Family tree Bas » Vasak Mamikonian (315-365)

Personal data Vasak Mamikonian 

  • He was born in the year 315.
  • (Geschiedenis) .Source 1
    is het oudst bekende lid van de Mamikonian. Verdedigde Armenië tegen een aanval van de Perzen onder Shapur II. De Perzische aanval werd gesteund door een groep binnen de Armeense adel die zich verzette tegen de overgang van Armenië naar het Christendom. Uiteindelijk werd Vasak verslagen en gedood door de Perzen. (overleden ongeveer 355).
  • (Levens event) .Source 2
    Mamikonian, Mamikoneans, or Mamigonian (Armenian: ??????????) was a noble family which dominated Armenian politics between the 4th and 8th century. They ruled the Armenian regions of Taron, Sasun, Bagrevand and others. Their patron saint was Saint Hovhannes Karapet (John the Baptist) whose monastery of the same name (also known as Glak) they fiercely defended against the Sassanid invaders.

    The origin of the Mamikonians is shrouded in the mists of antiquity. Moses of Chorene in his History of Armenia (5th century) claims that three centuries earlier two Chinese noblemen, Mamik and Konak, rose against their half-brother, Chenbakur, the Emperor of Chenk, or China. They were defeated and fled to the king of Parthia who, braving the Emperor's demands to extradite the culprits, sent them to live in Armenia, where Mamik became the progenitor of the Mamikonians.

    Another 5th-century Armenian historian, Pavstos Buzand, seconded the story. In his History of Armenia, he twice mentions that the Mamikonians descended from the Han Dynasty of China and as such were not inferior to the Arshakid rulers of Armenia. This genealogical legend may have been part of the Mamikonians' political agenda, as it served to add prestige to their name. Although it echoes the Bagratids' claim of Davidic descent and the Artsruni's claim of the royal Assyrian ancestry, some Armenian historians tended to interpret it as something more than a piece of genealogical mythology.[3] A theory from the 1920s postulated that the Chenk mentioned in the Armenian sources were not the Chinese but probably from a different ethnic group from Transoxania, such as the Tocharians.[4] Edward Gibbon in his The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire also believed that the founder of Mamikonian clan was not Chinese but merely from the territory of the Chinese Empire and ascribes a Scythian origin to Mamgon stating that at the time the borders of the Chinese Empire reached as far West as Sogdiana.[5] Other sources identify the Chen or the Tchen as the indigenous inhabitants of the Pontos region on the Black Sea - ancestors of the modern Laz people.

    Another reconstruction, similar to the previous ones but without references whatsoever to distant China, has that the family originally immigrated from Bactriana (present northern Afghanistan) under the reign of Tiridates II of Armenia,[6] likely coinciding with the accession of the Sassanids in Iran.
    Early history

    The first known Mamikonid lord, or nakharar, about whom anything certain is known was a certain Vatche Mamikonian (fl. 330-339).

    The family reappears in chronicles in 355, when the bulk of their lands lay in the province of Tayk. At that point the family chief was Vassak Mamikonian, a commander-in-chief (sparapet) of Armenia. Later, the office of sparapet would become hereditary possession of the Mamikonians. Vassak Mamikonian was in charge of the Armenian defense against Persia but was eventually defeated through the treachery of Marujan Ardzruni (c. 367-368).

    Following the defeat, Vassak's brother Vahan Mamikonian and multiple other feudal lords defected to the Persian side. The Emperor Valens, however, interfered in Armenian affairs and had the office of sparapet bestowed on Vassak's son Mushegh Mamikonian in 370. Four years later Varasdates (Varazdat), a new king, confirmed Musel in office. The latter was subsequently assassinated on behest of Sembat Saharuni who replaced him as sparapet of Armenia.

    On this event, the family leadership passed to Mushegh's brother, Enmanuel Mamikonian, who had been formerly kept as a hostage in Persia. The Mamikonids at once broke into insurrection and routed Varasdates and Saharuni at Karin. Emmanuel, together with his sons Hemaiak and Artches, took the king prisoner and put him in a fortress, whence Varasdates escaped abroad. Zarmandukht, the widow of Varasdates' predecessor, was then proclaimed queen. Emmanuel came to an agreement with the powerful Sassanids, pledging his loyalty in recompense for their respect of the Armenian autonomy and laws.

    Upon the queen's demise in 384, Emmanuel Mamikonian was proclaimed Regent of Armenia pending the minority of her son Arsaces III and had the infant king married to his daughter Vardandukh. It was Emmanuel's death in 385 that precipitated the country's conquest by the Persians in 386-387.

    Hamazasp Mamikonian was recorded as the family leader in 393. His wife is known to have been Sahakanoush, daughter of Saint Sahak the Great. She was a descendant of the Arsacid Kings and Saint Gregory the Illuminator. They had a son, Saint Vartan Mamikonian, who is revered as one of the greatest military and spiritual leaders of ancient Armenia.

