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| The Holy City and the Mother Church of St. Etchmiadzin |
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The Holy City of Etchmiadzin, will be the gathering point of the Christian
pilgrims in the year 2001 A.D. the year of the celebration of the 1700th
Anniversary of Armenia becoming the first nation to officially adopt and embrace
Christianity in the year 301 A.D. by the conversion of King Trdat (Tiridates)
III Arshakouni and his royal court by St. Gregory the Illuminator, who
established the Church of Armenia.
Christianity
in Armenia has very deep roots. Two of Jesus Christ’s Apostles, Thaddeus and
Bartholomew, were the first to preach the Word of God in Armenia, in provinces
of Syunik and Goghtan in the first century A.D. The Holy Apostles were martyred,
by king Sanatrook Arshakouni, who saw the great following of the Apostles and
conversions to Christianity as a great danger to his reign and stability, among
the converts were many members of the royal court of king Sanatrook, including
his sister, who was too along with other Christian converts was martyred. The
roots of Church of Armenia lay at those times of preaching of the Holy Apostles,
the official name of the Church of Armenia in the honor of the Apostles is "Holy
Apostolic Church of Armenia".
The archaeological excavations and digs in sites such as, Shresh Bloor and
Mokhra Bloor, in the vicinity of modern day City of St. Etchmiadzin revealed
layers of early prehistoric settlements, the oldest which dates back to Stone
Age. Layers of Bronze Age culture and under the later layers, an advanced
culture of Iron Age was revealed. Artifacts dating to these periods, such as
pottery, arrowheads, spears, swords, etc. The later part of the Bronze and Iron
Age is followed by the period of the powerful kingdom of Ararat. During the
reign of the Araratian king, Hrusha (Rusas) II (685B.C.-645B.C.), a cuneiform
inscription was made, in the occasion of the great water canal that was made by
the orders of king Hrusha II, from the river of Ildaruni (Hrazdan) to the city
of Quarlini, which lay in the heart of the St. Etchmiadzin and which became the
nucleus for the city of St. Etchmiadzin later on. The city of Quarlini, was
connected to the cities and fortress of the eastern provinces of the kingdom of
Ararat such as, Teishebaini, Argishtikhinili, Erebuni and Menuakhinili. The city
became an important center of Araratian commerce and trade system. Soon after,
the Yervandouni dynasty of Armenia, or the kingdom of Ararat became the ruling
Royal House in Armenia.
During the reign of king Yervand Sakavakyats (570B.C.-560B.C.) of the
Yervandouni royal house, the husband of the kings wife, Vardkes Manuk or the
youngest greatly rebuild an reshaped the old Araratian city of Quarlini and
renamed it in his name and honor Vardkesavan. During the reign of the one of the
most powerful kings of Armenia, king Tigran (Tigranes) the Great
(95B.C.-55B.C.), the city became as a trading and commercial city, near the
large city of Artashat, of the vast Armenian Empire, grew due to the vast
conquest of Tigran the Great in the Near East, Anatolia and the Caucasus.
Tigran, envisioned Armenia as a powerful Hellenistic state, with large cities
such as Vardkesavan - St. Etchmiadzin. His great capital Tigranakert, had a
population which numbered into hundred of thousands of citizens. The city had a
multiethnic and diverse population, which was common in Hellenistic type cities
such as Vardkesavan.
King
Vagharsh I, from the Royal House of Arshak (Arsacids) once again rebuilt and
remodeled the city of Vardkesavan, the city walls were completely rebuilt and
restructured. In his honor king Vagharsh I renamed the city Vagharshapat. The
vast city of Vagharshapat was considered as a second capital, after the city of
Artashat, by the Arshakouni kings. The city of Vagharshapat had the Royal Palace
of the Arshakouni kings, the city also had a large military contingent of the
kings and nobles army which was housed in barracks of the city. After 301 A.D.
and after the establishment of Christianity as a State Religion by St. Gregory
the Illuminator, the city of Vagharshapat became the Holy Center of Christian
Armenia and for Christians of Armenia, and as well as a safe heaven for the
Christians outside of Armenia, of the vast Roman and Persian Empires, where
Christianity was still persecuted to a large extent by their pagan rulers.
According to the chronicler, Agathangelus,
soon after the conversion of Armenia to Christianity, St. Gregory the
Illuminator (the first patriarch Catholicos of Armenia's Holy Apostolic Church)
saw a beautiful vision.
The heavens opened, and a blazing flood of
light poured upon the earth. Through that light a parade of angels started to
come down to earth. At the head of this heavenly procession there was a tall and
glorious figure. It was the Lord Himself, the Only Begotten Son of God. He had a
golden hammer in His hand. Descending from heaven down to the spot where the
present Church of Etchmiadzin is standing, He struck the ground three times with
a hammer. Instantly a mighty golden column rose on the spot and then it was
transformed into a magnificent church. Before the vision faded away, the form
and the lines of this church were indelibly impressed in the mind of St.
Gregory.
From that day on, in 303ad, a splendid
church (St. Etchmiadzin which in Armenian means "the Holy Ground of Christ's
descent") has always stood on the same place for nearly 1700 years. Around this
Cathedral centred the national and religious life of the Armenians.
Throughout the centuries Armenia's Holy
Apostolic Church took upon itself the task of preaching the word of God to its
nearby neighbors. Peoples of Caucasian Albania and Iberia (Georgia) were
converted to Christianity and other tribes of Caucasus and beyond were also
converted.
In 404 A.D. St. Mesrop Mashtots, a great
Armenian scholar reinvented and revived the lost Armenian alphabet, which was
for many centuries replaced by the Greek and Parthian( Pahlavi) alphabets,
because of the great influence of the Parthian state and royalty, which had
blood ties with the Armenian Arshakuni (Arsacid) Royal Court and the Christian
ties with Byzantium. Many new schools and educational facilities were
established in St. Etchmiadzin. A new age of enlightenment and awakening of
culture began, which later on became known as the Golden Age of Armenian
Literature and Culture as a whole. Many new books were written by Armenian
scholars, such as the great works of Moses of Khoren and his book "Armenian
History" which comprised the History of the Armenian people from the times of
the flood to the V th century. The book of Yeghishe, the author and eyewitness
to the Great Battle of Avarayr, Holy war between the Christian Armenians and
Persian Zoroastrians, the war was the first to be fought by any Christian nation
for the Holy Faith and Christendom and the book of Yeghishe described the bloody
battle and the heroism of both armies on the vast battlefield. Many translation
were also conducted, from the classical writers of ancient Greece, but the best
translation and the most painstakingly worked upon and completed (the Armenian
scholars believed that it would be a sin to make an inexact and inaccurate
translation of the Bible and the word of God) was the translation of the Holy
Bible into Armenian in the V th century, for its perfection it was regarded and
named the "Queen of Translations" by many European linguists of the XIX th
century. Many of those translations took place in St. Etchmiadzin and other
large cities and their monasteries and churches.
In
the early part of the VII th century, a number of renovations and constructions
took place in St. Etchmiadzin. The Mother Church of the Holy See of St.
Etchmiadzin and the Seat of The Catholicos of All Armenians, was rebuilt and
remodeled by Catholicos Komitas of Aghts . In the year 618 A.D. the Monastery of
St. Hripsime, one of the Christian virgins to be martyred, during the days of
Christian persecution was built. The church to this day is a remarkable and
spectacular in it's beauty. The church is complete in its architectural and as
well as shapely design. The monastery of St. Gayane, the second of the two
martyred virgins, was completed in the year 630 A.D., it too had a unique and
impressive features. But one of the most superb and outstanding churches to be
built throughout the world in the early, medieval Christian period was the
church of Zvartnots or St. Gregory the Illuminator. The construction of the
church began in the year 643 A.D. by the orders of Catholicos Nerses III
Ishkhantsi and was completed in the year 652 A.D. It was an extraordinarily
enormous in its size and towering in its height with its three sectioned parts
on top of one another of massive size and its conned dome, with its traditional
Armenian architectural design forming the end of the structure. The whole of
structure was covert by frescos and obelisks of Christian Saints and ancient
Armenian ornament of great beauty and fine craftsmanship. Inside the Church
housed the Catholicos’s quarters, monks quarters and the chapel, the main hall
served for the everyday mass and Christian processions. The Church also housed a
library of illuminated manuscripts. There were also a number of adjoining
structures such as baths and sellers of food and vine. The frescos of the Church
of Zvartnots were also found in the decorations of the Church of Sen-Chapel of
Paris, Roman Catholic visitors and pilgrims must have seen the Church of
Zvartnots and were amazed by its superb architecture. The Sen-Chapel fresco
depicts Zvartnots on top of Noah’s Ark, most probably, the Church of Zvartnots
at that time along with Holy Mt. Ararat, must have stood as symbol of Armenian
Christendom.
The Zvartnots church was destroyed in the
X th century, and unfortunately the historical sources don’t specify the reason
behind the destruction of the famous and exquisite church. As the time went on,
the church was covered in deep layers of dirt and the debris of the church. Even
the place, were the church once stood was forgotten. It was not until the early
part of the XX th century that the remnants and pieces of the beautiful frescos
and obelisks from the columns of interior and exterior frescos of the church
were uncovered, after locating the spot of the Church of Zvartnots.
