Filters:
People: Tobias Furneaux

Diocletian had forced the Persians to relinquish …

Years: 424 - 435

Diocletian had forced the Persians to relinquish Armenia, and Tiridates III, the son of Tiridates II, had been restored to the throne under Roman protection in about 287; his reign had determined the course of much of Armenia's subsequent history, and his conversion by St. Gregory the Illuminator and the adoption of Christianity as the state religion in about 314 has created a permanent gulf between Armenia and Persia.

The Armenian patriarchate becomes one of the surest stays of the Arsacid monarchy and the guardian of national unity after its fall.

The chiefs of Armenian clans, called nakharars, hold great power in Armenia, limiting and threatening the influence of the king.

The dissatisfaction of the nakharars with Arshak II had led to the division of Armenia into two sections, Roman Armenia and Persarmenia, in 387).

The former, comprising about one-fifth of Armenia, had been rapidly absorbed into the Empire, to which the Armenians will come to contribute many emperors and generals.

Persarmenia continues to be ruled by an Arsacid in Dvin, the capital after the reign of Khosrow II (330–339), until the deposition in 428 of Artashes IV and his replacement by a Persian marzpan (governor) at the request of the nakharars.

Although the Armenian nobles have thus destroyed their country's sovereignty, a sense of national unity will be furthered by the development of an Armenian alphabet and a national Christian literature; culturally, if not politically, the fifth century is an Armenian golden age.

Related Events

Filter results