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  • The Sisian Travelogue

    THE SISIAN TRAVELOGUE
    Joseph Dagdigian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-05-09-the-sisian-travelogue-
    Published: Wednesday May 09, 2012

    Moving the rocks in place at Karahunj. Joe Dagdigian

    Sisian is in Siunik province, southern Armenia. I guess it's a few
    hours' drive from Yerevan, though I don't know for sure because we
    stop at so many interesting places along the way. Sisian is perhaps
    best known for Karahunj, also known as Zorats Kar (stone soldiers)
    and believed to be an ancient astronomical observatory, and nearby
    Tatev (Datev) Monastery.

    Sisian In Sisian we arrived at the Basen Hotel, a no-frills but
    very comfortable hotel a 5-minute walk from the center of town. The
    hotel consists of five two story buildings with rooms on both
    floors. There are a total of 15 - 20 rooms. The restaurant is in a
    separate building. The food was excellent and our hostess Hasmik was
    extremely knowledgeable and helpful. She was of immense assistance
    in allowing us to make the most of our time during two visits to
    Sisian. There are other hotels in Sisian as well, though I can not
    comment on them as I have not stayed at them.

    Sisian art school Within a few minutes walk from the hotel are the
    Sisian music and art schools. The art school conducts classes after
    regular school hours.

    Classes include painting, embroidery, sculpture, and other subjects at
    very low cost for students. The painting instructor, Ashot Avagyan,
    is a well known painter who has an encyclopedic knowledge and love
    of Sisian and its surroundings. While he conducted a tour of the
    school, displaying some of his own and his students' paintings, we
    were interrupted by former students paying him a visit. Immediately
    obvious was the close bond established between these young Armenian
    artists and their mentor, Ashot Avagian. Many of these students are
    now budding artists in their own right. Within the hallway are works
    of the students, some of which are for sale. These include beautiful
    works of embroidery as well as paintings of a number of subjects
    including nature scenes, people, and images of the Karabagh war which
    undoubtedly influenced the students through the experiences of older
    family members. Despite a low tuition, often students' families can
    not afford the tuition or art supplies. When he can, stated Avagian, he
    helps the students with these issues. My friend and traveling companion
    Mesrob Odian and I made a small donation to help in such circumstances.

    Sisian music school Upon returning to the Basen hotel from the center
    of town, our hostess Hasmik informed us that the Sisian Women's Choir
    was having a "practice" at the music school. It soon became evident
    that this was more a performance than a practice. Accompanied by
    a piano the chorus sang Armenian folk songs by Gomidas and other
    composers. When I was a child, my mother Betty Dagdigian, was the
    piano accompanists for the Armenian National Choral Society of Boston,
    directed by Anahid Keshishian . I would often accompany my mother
    to practices and would be amazed at the beautiful songs and sounds
    produced by the choral society. The Sisian Women's Chorus replicated
    this experience. It was an emotional flashback to a wonderful
    experience which has remained with me always. Like the art school,
    the music school teaches music to interested children after normal
    school hours. Like the art school, they are handicapped by a lack of
    resources including instruments, computers, and the availability of
    music. Here also my friend and traveling companion Mesrob and I made
    a small donation.

    On an encouraging note, since then Mr. Berge Jololian of Watertown,
    with some friends, has established a program to provide Sisian's
    and neighboring villages' schools with computers and internet access
    which until then they have lacked.

    Karahunj On our subsequent visit a year later our host Hasmik
    informed us of a ceremony in progress at Karahunj. We arrived as
    a crowd of people was gathering across the road from the ancient
    astronomical observatory, probably predating Stonehenge, to inaugurate
    a miniature replica of Karahunj organized by Ashot Avagyan. Avagyan,
    besides teaching painting, is intimately tied to Sisian's land and
    it turbulent struggle for liberty and millennia old history and
    culture. He, with a group of sturdy Sisiantsis, moved into place the
    final large stone of the circle. With a band playing and a few speeches
    consecrating the modern replica of the ancient site across the road,
    visitors were invited to spend a minute in the central focal point of
    the stone circle to commune with the forces of the universe. Each of
    us who did so were awarded a certificate guaranteeing us the right
    to be buried at Karahunj! My wife Lisa coldly informed me that if I
    wished to be buried at Karahunj, I would have to die at Karahunj.

    Karahunj is believed to be an ancient astronomical observatory,
    perhaps with strong religious and spiritual connotations. While
    dating of the site is uncertain, some believe it to date back as
    early as 5,000 B.C. At the center of a ring of standing stones are
    the ruins of what is believed to have been a small temple, perhaps a
    Zoroastrian fire temple. On a roughly north-south axis are a line of
    other stones bisecting the circle. In total there are 204 standing
    stones, some 5-6 feet tall. A number of these stones are pierced,
    perhaps to view the alignment of stars and planets at certain times
    of the year. The field of Karahunj is on a slight rise above most of
    its immediate surroundings which somehow imparts a hard to describe
    mystical feeling that one is close to the heavens, despite the fact
    that the surrounding hills and mountains are much higher. It is easy to
    visualize how our ancient ancestors found spirituality in this place.