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Beginning
from the X th century and onward, Armenia and all of Anatolia, Caucasus and Near
East were flooded by hordes of nomadic barbarians such as, Seljuk Turks and
later on Mongols and Tatars. Many ancient civilizations of Anatolia and Near
East, that had managed to survive the assimilation of large empires such as
Byzantium and Sasanid Persia, were destroyed and assimilated by the Seljuk Turk
tribes. The Seljuk were utmost ruthless and barbaric. In Armenia’s Syunik province,
in the monastery of Tatev, they alone destroyed more than 10,000 priceless,
illuminated manuscripts, centuries of knowledge and research were destroyed in
one large blaze, by the barbaric Seljuks. St. Etchmiadzin, as other parts of
Armenia were being abandoned, by large number of Armenian families, who were
forced to leave their homes because of the treats from the nomads. The migration
took a larger aspect in the XI th and XII th centuries. Many families fled to
neighboring Armenia Minor (Lesser Armenia) and Cilician Armenia, were they found
a new kingdom of Cilician Armenia. The Bagratouni dynasty which ruled most of
Armenia from the IX th to XI th century also moved and exchanged its possessions
with lands in Anatolia and Cilician Armenia. The Catholicos seat, was also moved
from St. Etchmiadzin to the newly formed principality of Cilicia, which in the
XII th century became a sovereign and independent kingdom, headed by powerful
dynasties of Rubinian, Hetumian and Lusingnan dynasties.
The abandonment of the seat of the Mother Church of St. Etchmiadzin, lasted
untill the year 1441 A.D. when a council was held in St. Etchmiadzin headed by
Hovannes Hermonetsi and Tovma Metsopetsi. The council decided that the Holy Seat
that was established many centuries ago by St. Gregory the Illuminator, must be
reestablished in St. Etchmiadzin’s Mother Church. Many monasteries in St.
Etchmiadzin and other parts of Armenia were repaired and renewed. The revival
which began in the XV th century continued well into the XVII th century. The
revivification was disrupted by the invasion of Shah Abbas of Persia into
Eastern Armenia, which at that time was becoming a battle ground for the
Persians and Ottoman Turks, each of who wanted to establish a control of
Armenia. The Perso-Turk wars that lasted until late XVIII th century devastated
and effected large areas of Armenia. Shah Abbas during his invasion had
forcefully resettled hundred of thousands of Armenians, from Armenia to Iran.
The
instability and constant invasions and killings of Armenia population, finally
ended in the early part of the XIX th century. In the year 1828 A.D. the Russian
regular army along with many Armenia volunteer fighters liberated Eastern
Armenia, along with St. Etchmiadzin from the Persian rule. The conquests were
solidified by the treaty of Turkmenchay, in which the Persian side recognized
the fact that it had no claims on Eastern Armenia, and promised to help resettle
and help return those Armenians living in Iran back to their homeland in Eastern
Armenia. St. Etchmiadzin became part of the newly created Yerevan Province, of
the vast Russian Empire. From the second part of the XIX th century St.
Etchmiadzin began to once again grow in its population size and the city area
grew, with many new suburbs being added to the city. Many new schools were
opened, and St. Etchmiadzin became one of the most important cultural centers of
Armenia. The revivification of St. Etchmiadzin continued well into the early
part of the XX th century.
The chaos that spread throughout Western Armenia, during the Great Genocide
of 1915, when nearly 2,000,000 Armenians were killed in a systematic attempt to
wipe out the Armenian Nation as a whole by the Turkish government, hadn’t yet
affected Eastern Armenia, particularly St. Etchmiadzin. But large number of
fleeing refugees those who managed to escape, due to the help of the Armenian
fighters and Russian regular army during the evacuation of Van, told the
horrible stories of the Genocide. The Turks having bloodied and obliterated all
of Western Armenia and Cilician Armenia of its Armenian population, wanted to do
the same in Eastern Armenia, and "finish the job" and once and for all "solve"
the Armenian Question and their plan of mass extermination of the Armenian
people. The Turks were masters at finding the right moment for such an act, they
did the same during World War I, in the year 1915 when the world was in turmoil
and war, they quickly put into effect their horrific and barbarous deed of
Genocide. The same turmoil was now in Eastern Armenia, the Russian Front had
collapsed, because of the Russian Revolution of 1917, Armenia was overflowed
with hundred of thousands of survivors of the Genocide. The chaos of the fall of
the Russian Empire and order had terrible affect on Armenia. The Turks having
seen the right moment for their barbarous plan, in early 1918 moved on Eastern
Armenia, their advance was seen as unstoppable. But the Armenian nation having
seen and felt the terrible deeds of the Turk, united under one call: "In Arms",
everyone joined into the effort to stop the bloody Turks and check their
advance. Armenian volunteers from Europe and Americas, as well as other parts of
the world joined along side their kinsmen to fight for the preservation of the
Armenian nation, which was on the brink of extinction. The Turks had almost
reached the Holy City of St. Etchmiadzin. Armenian regiments from Yerevan rushed
to save the Holiest of Hollis, St. Etchmiadzin. The decisive battle took place
near the town of Sardarapat. Every Armenian knew that if the battle was lost,
the fate of extinction through systematic Genocide awaited the nation. The
battle began at dawn with the Turks charging up into the Armenian positions. The
Armenians, stood their ground and the Turks having seen the tenacity and will,
first stopped and slowly began to retreat, the Armenians threw a wide counter
offensive in which the Turks began to flee in unorganized fashion, the Armenians
with vengeance in their hearts cut down many Turks with bayonets and rifle fire.
The Turks were so surprised by the Armenian blow, they were chased hundreds of
miles by the Armenian troops. On their retreat they were constantly attacked and
harassed by Armenian partisans and guerrilla warfare.
The
Battle of Sardarapat became the turning point in Armenia history. The point of
rebirth and national will for survival. The horrific plan of the Turks to
exterminate the Armenian people and "get them off their way" had failed. In fact
Armenia was reborn and the Republic of Armenia was proclaimed on May 28, 1918.
Born out of ashes of Genocide and the heroic Battle of Sardarapat, Republic of
Armenia, comprised only the lands of Eastern Armenia, Western Armenia and
Cilician Armenia still being under the occupation of the Turks. The treaty of
Sevres on August 10, 1920, in which the Turkish government recognized and signed
the passing of Western Armenia to the Republic of Armenia. The Allies assured
the Armenians, that the return of the occupied lands, will take place which
would have been a very small remission for the Great Genocide and nearly
2,000,000 innocent victims who were martyred in their historic Homeland during
the Genocide, but the empty promises by the Allies and their unwillingness to
follow up and resolve the injustice, by political pressure on Turks to do what
they had signed in the Treaty of Sevres, and to apply force if needed be, which
the Armenians were originally promised to receive, a British or American mandate
with British or American troops safeguarding the actual Turkish hand over of
Western Armenia was never actually done, except for the great efforts by
President Woodrow Wilson, who himself mapped the lands of Western Armenia to be
passed to the Republic of Armenia and his stand against the unwilling Congress
and icelationism policy, to pass the mandate into effect. The promises only
remained a vague pledge and a great disappointment and a deceiving exploit of
the Armenian people by the Allies for their own purposes and interests only in
the game of realpolitik. To this day Holy Mt. Ararat, which can been seen from
St. Etchmiadzin and is the symbol of the Armenian people is still falsly called
Aghri Dagh by the Turks, it is still in Turkish hands. Each glance upon the
Biblical and graceful Mt. Ararat gives an agonizing and tormenting feeling and
arouses painful memories to an Armenian living on the other side of river Arax.
The Soviet rule which was forcefully proclaimed in Armenia by the XI th Red
Army, was established on November 29, 1920. Republic of Armenia, which was
promised by the Allies help to fight Bolshevism received none what so ever.
Armenian government seeing betrayal by the European powers, accepted and signed
the document of passing of rule to the Soviets. Soviet Socialist Armenian
Republic was setup. St. Etchmiadzin and Christianity as a whole was viewed by
the atheistic ideology of Communists as a rival "organization" or force which
could control the people and possible oppose the spread of Communism in Armenia.
Many Monasteries and Churches were being shut down and in some cases even
demolished. St. Etchmiadzin’s Mother Church and the Seat of Catholicos in a
great wave of protests by the people of Armenia and the Armenian population
living abroad was speared. The Catholicois of St. Etchmiadzin which presided
during the years of Soviet rule managed to keep the faith and spirit of
Christianity to some extent in the Armenian people.
One
of the biggest disappointments that came out of the Soviet rule and Cold War,
was the separation of the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia from the
Mother Church and the Holy See of St. Etchmiadzin in 1956. The separation, was a
blow to the unity of the Holy Apostolic Church of Armenia. In 1988, the wave and
movement of democracy and an outcry of freedom for the Armenians of Artsakh was
sweeping Armenia. Religious freedom and Christian faith, was gradually being
restored in the face of collapsing Soviet Union.