    After Vartan became Sparapet in 432, the Persians summoned him to Ctesiphon. Upon his return home in 450, Vartan repudiated the Persian religion and instigated a great Armenian rebellion against their Sassanian overlords. Although he died in the doomed Battle of Avarayr also known as Battle of Vartanantz (451), the continued insurrection led by Vahan Mamikonian, the son of Vartan's brother, resulted in the restoration of Armenian autonomy with the Nvarsak Treaty (484), thus guaranteeing the survival of Armenian statehood in later centuries. Saint Vartan is commemorated by many churches in Armenia and an equestrian statue in Yerevan.

    After the country's subjugation by the Persians, Mamikonians sided with the Roman Empire, with many family members entering Byzantine service. Not only did they rise to the highest offices of Constantinople, but even some of the emperors - conceivably Leo the Armenian and Basil I - could have been their descendants. Theodora the Byzantine regent and her brothers Bardas and Petronas the Patrician were also of Mamikonian heritage. Unsurprisingly, Mamikonians form a crucial link in the postulated descent of modern European nobility from antiquity.
    Genealogy

    The history of Mamikonians in the Early Middle Ages is quite obscure. In the period between 655 and 750 they are not documented at all. What follows below is their reconstructed genealogy between the 5th and 7th centuries.

    Hamazasp I Mamikonian, married to Sahankanoysh of Armenia
    1. Vardan I (+451) (saint)
    1.1. Shushanik (+472) (saint)
    2. Hmayeak I (+452)
    2.1. Vahan
    2.1.1. Vard
    2.2. Vasak
    2.2.1. Enmanuel
    2.2.1.1. Gaghik
    2.2.2. Vardan II
    2.2.2.3. Mamak (fl. 590)
    2.2.3 daughter
    2.2.3.1. Musel II (+c. 592)
    2.2.3.1.1. Kahan Gail (fl. 592-604)
    2.2.3.1.1.1. Smbat the Valiant (fl. 604)
    2.2.3.1.1.1.1. Musel III (+640)
    2.2.3.1.1.1.1.1. Grigor I (fl. 650)
    2.2.3.1.1.1.1.2. Hamazasp II (fl. 655)
    2.3. Artaches
    2.4. Vard
    3. Hamazaspian

    Last Mamikonians

    By 750, Mamikonians lost Taron, Khelat, and Mouch to the Bagratuni family. In the 770s, the family was led by Artavizd Mamikonian, then by Musel IV (+772) and by Samuel II. The latter married his daughter to Smbat VII Bagratuni, constable of Armenia. His grandson Smbat Msaker ("the Carnivore") became forefather of Bagratid rulers of Armenia and Taron.

    Mamikonians are known to have led a national rebellion against the Arab Caliphate in 774-775. After the rebels were rooted out, Mamikonians' supremacy in Armenia came to an end. Even in their homeland of Tayk, they were succeeded by the Bagratids. One Kurdik Mamikonian was recorded as ruling Sasun c. 800. Half a century later, Grigor Mamikonian lost Bagrevand to the Muslims, reconquered it in the early 860s and then lost it to the Bagratids for good. After that, Mamikonians pass out of history.

    After their disastrous uprising of 774, some of the Mamikonian princes moved to the Georgian lands. The latter-day Georgian feudal houses of the Liparitids-Orbeliani and Tumanishvili are sometimes surmised to have been descended from those princes.[7]
    Necropolis

    The necropolis of the Mamikonian family was at the 4th century Saint Karapet Monastery (also known as the monastery of Glak) in the mountains directly northwest of the plain of Mush in Taron.
  • (naam) .Source 1
    De Mamikonian zijn vanaf de vierde eeuw een vooraanstaande adellijke familie in het oude Armenië en hebben een belangrijke rol gespeeld in de geschiedenis van het land. Naast de functie van Naharar (regionaal bestuurder, familiehoofd) behoorde ook de erfelijke functie van sparapet (opperbevelhebber) aan de familie. De familie is in de achtste eeuw ten onder gegaan door haar leidende rol in het verzet tegen de Arabieren. Volgens de traditie zijn de Mamikonian van Chinese afkomst maar daar is geen enkele historische aanwijzing voor.
  • He died in the year 365, he was 50 years old.
  • A child of Hamazasp Mamikonian
  • This information was last updated on December 17, 2012.

Household of Vasak Mamikonian


Child(ren):

  1. NN Mamikonian  335-???? 

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Vasak Mamikonian

Vasak Mamikonian
315-365



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    Sources

    1. http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamikonian
    2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamikonian

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    The Family tree Bas publication was prepared by .contact the author
    When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
    Andre Bas, "Family tree Bas", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-bas/I10291.php : accessed January 8, 2026), "Vasak Mamikonian (315-365)".