Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Battle of Avarayr: victory of courage

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Battle of Avarayr: victory of courage

    Battle of Avarayr: victory of courage

    May 26, 2013 - 16:03 AMT


    PanARMENIAN.Net - The plain of Avarayr, located in the extreme
    northwest of Iran, was the scene of an important battle which took
    place during an Armenian uprising against the Persians in the
    mid-fifth century A.D. The cause of the rebellion was a decree issued
    in 449 by the Sasanian king, Yazdegerd II (439-57), in which he
    ordered the Armenians, the bulk of whose country had become a vassal
    state of Iran at the Romano-Persian partition of 387, to convert from
    Christianity to Zoroastrianism. The Armenians refused and were forced
    to take up arms to defend their stand. In the course of this conflict,
    the Persians attempted an invasion of Armenia which was met by a
    combined force of Persarmenian nobles on the field of Avarayr lying
    along the banks of the Thmut River (RÅ«d-e ZangemÄ?r), apparently the
    Armeno-Persian frontier at that time.

    The battle took place on May 26, 451. Its essential details were set
    down soon after by Lazar Parpetsi; a more elaborate account was
    recorded by Elise (Elisaeus) late in the same century or possibly
    early in the next. According to the story, an Armenian army of 60,000
    men, led by Vardan Mamikonyn, met a force of 200,000 Persians,
    including the elite corps known as the Immortals led by Muskan
    Niwsalawurt. The Armenians had appealed to the Byzantines for aid
    without success and were further weakened by the defection of several
    noble houses led by Vasak, Lord of Siwnik', the most important
    principality in Armenia. In spite of these disadvantages, the
    Armenians were holding their own until the Persians drew up their
    elephant corps. Through this tactic the Armenians were crushed, and
    Vardan and eight other generals were slain, together with the flower
    of the Armenian nobility and a large number of common soldiers. So
    spirited was the Armenian defense, however, that the Persians suffered
    enormous losses as well. Their victory was pyrrhic and the king, faced
    with troubles elsewhere, was forced, at least for the time being, to
    allow the Armenians to worship as they chose.

    The battle of Avarayr has become the Armenian national holiday; its
    anniversary is a festival of the Armenian Church, and Vardan Mamikonyn
    has become one of its saints. The defense of the Christian faith by
    the Armenians has been hailed as a landmark in the history of the
    struggle for religious freedom, and the fallen of Avarayr have been
    held up as examples of heroism, patriotism to generations of young
    Armenians.

Working...
X