In August 21, 1991 independent Armenia was proclaimed and was reborn out of
the ashes of the collapsing Soviet Empire. President of the Republic of Armenia,
Levon Ter-Petrosian, elected by a popular vote in the democratic elections was
blessed by one of the longest reigning and most favored Catholicos of all time,
Catholicos Vazgen I. Religious freedom and the right of worship, were
once again restored. The people could freely worship God, without being harassed
or questioned for it. The Holy Apostolic Church of Armenia, also made grate
moves toward the reunification of the two wings of Apostolic Christendom, with
the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia. Also under Vazgen I the
preparations began for the momentous celebration of the 1700 th Anniversary of
the official establishment of Christendom, first in the world to be established
as a state religion, in Armenia, by St. Gregory the Illuminator.
In the fall of 1994 after a nearly 40 year reign ( from 1955), Catholicos
Vazgen I passed away, forever being remembered by the people of Armenia as the
outspoken protector of Christianity in Armenia against the Communist regime.
Catholicos Vazgen I who also did much in reestablishment of St. Etchmiadzin as
the Holy Center of All of Armenians, he was also credited with his effort to
save the treasures of St. Etchmiadzin, such as the Holy relics, icons and
treasures of the church that the Church accumulated throughout its 1700 year
history, by establishing the museum of the Mother Church of St. Etchmiadzin were
the treasures were kept and displayed to the public. Vazgen I ‘s successor
became Karekin I, who was previously Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia in
April of 1995, elected by the Church Council held in St. Etchmiadzin. The move
brought closer together and united the Church of the Great House of Cilicia to
the Mother Church. Karekin I, highly educated and an author of many religious
books, was greatly respected by the people of Armenia and the Armenians living
in Diaspora. He began his reign with visits to the heroic people of Artsakh and
different Armenian communities in the Diaspora. On June 29, 1999 His Holiness
Karekin I, passed away in Yerevan after fighting a long battle against a
fatal disease.
Catholicos
Karekin I, headed the Committee for the preparations of the celebration of the
1700 th Anniversary, in the year 2001. The year 2001 will mark a great memorial
year of the Holy Apostolic Church of Armenia, which throughout its long 1700
year history, longest in any State Church history, remained faithful and devoted
in its faith to God. It fought wars like Vardanats and Vahanants for the
preservation of its religion. The Armenian people created a rich and unequaled
culture of Khachkar (Cross Stones) and Illuminated Manuscripts. The beautiful
churches and architectural marvels such as the Mother Church of St. Etchmiadzin,
Zvartnots Church, St. Hripsime and St. Gayane Churches in the city of St.
Etchmiadzin, the Church of the Holy Cross in Aghtamar, the Gandzasar Church in
Artsakh, and many, many other churches, monasteries and monuments which were
erected by the Armenian people were the sign of their belief in God even in the
face of massacres, bloodbaths and genocides. After all these barbaric acts
conducted upon the Armenian people at different times by different tyrannical
and bloodthirsty tribes and peoples, made the Armenian people even stronger and
even more enduring and withstanding the test of time, throughout thousands of
years.
On october 27, 1999 in the Holy See of Echmiadzin, delegates of the National
Synod elected Primate of the Ararat (Patriarchal) Diocese of the Armenia
Apostolic Church, Archbishop Karekin Nersissian to become the 132nd Catholicos
of All Armenians. His Holiness Karekin II Nersissian with his positive
outlook has pledged to continue the work of his predecessors and serve the
Armenian Church to the best of his abilities with the help of God All Mighty.
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| Treasures of St. Etchmiadzin |
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From time immemorial the Armenian people have created cultural artifacts of
lasting value embodying popular artistic concepts. These objects reveal the
innate talents of anonymous masters, as well as their sense of beauty. This
cultural heritage is anchored on a coherent national base, and the functional
value of the objects themselves is always integrated with the esthetic
philosophy of the people.
Since
ancient times, Armenian artifacts have been created, not only in Armenia itself,
but also in many other parts of the world. Arts and crafts have always occupied
a prominent place in Armenian life. Wars, deportations, the collapse of various
Armenian states frequently disrupted the development of Armenian arts and
crafts. Despite such reversals, under new conditions and often in new locations,
Armenian artists and artisans continued to create works endowed with new
qualities and shapes, which nevertheless were based on principles of the
traditional national art.
At different periods in history, cities such as Ani (the bustling capital of
medieval Armenia), Dvin (the "grand capital"), the cities of the Cilician
Kingdom and Vaspurakan, Garin, Erzinga, Sebastia, Gesaria (Caesaria), Kemakh,
Evtogia, Marash, Aintab, Madras, New Julfa, Constantinople and others within
Anatolia were centers of Armenian craft production. The creations of Armenian
artisans found their way into European and Eastern markets via the great trade
routes. The ornamental use of these articles in royal courts set standards of
beauty and became a mark of wealth.
Throughout
the centuries, visitors and pilgrims to Holy Etchmiadzin who sought the
salvation of their souls, or to commemorate love ones, donated beautiful,
appropriately inscribed artifacts to the Mother See. Numerous such objects
arrived at Holy Etchmiadzin during deportations and massacres. After finding
refuge at the monastery, many of the exiles delivered to the Holy See relics
rescued at the expense of their untold sufferings. The collection of art objects
at the Mother See has also been enriched through donations received by the
various Catholicoses and other members of the Brotherhood. Acquired over the
centuries, these objects are preserved in the old and new Catholical residential
buildings and in the museum of the Mother Cathedral.
Recently, a new museum known as the Alex and Marie Manoogian Treasury has
been added to the aforementioned; it was officially dedicated on October I 1 ,
1982. The Manoogian Treasury occupies a very special place among museums that
display Armenian artifacts. The Treasury building (B. Arzumanian, architect),
with its colonnaded hall and portico, blends in with the architectural style of
the rest of the complex, and especially with the new Catholical palace. It is
specially designed as a museum structure, and is equipped with a unique lighting
system and spacious galleries.
Displayed there are representative examples of Armenian art objects,
paintings, manuscripts and ancient coins. Prominent among these are religious
objects such as gold and silver-encased relics, chalices, crosses, staffs, fans,
reliquaries, communion pyxes, censers, processional banners, carpets,
embroidered drapes and vestments. All these have esthetically significant
designs and express specific features of Armenian national culture.
Reliquaries
are presented in the established classical forms. The most prominent among these
is the "Holy Cross of Khotakerats" commissioned by Prince Eatchi Proshian in the
year 1300, which is significant not only because of its age but also for its
artistic embellishments and delicate engravings. Equally delicate decorations
are found on the chalices and the reliquaries which are sometimes studded with
precious gems. Gems add a unique richness to the art on crosses, manuscript
covers and stafls. All of these were created in centers of the Armenian
goldsmith's art, such as Sis, Adana, Vaspurakan (especially Van and Ardzgh),
Constantinople, Smyrna, Garin, Gesaria, Yerevan, Tiflis and New Julfa. The Garin
tradition was later carried on by the masters who moved to Akhaltzkha (presently
in Soviet Georgia) during the nineteenth century. Armenian goldsmiths were
masters of the techiniques of engraving, shaping, meshing, threading and
granulation. Belt buckles made at the same centers are predominantly in silver,
sometimes gilded and adorned with pearls.
Armenian, Greek, Roman, Parthian, Iranian, Byzantine, and other gold, silver
and copper ancient coins, exhibited of the first floor of the museum, testify to
the wide scope of international ties maintained by the Mother See throughout
history.
Among the most beautiful artifacts displayed are the embroideries. These
consist basically of delicate and exquisite patterns, peculiar to the art of
Armenian needlework.
The
religious vestments, such as chasubles, palliums, stoles, mitres, infulae,
amices and cuffs, have embroideries depicting dominical scenes such as the
pictures of the Mother of God, Christ, the evangelists, the apostles and saints.
The judicious selection of colorful threads, the gold and silver additions, the
hues of precious and semiprecious gems, and the strings of beautiful pearls
elevate these works to the level of true art. The inscriptions embroidered upon
them indicate that they were crafted both in Armenia and the Armenian
communities of the Diaspora (such as Marash, Aintab, Sunik, Cilicia, Cappadocia,
Astrakhan, Constantinople, and others).
The processional banner of St. Gregory the Illuminator, dating from 1448, is
prominently displayed in the Treasury, and is a masterpiece of Armenian
embroidery. The banner, which depicts the first Catholicos, as well as King
Trdat, and St. Hripsime, is an exquisite sample of creative portraiture.
Among the woven artifacts, the curtains are especially noteworthy. Prominent
among them is a main-altar curtain designed by Grigor Marzvanetsi, the famous
publisher-painter from Constantinople. Begun in 1705 and completed in 1714, this
is one of the important decorative items of the Treasury. The so-called "eagle
rugs" are of great artistic value. A salient example of this category is the
embroidered eagle rug of Catholicos Philipos (1751).
