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Armenian Parliamentarians Concerned Over Ancient Crypt's Future

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  • Armenian Parliamentarians Concerned Over Ancient Crypt's Future

    ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARIANS CONCERNED OVER ANCIENT CRYPT'S FUTURE

    10:37 * 12.09.14

    Driven by concerns over the fate of a 4th century Armenian royal crypt
    excavated in the Aragatsotn region, a group of parliamentarians are
    planning to visit the ancient site to see the situation on the ground.

    It comes after Aragats Akhoyan of the Prosperous Armenia faction voiced
    serious alarm about the desolate situation of the chapel, basilica
    and the excavation site in the village Dzorap (historical Aghdzk)

    His statement spurred active discussions among parliament members
    (including Samvel Farmanyan, Tachat Vardapetyan etc) who are now
    said to be considering plans for rescuing area and later making it
    a tourist center.

    Dzorap, a village on the slopes of Mount Aragats, is home to a large
    grave monument complex and basilica of the 4th to 5th centuries. The
    complex includes the 4th century architectural complex of Aghdzk,
    the Arsacid Dynasty's (54-482) crypt, a church dating from the 6th-7th
    centuries etc.

    Speaking to Tert.am, Mr Akhoyan shared his concerns over the
    exceptional historical samples. "Excavations were periodically carried
    out, but they were never completed. The Arsacid kings' mausoleum, which
    is the only royal crypt our nation has on the territory of Armenia,
    is in a desolate state. I mean, the mausoleums have not been fully
    excavated, and shamefully enough, the bones are thrown around like
    waste. What's even worse, they were broken, and the stone coffins
    were scattered around. So we have to take urgent measures to first of
    all complete the excavations and secondly, make them [the monuments]
    tourist attractions, as well a strategically important sacred place to
    contribute to our younger generation's patriotic-military upbringing.

    >From the 16th t to the 17th centuries, the Persians wanted to take
    possession of those bones in order to undermine our statehood, but
    we are consigning them to inattention today," he noted.

    Tert.am also talked to Pavel Avetisyan, the director of the National
    Academy's Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, who shared his
    professional standpoint on the issue. The archaologist highlighed
    the importance of preserving the monuments as unique samples of
    national identity.

    "This [complex includes] several graves of Armenian kings, which
    do not have their analogues in any other place. Hence, it is
    exceptional in this respect. If Ecnmiadzin is in the first place
    in our religious-cultural set of values, then the Arsacid kings'
    grave should be the first as a secular [value]. So this is one of
    the remarkable memories in the Armenian history," he explained.

    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/09/12/arshakunineri-dambaran/

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