then shamed for challenging and subverting the prescribed roles of a woman as stipulated by awrēnk. Despite her significant place in early Armenian history, P‘aranjem’s treatment has left her largely absent from current discussions of Armenia’s past. Her story highlights the need for further research on the history of women and their representation in Armenia in order to explain why their past treatment has led to their continued marginalisation. 

 

Lewis Read researches Armenia and the early medieval Middle East.

 

Main stage of West 2021 drills kicks off with participation of Armenian battalion

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 20:48, 13 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The main stage of ‘’West-2021’’ military drills has kicked of at Mulino’s shooting range in Russia. The Minister of Defense of the Republic of Armenia Arshak Karapetyan also followed the drills, carried out with combat firing.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MoD Armenia, military units of the Western Military District of the Russian Federation, as well as military units from Armenia, Belarus, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia are involved in the main stage of ‘’West-2021’’ drills. Armenia participates in the drills with a battalion comprised of tank, motorized rifle and artillery units.

‘’The drills are based on the experience of the recent military operations, in particular, in the Syrian Arab Republic and the Artsakh Republic. New ways and methods for operations of joint forces have also been developed’’, reads the statement.



Only comprehensive resolution can normalize Armenia-Azerbaijan relations – US embassy’s response to Baku

Only comprehensive resolution can normalize Armenia-Azerbaijan relations – US embassy’s response to Baku

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 16:57, 14 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS. The United States – as an OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair – remains committed to engaging towards a lasting political settlement to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, and is certain that only a comprehensive resolution can normalize the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the US Embassy in Armenia told ARMENPRESS when asked to comment the Azerbaijani foreign ministry’s latest statement.

“As a Minsk Group Co-Chair, we remain committed to engaging towards a lasting political settlement to the NK conflict and urge Armenia and Azerbaijan to return as soon as possible to substantive discussions under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs to achieve this goal. Only a comprehensive resolution that addresses all outstanding issues can normalize relations between the two countries and allow the people of the region to live together peacefully,” the US Embassy said.

On September 12 Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva labeled “unacceptable” the US Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy’s September 11 statement that the US “doesn’t consider the status of Nagorno Karabakh resolved.” Baku went as far as accusing the US Ambassador to Armenia in “undermining the future activities of the Minsk Group”.

Reporting by Aram Sargsyan

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Masked and armed Azerbaijani servicemen stop bus with Armenian children, check the phones – Ombudsman

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 17 2021

Masked Azerbaijani servicemen legally stopped a bus with Armenian children on Vorotan road, Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan reports.

The Ombudsman has shared footage showing Azerbaijani servicemen, armed and masked, checking children’s phones under the pretext of finding some videos.

The teens aged 15-16 were football players from Artsakh traveling to Armenia.

“The children’s bus was kept for 10-15 minutes. During that time, the Artsakh flag was scraped off the bus with a knife. Azerbaijani sources are proudly sharing the video. But the issue here is the behavior of the Azerbaijani armed forces aimed at intimidating the children and openly terrifying them,” Tatoyan said.

According to him, the video widely shared on Azerbaijani social networks is accompanied by brazen insults to children, calls to kill Armenians, and deep hatred.

“All this is the result of years of Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian policy. We have documented the evidence,” the Human Rights Defender said.

Watch the video at the link below

The Azerbaijani-Turkish military exercises in Qashatagh are a provocation – Tigran Abrahamyan

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 7 2021

POLITICS 10:46 07/09/2021 REGION

Azerbaijani-Turkish military exercises in Qashatagh is a provocation, and the Armenian authorities should react accordingly, security expert, lawmaker from the opposition “I Have the Honor” bloc Tigran Abrahamyan wrote on Facebook.

“Any accumulation and movement of forces in the occupied territories of Artsakh are dangerous especially when that is taking place near the areas of Goris-Kapan roadway or the territories adjacent to Sev Lich (Black Lake). If we consider also the presence of the Turkish forces and the recent border incidents, the picture becomes clearer,” added Abrahamyan.

Spanish MP: Today is the 30th anniversary of the independence of Artsakh

News.am, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

The deputy of the Spanish Congress John Inarritu tweeted the congratulations on the Artsakh Republic  day.

“Happy Independence Day Artsakh!

Today is the 30th anniversary of the independence of Artsakh. I wish peace, and prosperity to this people that has suffered a lot due to war atrocities,” he tweeted.

Caucasian Knot | Opposition boycotts first session of Armenian new parliament

Caucasian Knot, EU
Aug 2 2021
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MPs from the opposition “Armenia” and “I Have the Honour” factions left the first session of the Armenian National Assembly of the eighth convocation, boycotting the discussion of the candidacy of Alen Simonyan, the speaker of the ruling “Civil Contract” Party, the “News-Armenia” reports today.

The opposition nominated the arrested mayors of Megri and Sisian – MPs Mkhitar Zakaryan and Arthur Sargsyan – for the post of the vice-speaker of the parliament. The opposition demanded from Knyaz Khasanov, the presiding MP from the “Civil Contract” Party, to ensure the presence of its candidates at the parliament session, referring to the parliamentary regulations, but Knyaz Khasanov noted that was not in his competence, the “News-Armenia” reports.

Every MP may be nominated for the position of the parliament speaker, says Aram Vardevanyan, a member of the “Armenia” bloc. “It turns out that Mkhitar Zakaryan and Arthur Sargsyan could not present their programme provisions, and therefore, the process based on those negotiations cannot be legal,” the “News.Am” quoted him as saying.