Each of these art objects has its specific style, embellishments and
canonical form, developed over the centuries. Yet the crosses on chasubles, the
portraits of evangelists embroidered on palliums, the dominical scenes on mitres
are also the results of the unique artistic talents and vivid imagination of the
creative masters. Embroideries executed by anonymous talents in convents and
orphanages are also represented among the artifacts in the Treasury. The superb
samples of im printed curtains are of special value. Worldrenowned Armenian rugs
and runners of Karabagh, woven during the eighteenth century, are also
displayed.
Armenian
miniature art attained its glorious culmination during the sixteenth century;
thereafter it was replaced by the new art forms, particularly painting, which
developed under European influences. The Treasury also features a valuable
collection of illuminated manuscripts, bearing popular and classical motifs,
originating from dif ferent periods and regions.
The Holy See of Etchmiadzin has sponsored Armenian artists throughout the
centuries. Naghash Hovnatan; his sons Hakob and Harutune; his grandson Hovnatan
Hovnatanian; the latter's son Mkrtum and grandson Hakob were among these
artists, as were many other anonymous masters. Hovnatan Hovnatanian (1730-1801)
distinguished himself by remodeling and embellishing the Cathedral of
Etchmiadzin (1765-1786). His portraits of historic figures and his thematic
paintings add a special luster to the Treasury. Hovnatan Hovnatanian founded yet
another distinctive artistic tradition in Armenia.
Thanks to the patriotism and generosity of Alex and Marie Manoogian, the
cultural undertakings of His Holiness Vazgen I have been brought to fruition,
and Armenia has been enriched with one more institution, the Alex and Marie
Manoogian Museum, where the treasures created by our talented ancestors will be
preserved for posterity.
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| The Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia |
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In the eleventh century the Seljuk Turks conquered Armenia, thus beginning a
long tenure of subjugation, including some of the darkest days faced by the
Armenian people.
Throughout
this period the Catholicosal Seat - the center of authority - frequently moved
from place to place, due to the constant state of political disorder and unrest.
The See was initially established in Etchmiadzin, Armenia, where it remained
until 485 when it was moved to Dvin by Catholicos Hovhannes Mandakuni. It
remained in Dvin for 442 years, after which it was moved to various locations
for shorter periods. At various times the See was located in Vaspurakan,
Aghtamar, Argina, Ani, Sebastia, Tavploor, Dzamtav, Shougher, Dzovk, and in 1147
in the castle of Romkla on the Euphrates River.
After the fall of the Armenian Kingdom of Ani, the Catholicate was
transferred from Armenia Major to Cilicia (Lesser Armenia) where a large
number of Armenians had settled and organized a dynamic center of ecclesiastical
and national life under an independent principality which eventually became
known as the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia.
In the year 1293, the Catholicate established its permanent seat in Sis, the
capital of the Cilician Armenian Kingdom. During this period there were attempts
to unite the Armenian Church with Rome. Prince Levon II especially favored this
union, as did some of the clergy. However, the church was able to remain
independent from Rome and maintain her orthodox tradition.
The Cilician Kingdom was destroyed by the Mameluks of Egypt in 1375, but the
Catholicate continued to maintain its Seat at Sis and assumed the leadership of
the nation.
During
the beginning of the fifteenth century there was a growing movement within lay
and religious circles to return the Catholicate to its original location,
Etchmiadzin, which it had left almost one thousand years earlier. Armenia Major
was in a relatively peaceful time and it was considered an appropriate time to
return to Etchmiadzin.
The Catholicos, Krikor Mousabegyantz, did not wish to abandon Sis at this
time since there was a large Armenian population in Cilicia. However, he did not
oppose elections in Etchmiadzin. so in 1441 an electoral assembly in Armenia
Major elected Kirakos Virapetsi, Catholicos of the Holy See of Etchmiadzin.
Therefore, from 1441 until the present time there have existed two
Catholicates, each without interruption, each with its own jurisdiction, each
independent. Even after the establishment of the Armenian Patriarchate of
Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks, more than fifteen dioceses were under
Cilician rule including Sis, Adana, Hadjin, Payas, Peria, Marash, Zeytoun,
Fernooz, Aintab, Antioch, Melitene, Yozgat, Gorun, Cyprus.
For five centuries the two catholicates, for the most part, worked
harmoniously with a spirit of cooperation. Any disputes between the two were
solved through consultation and compromise.
Both catholicates prospered and served their people. The eighteenth century
was a time of advancement for Armenian national and ecclesiastical life. The
nineteenth century was marked with an increase in participation of the laity in
church affairs, although lay members of the church have always had a strong
role. At this time historic Armenia was divided between Russia and Turkey. In
Russian Armenia a church constitution called Polojenye was adopted governing the
church. In Turkish Armenia a National Constitution was developed by the
Armenians and approved by the Ottomans in 1863. This constitution covered not
only church administration but the administration of the Armenian millet. This
basic constitution is in use today governing the Cilician See and the Armenian
communities in Lebanon, and other countries in the Middle East.
Coinciding with this cultural and national awakening of the Armenian
population in Turkey was the steady weakening of the Ottoman Empire. At various
times during the nineteenth century, the Ottoman government attacked the unarmed
Armenians in an attempt to stifle this national awakening.
With
the outbreak of World War I, Turkey unleashed a program of systematic
extermination of the entire Armenian population. In 1915 there was scarecely no
Armenian in Turkey who had not been affected. Men and young boys were forced
into work camps and eventually killed. Women, children, and elderly men were
sent on death marches. In all, more than a million and a half Armenians
perished.
The Armenian population in Cilicia had been largely evaculated after France
abandoned the region. The majority found refuge in countries in the Middle East,
primarily Syria and Lebanon which were under a French mandate.
The Cilician Catholicos, Sahag II (Khabayan), followed the exodus. From 1921
to 1929 he had no permanent residence. He travelled throughout the Middle East,
gathering orphans, visiting the sick, consoling the survivors.
In 1922 the American Near East Relief (later known as the Near East
Foundation) established an orphanage for Armenians on the shores of Lebanon
along the Mediterranean in a little suburban town called Antelias. There,
thousands of Armenian orphans were cared for by the Near East Relief until they
could be safely resettled elsewhere.
On February 28, 1928, Catholicos Sahag issued a letter of appeal asking the
people for guidance about the future of the Cilician See. Response from both lay
and religious leaders was overwhelmingly in support of the See. One year later,
Catholicos Sahag expressed the desire to establish the Great House of Cilicia in
Antelias at the site of the orphanage. The Near East Foundation was receptive to
the pontiff's request and granted the Antelias site to the Catholicate free of
charge for a period of five years. During these five years the Foundation also
provided considerable financial assistance. And so, on March 4, 1929, the Great
House of Cilicia was established in Antelias, Lebanon, where it continues today.
The buildings which had been used for the orphans were modified and repaired
for use as a church, administrative offices, residences for monks, a seminary,
and printing plant. Since January, 1932, the Catholicate has published its
official publication, Hask. After consultation with lay and religious members, a
Coadjutor, Papken Guleserian was appointed. He had previously been a teacher in
the Seminary in Jerusalem. He was consecrated under French authority in Aleppo
on May 29, 1930.
Catholicos
Sahag also invited Rev. Shahe Kasparian from the United States to act as Dean of
the Seminary, which was patterned after the famous Seminary of Armash in Turkey
where Patriarch Malachia Ormanian and Patriarch Yeghishe Tourian served as
deans. On June 16, 1935, the Cilician Seminary in Antelias proudly graduated its
first class of sixteen young scholars. Many years later one of the sixteen,
Zareh Payaslian, became Catholicos Zareh I.
With the end of the five-year period granted to the Catholicate, the Near
East Foundation agreed to sell the Antelias site to the Catholicate. The site
was purchased with generous contributions from several benefactors.
Unfortunately, both Catholicos-Coadjutor Papken I and Rev. Shahe Kasparian,
the outstanding dean of the Seminary, died at a young age, leaving the elderly
Catholicos Sahag to continue. The Archbishop of Cyprus, Bedros Sarajian, was
appointed vicar-general and succeeded Catholicos Sahag when he died in 1939 at
age 90.
Catholicos Bedros I died in 1940 serving only six months. During his reign as
vicar-general and the short period as Catholicos, the Cathedral, the memorial
chapel, and the seminary building were built.
Subsequently, Karekin Hovsepiantz, the Prelate in the United States, was
elected Catholicos and became Karekin I of Cilicia. However, because the world
was now in the midst of another great war, he could not travel to Lebanon until
1945.
His
reign was marked with a new period of spiritual and intellectual awakening with
emphasis on cultural activities. He encouraged the escalation of standards at
the Seminary and appointed Bishop Terenig Poladian to serve as its dean. He
encouraged the publication of much needed texts and the monthly review, Hask,
was enriched and enlarged. Qualified professors from around the world were
invited to join the faculty at the Seminary. During this period the Catholicate
sent many new priests to various parts of the world to serve Armenian parishes.
Karekin I died in June, 1952, and immediately thereafter Archbishop Khad
Achabahian was elected locum tenens, whose main function according to the
bylaws, was to prepare for the election of a new catholicos within six months.