    Oughtasar Looking roughly north across the highway from Karahunj, one
    sees the twin peaks of Oughtasar (Camel Mountain). After a 45 minute
    bone jarring jeep ride up the mountain, past an interesting field
    of rocks (I believe remnants of an extinct volcano), one comes to a
    little lake below the peaks. On one side of the lake in ancient times
    were deposited large slabs of dark stone upon which the ancients drew
    numerous petroglyphs or stone drawings of snakes, serpents, people,
    and animals. I've been told or have read that these drawings date
    from 200 to 2,000 B.C., but an archaeologist friend indicated that
    in fact nobody really knows their age. During my second trip here,
    as part of a hiking expedition, we camped next to the lake. Though
    we were in t-shirts during the day, as soon as the sun set it got
    cold. In the morning there was ice along the lake shore. This was
    July. The mountains upon which we hiked were pristine, with patches
    of snow here and there where the ground was shaded by the peaks. The
    ground was stone rubble, or thick grass, sometimes with boulders
    hidden by the grass and, on occasion, covered with a few inches of
    snow though the day time temperature was quite warm.

    Siuni Vank A 15 minute walk from the Basen Hotel through the center
    of town brings one to the Saint Hovhannes church, built on the
    site of an original pagan temple in the 4th C. The current church,
    which replaced an older one, dates to the 600s and was originally
    part of a monastery, Siuni Vank, which was a center of learning and
    culture during medieval times. There are a number of inscriptions
    on the church. In the church's niches are sculptured portraits of
    clergy and members of Siunik's princely family members who were
    responsible for the construction and protection of the church. The
    day after photographing the church I returned, realizing that I
    had overlooked photographing one aspect of its construction. In
    medieval times stone masons would leave their unique "mason marks",
    inscribed patterns indicating the identities of those who physically
    built the structure, on churches. Upon my return the caretaker of the
    church, Zaven, immediately asked where I was from. Answering Boston,
    he immediately exclaimed "Ahhh, General Dro was buried in Boston",
    referring to General Dro Kanayan who commanded the battle of Bash
    Aparan in May 1918. Together with the battles of Karakillese and
    Sardarapat, the Armenians stopped the invading Turkish army from
    eliminating the Armenians remaining in the Caucasus and resulted
    in the Independent Republic of Armenia on May 28 of that year. The
    gentleman then proceeded to relate the last 100-200 years of Siunik's
    resistance to foreign domination, often pointing at the mountains or in
    directions where Armenians clashed with invaders. When questioned on
    "mason marks" he showed me a number of them. Of all the churches in
    Armenia, he stated, Siuni Vank has more mason marks than any other
    structure in Armenia - a total of 39. These marks are the personal
    signs of masons recording their accomplishments. Some are in the
    shapes of Armenian letters, while others are geometrical patterns
    such as stars, crosses, hour glass shapes, etc.

    Underneath the pavement in front of the church are remains of a
    pre-Christian Zoroastrian fire temple. Of more recent origin is an
    adjacent cemetery containing the graves of local casualties from the
    Karabagh war.

    Aghudi South-east of Sisian is the village on Aghudi. Within the
    village is a 1,500 or so year old monument consisting of 3 columns
    standing upon a structure which perhaps was a mausoleum. This is
    a very unusual style of monument in Armenia, the only other known
    example being at the Odzun church in northern Armenia. The monument's
    purpose is unknown but speculation is that it may have been a memorial
    to fallen comrades erected by the retreating veterans of the Battle
    of Avarayr in which Armenian national hero Saint Vartan Mamikonian
    was killed in 401 A.D.

    Others speculate that this was a tomb to princely family members in
    Siunik. Adjacent to the monument is a circular foundation, perhaps
    the remnant of a circular church similar to Zvartnots near Echmiadzin
    or the circular chapels in the medieval Armenian capital of Ani,
    across the Armenian - Turkish border.

    Vorotnavank A short distance from Aghudi, at an isolated part of
    the Vorotan River valley, is beautiful Vorotnavank. The monastery,
    surrounded by a defensive wall, contains two churches, Soorp Garabed
    and Soorp Stepanos, as well as a gavit or assembly hall built
    between years 1000 and 1007. Like many other monasteries in Armenia,
    Vorotnavank was captured by the Seljuk Turks only to subsequently be
    liberated by the Zakarian brothers, Ivane and Zakare, who were in the
    service of Queen Tamara of Georgia. Ivane liberated Vorotnavank and the
    nearby fort of Vorotnabert and turned them over to Liparat Orbelian of
    the famous Orbelian family of princely rulers. Vorotnavank was a center
    of medieval learning together with other monasteries in Siunik. Near
    the monastery are elaborately carved gravestones graphically portraying
    events which perhaps are episodes from the life of the deceased. A
    spectacular view of the monastery, the Vorotan Valley, and nearby
    mountains can be obtained from the top of the adjacent hill.

