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Tigranakert Intended To Be Pilgrimage Site

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  • Tigranakert Intended To Be Pilgrimage Site

    TIGRANAKERT INTENDED TO BE PILGRIMAGE SITE

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/12/tigranakert-int ended-to-be-pilgrimage-site/
    Aug 12, 2009

    STEPANAKERT-It has already been five years that the archeological
    excavations of the ancient city of Tigranakert begun in the Nagorno
    Karabakh Republic.

    This year, the upper part of the church (basilica) was excavated,
    which, according to initial data, dates back to the sixth century.

    Head of the excavation group Doctor of Historical Sciences
    Hamlet Petrosyan singles out the discovery of an agate stamp this
    year. Archeologists were unsure about the period to which the stamp
    belonged, but are opining that it was the Hellenic period.

    Petrosyan said that stamp and early medieval clay stamps prove that
    Tigranakert played a significant administrative-trade role.

    Excavations at the north wall of the citadel are also in progress,
    with some 85 meters already excavated. It is one of the largest walls
    ever excavated in the South Caucasus.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Foreign Ministry told Armenpress that the
    excavations were financed by the Karabakh government; organizational
    tasks were being coordinated by the "Tigranakert Reserve" state
    non-trade organization established by Karabakh's Tourism Department.

    A Museum of Tigranakert is being planned. At present reconstruction
    projects are being carried out in an 18th century castle, where
    the museum will be housed. Tigranakert is intended to become a
    pilgrimage site and a "Land of Promise of All-Armenians," said the
    foreign ministry.

    As international mediators continue to seek a resolution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, archeologists in the mountainous republic
    are searching for the remains of ancient Armenian cities in Karabakh,
    buried under the sands of time.

    The Armenian specialists came close in 2005, when they found one of
    four Tigranakert cities built by Armenian King Tigran the Great on
    the liberated land of Aghdam, to the southeast of Martaket region.

    "For me this is Troy, this is how I would assess it," said Vardges
    Safaryan, member of the Tigranakert expedition. "We continue finding
    different items here, but it's not the most important. What's important
    is that the city once existed here,"

    According to Safaryan, the city, founded sometime in the 80s B.C.,
    survived through the 15th century, which explains the presence of not
    only Hellenic monuments, but Christian ones as well. Among the findings
    were two main walls and the towers of the Hellenic styled city and
    an Armenian church built sometime between the 5th and 7th centuries,
    in which was found a clay, dish-like item with an engraving that reads
    "My, Vache, the slave of God."

    "This inscription dates back to the 6th-7th century, and it is the
    most ancient Armenian inscription found on Karbakh soil to date,"
    said Safaryan.

    The authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh have attached a great deal of
    importance to the excavations of Tigranakert and the government has
    been financing the project for approximately two years now.
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