From 1952 to 1956, the Electoral Assembly was called and postponed three
times. In October, 1955, Archbishop Achabahian resigned and Bishop Khoren
Paroyan was elected locum tenens by the General Assembly. At the same session,
the date of the election was set for February, 1956.
The Electoral Assembly convened February 14, 1956. Prior to the official
opening, the Catholicos of Etchmiadzin, His Holiness Vasgen I, requested a
postponement of the elections, in order to give him an opportunity to mediate an
agreement between the majority of the delegates and a minority group which
opposed the election. The Assembly convened and decided to postpone the election
for one week as His Holiness had requested. One week later, on February 20, the
Electoral Assembly met without a reconciliation between the majority and
minority opinions. His Holiness Vasgen I left Antelias without participating in
the election.
That
same morning Bishop Zareh Payaslian was elected Catholicos by an overwhelming
majority of the delegates. The young Catholicos assumed the high office
dedicating himself to the work of the church and nation, but was saddened by the
controversy surrounding his election and said: "You have placed upon my
shoulders a most heavy duty, perhaps the heaviest in the world. While others
possess worldly and coercive powers, you have given me only one kind of power
over this Holy See of the Armenian Church-spiritual power- and only one
weapon-the Holy Bible. With the deep faith that we have inherited from our
ancestors, we should believe that beyond the transitory powers and values, there
exist the moral values and the Holy Bible which are more basic, sublime, and
external".
Unfortunately, the reign of Catholicos Zareh, perhaps the gentlest and
holiest of Catholicoses, was marred with the electoral disagreements.
Nevertheless, the Seminary flourished, the church moved into its ecumenical
period, and young seminarians were sent to Europe and the United States to
further their studies.
In a courageous and bold step, His Holiness responded to a petition and
assumed religious leadership of a group of Armenian churches in the United
States whose members were without spiritual guidance since 1933. This act,
together with a somewhat similar situation concerning the dioceses in Iran and
Greece, further aggravated the already strained relationship between Cilicia and
Etchmiadzin.
Catholicos Zareh died in February, 1963, at age 48, following a massive heart
attack. Archbishop Khoren Paroyan was elected in May 1963 to succeed him. The
pontificate of Khoren I will be remembered for the extensive physical
improvements, not only within the Catholicate, but the construction of schools
and apartment buildings outside of Antelias. As Catholicos he personally
supervised the acquisition of land in Antelias, Beirut, Bikfaya, and Junieh.
He
personally supervised projects such as the establishment of the George Mardigian
School, the building of a mausoleum (dedicated to Catholicos Zareh), the
renovation of existing buildings, construction of the Veharan (residence and
administrative offices), new printing facilities, summer residence in Bikfaya, a
museum, and a library.
Catholicos Khoren continued and expanded the See's involvement in the
ecumenical movement. His efforts in that direction established the Great House
of Cilicia firmly within the international Christian family.
In 1963, His Holiness Khoren I and His Holiness Vasgen I met in Jerusalem
with the hope of beginning a process of reconciliation. At that meeting
Catholicos Khoren told Catholicos Vasgen, "Rest assured, Your Holiness, that the
Holy See of Cilicia is at your side and will stand as a buttress for the
existing and everlasting security of Etchmiadzin. Etchmiadzin will be
strengthened when we strengthen the heirarchical Sees and the dioceses of the
diaspora, and better organize the Armenian church there. Let us strengthen the
Catholicate of Cilicia and the Patriarchate of Jerusalem so that Etchmiadzin,
too, will always remain strong. We conclude our words with this declaration: Let
us love Etchmidzin, but let us not hate Cilicia. Let us love Cilicia, but let us
not hate Etchmiadzin".
In 1977, having suffered several heart attacks, and realizing that the
current conditions in Lebanon required the services of a younger person, His
Holiness called for the election of a Catholicos-Coadjutor. On May 22, 1977,
Archbishop Karekin Sarkissian, the Prelate of the Eastern United States and
Canada, was elected and consecrated one week later. He served as Coadjutor until
the death of Khoren I in 1983, at which time he became Catholicos.
Karekin II served the Cilician See until 1995 when on April 9 he was
consecrated as the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians in Holy
Etchmiadzin, becoming Karekin I.
Less
than three months later, Archbishop Aram Keshishian, the Prelate of Lebanon, was
elected and consecrated as the 45th Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia. His
Holiness Karekin I officiated during the consecration ceremony with the
participation of His Beatitude Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, Patriarch of
Jerusalem, and His Beatitude Archbishop Karekin Kazanjian, Patriarch of
Constantinople.
Throughout his years of service, Catholicos Aram I has been committed
to the ecumenical movement and he currently is the Moderator of the Central and
Executive Committees of the World Council of Churches-the highest elected office
of the WCC. His commitment to the Armenian church and nation is steadfast and he
has often spoken and written about the growth and renewel of the Armenian
church:
...By survival I do not mean a mere continuity, a barren existence, an
inward-looking estate, but a dynamic and creative existence for an effective
witness. We are not concerned with our physical survival as such. Nor are we
anxious only for the sheer perpetuation of the institutions that we have
inherited. We are deeply concerned with the very survival of Christian faith
that was transmitted to us as a sacred heritage, as the raison d'etre of our
existence.
The secret of survival lies in renewal. I know, we are still suspicious
of and reluctant to face changes. Very often we hesitate to introduce even
minor modifications into our traditions and institutions. No doubt, the
traditions and structures that we still preserve are of great importance to
us. But we can no longer afford the blind traditionalism which prevailed at
certain times in our respective histories as an absolute necessity for the
survival of our churches. We cannot remain imprisoned in a petrified
institutionalism that hampers the efficacy of Christian witness.
Catholicos Aram I Keshishian
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| Two Catholicosates within the Armenian Church |
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The
existence of two Catholicosates within the Armenian Church - the Catholicosate
of Etchmiadzin (the Catholicosate of All Armenians), Etchmiadzin, Armenia, and
the Catholicosate of Cilicia, Antelias, Lebanon,- is due to historical
circumstances. In the 10th century, when Armenia was devastated by Seljuks, many
Armenians left their homeland and came to settle in Cilicia where they
re-organized their political, ecclesiastical and cultural life. The
Catholicosate also took refuge in Cilicia. In 1375 the Armenian Kingdom of
Cilicia was destroyed. Cilicia became a battleground for hostile Seljuks,
Mamluks and other invaders. In the meantime Armenia was having a relatively
peaceful time. The deteriorating situation in Cilicia on one hand, and the
growing cultural and ecclesiastical awakening in Armenia on the other, led the
Bishops of Armenia to elect a Catholicos in Etchmiadzin. The latter was the
original seat of the Catholicosate, but it had ceased to function as
Catholicossal See after 485.
In 1441 a new Catholicos was elected in Etchmiadzin in the person of Kirakos
Virapetsi. At the same time Krikor Moussapegiants (1439-1446) was the Catholicos
of Cilicia. Since 1441, therefore, there have been two Catholicosates in the
Armenian Church with equal rights and privileges and with their respective
jurisdictions. The primacy of honor of the Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin has
always been recognized by the Catholicosate of Cilicia
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| The Multi-faceted role of the Catholicosate of Cilicia |
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The role of the Cilician Catholicosate has incorporated various dimensions
and spheres of the life of the Armenian people. It is important to identify some
of the major ones:
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Throughout its history, and especially in difficult times, the Catholicosate of
Cilicia has always been actively present in the life of the Armenian people. It
has played a leading and significant role particularly in the educational,
cultural and social spheres. After the Genocide it brought an important
contribution to the formation and the organization of the Armenian Diaspora.
- Being itself a victim of the Armenian Genocide, the Cilician Catholicosate
played a key role in the presentation of the Armenian Cause to international
circles. It also helped towards the awareness-building of its own people
concerning this crime against humanity.
- The Catholicosate brought a major contribution to the development of social
service. Not only it encouraged social projects at the diocesan level, but
initiated important social projects, mainly in Lebanon, Syria and Greece. The
orphanage in Jbeil (Bird's Nest), the Sanatorium, the popular housing project,
the Old Peoples' Homes in Lebanon, Syria and Greece, are directly administered
by the Catholicosate.
- The contribution of the Cilician Catholicosate to the flourishing of the
cultural life in the Armenian Diaspora is significant, indeed. The publishing
house of the Catholicosate has each year published hundreds of titles. An
important number of publication funds have been established; book exhibits and
fairs, a great number of conferences, debates, seminars, cultural meetings and
concerts have been organized annually. The construction of a Museum in 1994 and
the establishment of an important Library are eloquent manifestations of the
growing interest of the Catholicosate in the promotion of the Armenian spiritual
and cultural values.
"Cilicia"
museum treasures are displayed on four floors. They comprise mainly liturgical
sacred relics, vestments and vessels brought from the Catholicosate of Cilicia,
in Sis, illustrated manuscripts, coins, traditional Armenian artworks, carpets,
archeological objects and works by Armenian painters and sculptors. The
masterpieces of this collection are undoubtedly the Gospel of "Partzerpert"
copied and illuminated in Hromgla-Cilicia, in 1248, and "The Bible of Vosgan"
printed in Amsterdam, in 1666.