    Angeghakot Upon our arrival at Angeghakot we visited a small cemetery
    near the town's center. There were buried Armenian freedom fighters who
    died defending Siunik around 1906 -probably fighting under the command
    of General Keri, or perhaps General Antranig or Njdeh. One of the
    tombstones portrays a soldier, standing erect, with his rifle at his
    side. The people of Siunik have always been fiercely independent and
    to this day can relate the struggles they endured for their freedom.

    We then proceeded to a small hill upon which an archaeological
    excavation was being conducted. Two pits, about 10 feet deep,
    revealed ancient foundations and artifacts from the copper or bronze
    age (roughly 6,000 - 3,000 BC). Just exposed that day or the previous
    evening was a human skeleton. Archaeologists were delicately uncovering
    the bones with soft brushes. I asked the head archaeologist if she
    had dated the site. She responded that the site was believed to
    be from the chalcolithic (copper) age, but obviously they had not
    yet carbon dated the human remains. Within the region are a large
    number of bronze and iron age remains as documented in English by
    Onik Xnkikyan Syunik During the Bronze and Iron Ages, translated by
    Vatche Ghazarian, Mayreni Publishing, 2002.

    Just outside town is Soorp Vartan church, dated around 1298. The church
    is crudely built half into the side of a small hill. Local tradition
    has it that this is the burial site of Saint Vartan Mamikonian, the
    sparabed or general who led the defense of Armenia's Christianity
    against the Sassanid Persians in the Battle of Avarayr 451 AD. Vartan
    died heroically in the battle in which the outnumbered Armenians
    lost to the Persians, though the Armenians extracted a high price. A
    guerilla war ensued for the next 3 decades under the leadership of
    Vartan's nephew Kayl (Woolf) Vahan causing the Persians finally to
    guarantee Armenia's freedom of religion. Yearly, on St.Vartanantz Day,
    there is a procession to this shrine. I am told this was the only
    public religious procession permitted in Armenia during the Soviet
    era. It should be noted that there are a number of sites reputed to
    be the final resting place of St. Vartan.

    Kndzoresk Heading east from Sisian there is the village of Khnsoresk
    on the right shortly before entering the Lachin Corridor towards
    Artsakh (Karabagh). Passing through the village one arrives at a
    deep gorge with vegetation on its slopes and easy to follow paths
    leading into the gorge. Along the slopes of the gorge are naturally
    occurring caves in which Armenians have carved homes, factories,
    bakeries, and churches. People lived in these homes, I am told, until
    the 1940s. The cave dwellings had windows carved out of the stone,
    and entrances were squared off to allow doors. Holes in the roofs
    served as chimneys. A group of us, guided by superb guides from
    Avarayr Tours in Armenia, hiked down one side of the gorge and up
    the opposite side. We encountered a cheese factory with large vats
    carved from the stone, a spring (the water was cold and delicious),
    three churches, and a bakery with tonirs (barrel shaped clay pits set
    in the ground in which bread was baked). During the hike we enjoyed
    wild ripening blackberries. At the bottom of the gorge was the barely
    recognizable foundation of an ancient church (perhaps as old as the
    4th C) and the Pantheon - a handful of graves with gravestones intact.

    Among the graves was that of Mkhitar Sparabed, David Beg's military
    commander in the 18th C struggle against Persia and the Ottoman Empire
    in Zangezur (southern Armenia). Upon the death of David Beg, Mkhitar
    Sparabed assumed the leadership of the armed struggle but was killed
    by a traitor who presented the Persian shah with Mkhitar Sparabed's
    severed head. The traitor expected a reward. The Shah responded
    "If you would do this to your own people, I can only imagine what
    you would do against me" and had the traitor executed.

    Conclusion I've described a small fraction of the interesting sights
    to be seen.

    Sisian is a rich repository of Armenian history and culture with
    beautiful scenery and welcoming people. Other than Karahunj and the
    Datev Monastey (which is well worth a visit), relatively few people
    visit other nearby sites. Sisian is an interesting and rewarding area
    to explore, with ample documentation available in books and on-line.

    Sisian, Siunik, and especially its people have won a place in our
    hearts.

    References A great resource for exploring Armenia is the book
    Rediscovering Armenia by Brady Kiesling and Raffi Kojian. This book is
    freely available on-line, from the National Association of Armenian
    Studies and Research (N.A.A.S.R.) in Belmont, MA, and in Armenia at
    the Artbridge Bookstore. The English version of Syunik During the
    Bronze and Iron Age is available from N.A.A.S.R.

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