The parliament session was also held amid a protest action organized by relatives of the prisoners of war. Relatives of the prisoners of war (POWs) kept in Azerbaijan gathered in front of the parliament building and demanded to include in the parliament’s agenda the issue of returning the POWs, the “News.Am” reported.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on August 2, 2021 at 05:26 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: The Caucasian Knot;

Source:
© Caucasian Knot

Winery: Zorah, Armenia

Jancis Robinson
July 28 2021





Caroline Gilby MW is a wine writer, Eastern European wine specialist and author of The wines of Bulgaria, Romania and Moldova as well as winner of Prix de L’OIV 2020. Her old-vines competition entry is about a vineyard so remote, high and ancient that no one knows when it was planted. See our WWC21 guide for more old-vine competition entries. 

“What have you done to us?” my lungs seemed to gasp as I set off on the Armenia trail half marathon from a little winery in the mountains called Zorah. I thought I was fit but we were 1400 metres high, and the air was distinctly thinner than I was used to. The race was going even higher, over 1600 metres, passing a little plot of grapevines that time forgot on its way. The altitude matters because it shows how far off the beaten track this vineyard is, perched up in the mountains, where there are few people apart from wandering shepherds. Up here, the vines were so remote they survived waves of politics in a region where politics and wine are never far from each other. They hung on through Stalin’s programme of collectivisation of viticulture in the service of brandy that was the designated role for Armenia’s vineyards. Later, in the mid 1980s they were too far away to be worth the effort of pulling out in the face of Gorbachev’s anti-alcohol programme. The other factor that allowed these ancient vines to survive is absence of Phylloxera (the vine root louse that destroyed most of Europe’s vines in the 19th century), though no one quite knows why it failed to munch its way as far as Armenia’s Highlands. Seriously cold, continental winters and very dry, warm summers may have been factors, though it may simply be luck that hasn’t yet run out – as the louse is busy marching across the Ararat Valley not far away.

These venerable vines are an indigenous Armenian variety called Areni or Areni Noir. It’s been traced back to medieval vines from an abandoned monastery site, but may be much older, and has no identified parentage. And the lack of that pernicious Phylloxera meant that all anyone had to do to create more vines was to bury a shoot in the soil, so the plants may be centuries old. There are no ordered rows here, nor posts and wires, just higgledy-piggledy vines sprawling over and around rocks. When Zorik Gharibian (the owner of Zorah) wanted to buy these grapes and later the land itself, he sent out a couple of locals in rusty Ladas with envelopes of cash, to avoid alerting anyone to foreign interest, “The locals see me as dollar signs,” he says. 

Altitude also came into the story when I went to climb the 5137 metre Mount Ararat with Zorik to launch the wine produced from these ancient vines. It’s a rite of pilgrimage for Armenians to climb their spiritual mountain, even though it lies over the border in Turkey and it seemed the right place for Zorik to launch his dream wine. It is named Yeraz which means ‘dream’ as well as being his wife’s name. A few drops of wine were sprinkled as a libation in the snow at the top of the mountain then we shared the rest of the bottle. There’s something about these pensioner vines that gives incredible depth and vivid complexity to the wine, along with lingering elegance and a gorgeous ethereal nose. Not quite like anything else, but if you think cru Burgundy mixed with a dash of top Sangiovese, it will guide you in the right direction. 

No one knows how old these vines are, but I’d like to think they are channelling the spirit of Armenia’s 6000-year wine history. You can see the cliffs that hide the Areni-1 cave from the Yeraz vineyard. This karst cave is the location of the oldest winery ever discovered. It’s a spine-tingling place to visit, full of wine jars that look just a few decades old, not six millennia. The jars are surrounded by a rudimentary grape press and grave caskets, and there’s evidence of sacrifice too. Wine has clearly had a central role in human ritual for a very long time. It’s unlikely to have been the same vines, but maybe people were growing grapes in this remote spot even then. 

Oh, and the race … I came second.   

The photo above is provided by the winery with kind permission for us to use.

Armenian political scientist on Iran’s nuclear program, Meghri road and Armenia’s future actions

News.am, Armenia

Iran’s nuclear program is advancing effectively and will become factual in the near future, and a big war remains the only option to undermine this. This is what political scientist Stepan Danielyan wrote on his Facebook page, touching upon regional developments.

“Who will wage a war against Iran? It seems that the answer to this question is clear — Turkey and Azerbaijan. The meaning of the Turkey-Azerbaijan military alliance, as well as the ongoing purchase of weapons and military exercises should be viewed in this context as well.

It’s clear that the London-Ankara-Baku-Tel Aviv axis is acting against Iran. The local Azerbaijanis and Arabs of Khuzistan will act against Iran, and in its turn, Iran will try to mobilize the Kurds of Turkey, like it did during the war against Iraq.

Who will be Iran’s allies? Iran has issues with Pakistan. Taking into consideration Iran’s relations with China, it’s not very likely that China and Russia will directly support Iran, but perhaps indirectly.

What is the route through which Turkey will supply troops and weapons to Azerbaijan? The importance of the road of Meghri for Azerbaijan should be viewed in this context as well.

It’s clear that this scenario will very likely become a reality, but it’s hard to predict when. However, it seems that the issue of Iran’s nuclear program is accelerating the development of events.

What is Armenia going to do? This is a question that the government needs to answer. The government’s duty is to draw up action programs for different scenarios and lead an appropriate policy. Armenia’s objective is to stay as far away from that war as possible,” he wrote.


Sports:Mkhitaryan, Pepe clash and get into dispute

News.am, Armenia

Center-back for the Portugal national team Pepe and midfielder for Roma and the Armenia national team Henrikh Mkhitaryan clashed after Pepe played tough to seize the ball during the Porto-Roma friendly match in Portugal.

The match ended with a tie (1-1). Mkhitaryan was part of the starting lineup for Roma. He received a yellow card at the 69th minute and was replaced a minute later.