"Khatchig Babigian" Library has a rich collection of 80,000 volumes and 2000
old-prints. It has also an important series of old and new periodicals. This
museum-library is dedicated to the 1700th Anniversary of the Proclamation of
Christianity in Armenia.
- The Theological Seminary has played a pivotal role in the witness of the
Catholicosate. 250 teachers, 130 married priests, 75 vardapets, 30 bishops and
archbishops, and the last four Catholicoi have graduated from the Seminary.
The
history of our Seminary is inseparably interwoven with the history of the
Armenian people. This is also true with the Armenian Church who has always kept
pace with the rhythm of changing circumstances of the life of the Armenian
people.
After the Armenian Genocide in 1915, the Catholicosate of Cilicia was exiled
together with its people from its centuries-old homeland and in 1930 took refuge
in Antelias, Lebanon. One of the priority concerns of Catholicos Sahak II, has
been the foundation of Seminary. Thus late in 1930, through his untiring efforts
a Theological Seminary was established in Antelias. In the course of time the
Seminary grew qualitatively and quantitatively. All the Catholicoi pay a
particular attention to the Seminary, making it "the heart" and "the backbone"
of the Catholicosate of Cilicia.
The Theological Seminary brought a significant contribution towards the
evangelistic, missionary and educational task as well as to the spiritual
renewal of the Armenian Church. Thousands of people, both clergy and laity, were
formed in the Seminary. It was a very tough responsibility for the Seminary to
struggle against the odds of a Diaspora situation, to wrestle with the
challenges of changing times, and to meet the growing needs and demands of the
Armenian people scattered all around the world. The Antelias Seminary took this
challenge with supreme courage and profound sense of responsibility.
It is with this vision in heart and perspective in mind, that His Holiness
Aram I, immediately after his election as Catholicos and within the context of
his new priorities, gave a particular attention to the Seminary. His Holiness
clearly stated that the Seminary will remain "a top priority" for him and he
will do his utmost to give a new vitality and efficiency to the activities of
the Seminary.
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Ecumenism has remained one of the main fields of the work of the Catholicosate.
Since the fifties, its representatives, both clergy and lay people, have taken
an active part in the meetings and conferences of the World Council of Churches.
The ecumenical engagement of the Catholicosate was given a more organized form
after 1962, when it became a member of this world family of churches. During the
General Assembly held in Nairobi in 1975, Bishop Karekin Sarkissian (the actual
Catholicos of Etchmiadzin) was elected a Vice-Moderator of the Central Committee
(a position he held until 1983). At the last General Assembly in Canberra 1991,
another member of the Catholicosate, Archbishop Aram Keshishian, was elected
Moderator of the Central and Executive Committees (term ending in 1998), thus
becoming the first Orthodox, the first Middle-Easterner and the youngest in age
to reach the highest leadership position in the history of the World Council of
Churches. The Catholicosate sent observers to the Second Vatican Council. The
visits of the Catholicoi to Popes, as well as joint declarations, meetings and
consultations with representatives of the Roman Catholic Church greatly
contributed to the development of brotherly relations and theological dialogue
between the Armenian Church and the Roman Catholic Church on international,
regional and local levels. The relations of the Catholicosate with the churches
of the Middle-East have always been fraternal. As one of the initiators of the
ecumenical movement in the region, the Catholicosate took an active part in the
foundation of the Middle East Council of Churches in 1974. The Catholicosate has
played a key role in promoting the theological dialogue between the two families
of the Orthodox tradition: Eastern and Oriental. It has had a significant part
in the development of a more organized collaboration among the Oriental Orthodox
Churches particularly after the meeting of the Heads of these Churches in Addis
Abeba, in 1965. The Catholicosate of Cilicia continues with growing impetus and
interest its ecumenical relations with the Anglican Church and the other
Churches of the Protestant tradition as well as with various ecumenical
organizations.
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Having its headquarters in the Arab world, the Catholicosate of Cilicia has
brought its full participation in the major events of this part of the world. It
has taken part in the struggle for independence of the Arab countries, mainly in
Lebanon and Syria. It has strongly supported the Palestinian cause and worked
for a just, comprehensive and permanent solution of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
- Being a firm believer and defender of co-existence and dialogue, the
Catholicosate of Cilicia has taken part in all efforts aiming at the
strengthening of a shared and harmonious common life among religions, societies,
cultures and civilizations in the Middle East.
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| The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem |
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Though historically unproved, it is a generally accepted tradition that
subsequent to the Ascension of Christ the apostles assembled at Jerusalem and
elected James the Younger as first " bishop " and conferred upon him the
episcopal ordination. It is believed that he established his seat at his own
residence on Mount Zion, which is thought to have been located on the present
site of the Armenian cathedral of St. James. According to Armenian tradition,
after the destruction of the monastery in which the body of the martyred apostle
James the Younger was originally buried, his relics were removed to the
cathedral of St. James and placed on the spot where the principal altar now
stands. This cathedral is also believed to be the site on which the head of the
apostle James the Great, brother of John the Evangelist, was interred. These
traditions are usually adduced to underscore the Armenian institution's historic
associations with the two apostles, whose relics they have jealously guarded for
many centuries.
However,
this does not fully explain the origin of the Armenian see of Jerusalem. In the
earliest Christian centuries the ecclesiastical affairs of the new faith were
supervised by duly chosen regional bishops, whose authority was recognized by
all Christians within his jurisdictional bounds regardless of race or language.
In the course of time five of these regional bishoprics, Alexandria, Antioch,
Rome, Constantinople, and Jerusalem, were elevated to the dignity of
patriarchates, each enjoying prerogatives within its designated sphere, but
still within the framework of the one Universal Church of Christ. The various
heretical movements and the rivalries among these hierarchical sees, however,
eventually disrupted the unity of the Universal Church. With the doctrinal
disputes brought about by the Christological decisions of the Council of
Chalcedon in 451 this disunity developed into a schism.
It is important to note that the Church of Jerusalem did not immediately
align itself with the creed of this council, and the schism between the
monophysites and dyophysites did not occur there until about the middle of the
6th century, even though the Armenian church synod held at Dwin in 506
categorically rejected the dyophysite Christology of Chalcedon. It was only the
persecution of monophysite Christians by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I and
the Chalcedonian Greek patriarch of Jerusalem that caused the Armenian clergy of
the Holy Land to sever their ecclesiastical ties with the hierarchy of
Jerusalem. Many monophysite clergy abandoned their monasteries at Jerusalem and
sought refuge in other regions of the Holy Land and in neighbouring countries.
Those who remained formed an Armenian see independent of the Greek.
Henceforward, the see of Jerusalem was split into the Greek patriarchate
exercising jurisdiction over the dyophysite Christians regardless of nationality
or language, and the Armenian hierarchy having authority over the monophysite
communities, notably the Jacobite Syrian, Coptic and Abyssinian.
With the Arab conquest of Jerusalem, the Armenian see of the Holy City
attained a stature which perhaps equaled the Greek patriarchate, whose
association with the Byzantine empire rendered it suspect in the eyes of the
conquerors. Its position was further enhanced under the Latin kingdom of
Jerusalem (1099-1187), and especially under Saladin who, as an avowed enemy of
the Latins and ever suspicious of the Greeks, found it expedient to endow the
Armenians of the Holy Land with greater privileges. Moreover, the institution
enjoyed, particularly in the l2th and l3th centuries, the active interest of the
Armenian kingdom of Cilicia whose royal family and princes bestowed on it
munificent gifts.
Subsequent
to the transfer of the supreme pontificate to Cilicia and until the beginning of
the l4th century, the see of Jerusalem came into closer contact with the
pontificate, which in spiritual and even administrative matters took a more
direct part in its affairs. The increasingly strong pro-Latin tendencies
manifested by the Cilician royal family and subservient catholicoses, however,
began to have a disruptive influence. Obviously dictated by political and
military expediency, these efforts had the effect of bringing the Armenian
church under papal control. The official Latinophile policy culminated in the
adoption by the church synod, held at Sis in 1307, of a number of canons and
rites which ran counter to the traditional tenets and practices of the Armenian
church. Attempts to have these decisions implemented by the clergy beyond the
limits of Cilicia met with the determined opposition of traditionalists both in
the Armenian provinces and in the Holy Land.
In contrast to the political and ecclesiastical authorities in Cilicia, the
Armenian see of Jerusalem always remained the bastion of Armenian orthodoxy.
Among other reasons, this can be explained by the fact that, unlike in Cilicia,
the Armenians at Jerusalem did not, and had no cause to, entertain ideas of
protecting political interests through European assistance. When the Cilician
authorities sought to compel the see of Jerusalem to adopt and implement the
decisions of the synod of 1307 the incumbent Bishop Sargis and the Jerusalem
clergy not only categorically refused to conform, but in the year 1 311 severed
their ties with the pontificate of Sis...
[Yet,] despite the official split in 1311, the patriarchate of Jerusalem
remained within the framework of the see of Sis until 1441, that is, so long as
the hierarchy at Sis represented the supreme pontificate of the Armenian church.
With the pontificate's transfer in that year the see of Jerusalem recognized the
supreme spiritual authority of Etchmiadzin. It is equally important to note that
... because of its custodianship of the Holy Places the patriarchate of
Jerusalem continued to have a uniquely prominent position in the eyes of the
Armenian people as a whole - second in importance, from the spiritual
standpoint, only to the apostolic see of Etchmiadzin.
Custodianship of the Holy Places
By
the 7th century, when Jerusalem fell to the Muslim Arabs, the Christian Church
had already been divided into various sects. Nevertheless the see of Jerusalem
still had only one patriarch, and all Christians, regardless of their ethnic
origins, doubtless shared in common worship at the Holy Places, arranging among
themselves a schedule for their services...
With the arrival of the Crusaders and the establishment of the Latin kingdom
of Jerusalem a far-reaching change took place. As the cleavage between the
Franks and the indigenous Christians became more and more pronounced, the Latin
element gained praedominium (paramountcy) in all the Holy Places at the experise
of the other Christian sects, notably the Greek Orthodox, whose patriarch
finally retired to Constantinople. Nevertheless, according to the account of
Theodoric, there were still in 1172 representatives of the other churches
officiating in the Holy Sepulcher, though "differing in language and in their
manner of conducting divine service".
During the Frankish hegemony many Christians, mostly Armenian, from Antioch,
Edessa, Tarsus, Cappadocea, Cilicia, Mesopotamia, and Syria, flocked into
Jerusalem, some to establish permanent residence there and others performing
pilgrimages. As a result of this influx and because of the close relationship
between the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem and the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia, the
Armenian position in the Holy Places and their private monastic institutions
gairied a new revival of strength, vitality, and splendour. The monastery and
cathedral of St. James on Mount Zion became the principal headquarters of the
Armenian ecclesiastical institutions in the Holy Land.
Saladin's
occupation of Jerusalem in 1187 and the fall of the Latin kingdom marked another
turning point in the fortunes of the three major custodians of the Holy Places.
The Latin-Orthodox rivalry for control of the dominical sanctuaries began as
early as 1188, when the Byzantine Emperor Isaac Angelus allied himself with
Saladin to secure the privilege. Nevertheless, for a century or so, even after
the fall of Jerusalem, Latin supremacy was maintained. As attested by the
treaties made with the Muslims, the Crusaders sought to secure the position of
the Latins exclusively and barely tolerated the performance of other rites in
the Holy Places. The Franciscan order, established in Jerusalem in 1230, was the
official representative of Roman Catholicism in the Holy Places, with
headquarters in the Cenacle on Mount Zion. With the fall of Acre in 1291,
however, undisputed Latin supremacy came to an end. The ever deepening
estrangement between Rome and the church of Byzantium, and particularly the
sacking and plunder of Constantinople by Crusaders in 1204, accentuaded the
rivalry between the two parties in Jerusalem, which henceforth became their
battlefield.
The Armenian Patriarch Abraham and his leading clerical associates are said
to have hastened to pledge their loyalty to the victorious Saladin and to pay
him the prescribed poll tax. The patriarch requested the sultan to reaffirm all
privileges previously guaranteed to the community in the charters allegedly
granted to the Armenians by the Prophet and by the Caliphs Umar and Ali. The
text of the charter issued by the sultan reconfirmed the " sacred and benevolent
acts " of his revered predecessors. The sultan enjoined that not only his
successors but also the Muslims generally should faithfully honour the new pact
granted by him...
The records involving the control of the Holy Places and intercommunity
rivalries and disputes are much more abundant beginning with the dominion of the
Mameluke sultans of Egypt. Under Mameluke rule the seemingly loyal and
trustworthy Armenians, and their communicant Copts, Syrians, and Abyssinians,
enjoyed relatively greater freedom in the exercise of their religious rites. The
special privileges granted to them enabled not only the perservation but also
the extension of their sanctuaries, monasteries, and other possessions, after
due payment, of course, of regular taxes and bribes...
The
four centuries of Ottoman dominion in the Holy Land produced a marked change in
the fortunes of the various Christian communities in the Holy Places. From the
second half of the l6th century until the l9th century time and again the
praedominium alternated, although generally the Greek Ortodox secured the
balance of power in their favour at the expense of the Latins. Since the Latins
were subjects of powers with whom the Ottoman empire was constantly engaged in
war, the sultan's Greek and Armenian subjects in particular were treated with
favour at the expense of the " Franks ". During these centuries the possession
of the Holy Places almost always remained in the forefront of international
politics. The European Latin powers, especially France, supported Latin
interests; the Orthodox cause was championed by the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople and, beginning in 1774, by Russia. The Armenians, deprived of
such political protection, had ,to rely on their own resources, particularly
their patriarchate and influential secular magnates in the capital. The Porte
generally was inclined to defend its subject communities from Latin
encroachments in the Holy Places, but the Catholics nonetheless could, through
the payment of appropriate fees and bribes, secure concessions... The strongest
and almost continuous challenge to the Armenians and their holdings in the Holy
Land came from the Greek community, despite the fact that the charters issued in
March 1517 to the Armenian and Greek patriarchates by the Ottoman conqueror of
Jerusalem, Sutan Selim I, did no more than sanction the status quo...
[Not to enter into details, it should only be noted that] during the four
centuries of Ottoman dominion the rivalry and interminable struggles among the
major guardians for aggrandizement at the expense of each other were marked by
an almost fanatical zeal and frequently were attended by violence. The community
disputes invariably involved the local and central authorities, who were called
upon to adjudicate between contending Christians. The role which the Ottomans
played in these cases was sometimes motivated by considerations of justice, law,
and order. More often than not, however, the Ottomans played one community
against the other. Ouite frequently they were influenced by factors extraneous
to the merit of the issues, chiefly the possibility of financial gain and the
requirements of international diplomacy.
The
status quo in the Holy Places as enunciated in the 1850's and as reconfirmed
time and again in subsequent years was the sum of a historical evolution whose
beginnings are traceable to the early centuries of Christianity, and as a result
it established a most complicated network of rights and privileges. This was
made more problematical by the difficulty of defining and regulating possessory
rights, the doubtful validity of earlier contradictory edicts, and the mutual
distrust, suspicion, and jealousy of the rival communities. Yet the Ottoman
government was able to maintain the status quo, and no appreciable change in the
holdings and privileges of the major custodians occurred after 1850.
From the standpoint of political protection and material resources, the
Armenian community was considerably weaker than the much more powerful Latin and
Greek rites. As head of the monastic congregation of St. James and as a chief
custodian, the primary function of the Armenian patriarch of Jerusalem was to
safeguard not only the private institutions of his relatively small community
but also its age-old privileges in the commonly held sanctuaries. In this most
difficult task the patriarch relied upon the moral and material support of the
local monastics and secular community, the other hierarchical sees of the
Armenian church, pilgrims, and the Armenian people as a whole. The local
monastics had to be especially vigilant. The safeguarding of their status in the
Holy Places and other interests necessitated the prompt and unfailing
performance of religious services, especially in the commonly held sanctuaries,
at precisely designated places and times, for any laxity would certainly result
in losses by default to the rival parties. The Armenian tenacity in the Holy
Land is impressive testimony to the national resolve of the Armenian people.
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| The monastery of St. James |
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The Armenian Monastery of St. James occupies the entire summit of Mount Zion,
with an area of about 150,000 sq. m (300 acres). It is one-sixth of the entire
area of the Old City of Jerusalem within the walls. Apart from the cathedral of
St. James, there are many buildings and historic sites located within the
monastery.
Entering
the convent and passing through the first door on the left, one comes to the
courtyard of the cathedral of St. James, which, in the past, served as the
resting place of the Armenian patriarchs and members of the monastic community.
Some of the tombstones are very interesting records of the history of the
monastery and the patriarchate. Among the oldest is that of ... " Bishop Abraham
and Patriarch of the Apostolic See of Jerusalem during the reign of Sultan
Saladin 1192 A.D. " Besides these, there are many old khatchkars, beautifully
designed cross-stones dating back to different periods.
The St. James Cathedral stands on the spot where [according to tradition ]
the head of St. James the Major, brother of John, who was beheaded by Herod
Agrippa in 44 A.D., was buried (under the northern wall of the present
church)... The remains of St. James the Less (the first bishop of Jerusalem)
were trasferred from the Cedron valley in the 4th century, and buried in his
home. At present, both graves are within the cathedral.
According
to tradition; a chapel was built on the spot of the decapitation of St. James
the Major, as early as the 1st century. However, there are many evidences that
the foundations of the first church built upon these sacred spots were laid in
the 4th century. , The original church was partly destroyed by the Persians in
614, repaired in the 8th century, finally reconstructed in the 1lth century.
Numerous additions were made on the main body of the church during these
reconstructions. During a minor restoration work in 1957, a wail dating back to
the 4th century was found in the cathedral. According to an inscription, the
oldest part of the cathedral is the portion which falls directly under the
northern wall of the present construction, including the chapel of the
decapitation of St. James the Major and the chapel of St. Minas. The cathedral,
with its arches resting on four massive columns, the magnificent gilded altars,
the old paintings, the precious Kutahya blue tiles of the walls and the shafts
of light piercing through the high windows of the dome, has an atmosphere of
religious fervour. Its length is 24 m, with a width of 17.5 m. It is divided by
four pillars into three aisles, which support the main dome of remarkable
structure, set on eight interlaced arches. All the walls and the massive
columns, from the floor to a height of 2 m, are covered by blue tiles made by
Armenians from Kutahya in the l7th century.
At the entrance to the Cathedral, a large plaque marks the site of the grave
of Jerusalem's 94th Armenian Patriarch, the late Archbishop Guregh Israelian.
One of the city's most popular and charismatic men of the cloth. Israelian died
in 1949, of a broken heart it is said, after witnessing the intolerable
suffering of his war-ravaged flock, caught in the crossfire of war-time
hostilities. More than once, he would cradle in his own arms, the
shrapnel-shredded body of an Armenian who had been the latest casualty in the
unrelenting war.
Another
unpretentious grave sits under an archway a few paces away, at the other end of
the vestibule. This one is the last resting place of the Armenian Patriarch,
Abraham, a contemporary of Saladdin.
Upon entering the Cathedral, one is immediately captivated by the interior
bedecked by centuries old "ganteghs" (oil lamps) dangling from the soaring
vaulted dome and tallow candles dotting the three altars. The only source of
light, the oil lamps, are still lovingly tended by altar boys who replenish them
with oil at regular intervals. The candles, made by the Patriarchate's own
candle-maker, try vainly to dispel the elemental darkness that pervades the
church, imparting a mystical significance to Armenian church rites.
To the left, within the north wall of the cathedral, is the chapel of St.
Macarius, bishop of Jerusalem. Further on is the entrance to the chapel of St.
Minas, which is considered to be the oldest part of the cathedral, dating back
to the 4th c,entury. The chapel of the Decapitation of St. James comes next.
Further on, another door leads to the chapel of St. Stephen, which serves also
as the vestry of the cathedral. In this chapel is the baptismal pond.
The cathedral has three main altars : the one in the centre is the high
altar, which is named after St. James the Less; the one on the right after St.
John the Baptist, and that on the left after Virgin Mary. All the ornaments and
wooden panels were decorated and gilded in 1721. A passage in the southern wall
of the cathedral leads up to the upper chapels of St. Paul and St. Peter, which
are above the altars of Virgin Mary and St. John the Baptist. This passage has
two very ancient doors; the most interesting is the one which is behind the
outer door,built in 1371 with great artistic taste.
Near
to this door, and on the south wall of the cathedral, is the entrance to the
narthex of the l2th century. The outside arcades have been walled up since 1633,
but the beautiful portal can well be recognized. This is called the Church of
St. Etchmiadzin. On its walls there are many tile pictures (ceramics)
representing the life of Christ and biblical stories, reproduced from ancient
Armenian manuscripts. These tiles are mostly dated 1718 and are believed to be
the work of Kutahya Armenians. From this church sixteen steps lead up to the
upper room of the cathedral, erected in 1835. During the construction of this
vestibule, many khatchkars and tombstones were discovered, the oldest of which
dates back to 11 51: it can be seen at present on the west wall of the cathedral
facing the courtyard.
The Church of St. Theodoros was built by the Armenian King Hethum of Cilicia
in 1266, in memory of his son Thoros who was killed in the battle of Mari
against the Egyptians. It is a beautiful church, 18 m long and 9 m wide. All the
walls are covered with Kutahya tiles. There are also some very old and
historically interesting khatchkars. In this church is the Library of Armenian
Manuscripts. There are, in all, 3,815 manuscripts. Bishop Norayr Bogharian was
the custodian of this library. He has prepared a complete and detailed catalogue
of the manuscripts in eight volumes.
On the south-western corner of the courtyard of the cathedral of St. James, a
stairway leads up to the residence of the Armenian Patriarch and the
administrative offices of the Patriarchate. Leaving the courtyard of the
cathedral through the west door by turning left, one walks along an arched
passage and soon comes to the main courtyard of the monastery. On the south and
west of this courtyard are the buildings of the old Printing Press, established
in 1833 by Patriarch Zacharias, thus having the distinction of being the first
press in the Holy Land. It is now the main provider of Armenian religious and
liturgical books to churches spread all over the world. The Patriarchate
publishes its own official bimonthly in Armenian, called " Sion ", the first
issue of which was printed in 1866, in the same printing press.
Crossing
the main courtyard of the monastery to the south, and passing through a small
door and a narrow lane, one finally arrives at a small courtyard, around which
the cultural institutions of the Patriarchate are located. The Gulbenkian
Library was founded in 1929, through the generous donation of the late Calouste
Gulbenkian, in memory of his parents. It contains almost 50,000 volumes, of
which 20,000 are in Armenian, the rest being in foreign languages, mainly in
English and French. It receives about 300 different kinds of periodicals. It has
also a complete collection of Armenian newspapers and magazines, including the
first Armenian newspaper called " Azdarar ", which was published in Madras
(India) in 1794. It has one of the finest collections of old printed books in
Armenian, including a rare copy of the first one dated 1512 and printed in
Venice.
Close to the Gulbenkian Library is the the Edward and Helen Mardigian Museum
of Armenian Art and Culture housing historical and religious artifacts including
precious rugs, Armenian coins and scraps of evidence of the presence at the site
of the Tenth Legion of Rome.
The Theological Seminary is one of the very important institutions of the
patriarchate, where young candidates for priesthood are trained and educated. It
was established in 1843, and has many buildings for the use of the seminarians.
Recently, under the administration of Patriarch Torkom Manoogian major
renovations have been undertaken to upgrade the cleric quarters and various
parts of the Seminary. The new Theological Seminary complex, (a gift of the late
Armenian-American philanthropists Alex and Marie Manoogian) which is found
outside the main Patriarchate, opposite the main gate of the Patriarchate,
houses a new printing press, a large hall used for graduation ceremonies and
various other events, a dormitory which can accommodate over 100 young men, who
readily enter the service of the Church and the congregation, classrooms and
various other administrative offices.
There
have been many educational institutions established by the Patriarchate in the
past, for the education of the Armenian young generation in Jerusalem. It could
be noted that the first girls' school in Jerusalem was the Gayaniants Armenian
School, established in 1863. St. Targmantchats School was established and built
in 1929, with kindergarten and elementary classes. The secondary classes were
added in 1953.
Leaving the building of this National School, and going down some steps, we
reach the Convent of St. Archangels (House of Annas), which is also called in
Arabic Deir-el-Zeituneh (convent of the Olive Tree) named after the walled up
tree outside the church, and to which, so it is piously held, Christ was tied on
the night when he was brought to be judged by Annas, the high Priest. According
to tradition, there has been a chapel built on this site as early as the 4th
century, in honour of the Angels who, according to the expression of the Church
Fathers, covered their faces, when their God was struck by a servant of the high
priest; this happened, by tradition, in the house of Annas. However, the present
church was built in the l2th century. The Armenian king Leo III of Cilicia
repaired the church in 1286, when the outer wall of the convent was built.
Entering the convent by a vestibule, one may turn right to enter the church by a
portico, on the walls of which can be seen many khatchkars: the oldest one is
dated 1362. At present, the church of St. Archangels is the parish church of the
Armenians in Jerusalem. Also, within the walls of its grounds lived the Armenian
Sisters of the monastery.
It is worth mentioning that a small Armenian community (about thousand and
five hundred or so) reside within the walls of St. James Armenian convent.
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| The concept of the Millet |
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When
Constantinople fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453 the Ottoman Sultans, following
the precedent set by the Arab Caliphs after the conquest of Palestine, Syria and
Egypt, did not interfere with the religious and communal organisation of their
non-Moslem subjects. On the contrary, they officially recognised the religious
chiefs, whether Patriarchs or Grand Rabbis, as the heads of their respective
communities or millets. The sultans confused nationality with religion, or
rather treated religion as the criterion of nationality. Thus the Oecumenical
Patriarch was invested with delegated authority over the Greek or Roman nation
(called Rum-milleti), which included all members of the Eastern Orthodox Church
under Ottoman rule, regardless of their race - whether Greek, Serb, Bulgar or
Vlach (Slavs from Wallachia) - who were all lumped together under the
designation 'Rum'.
Sultan Mehmet II conquered a depopulated and plundered city which needed
transforming into the capital of the Ottoman Empire. Not only were Turks brought
in as the conquering élite, but settlers from every corner of the Empire,
including enslaved Greeks from the newly captured Aegean islands, Jewish
refugees from the Spanish Inquisition and Armenians from Anatolia and the city
of Kaffa in the Crimea. Each nationality established its own quarter, the
Armenians3 settling at Sulumanastir (Psamathia, later Samatya, recently
Kocamustafapasa).
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| The Armenian Patriarch (1720) |
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In 15th century documents the Armenian population is given as less than two
thousand in Constantinople and three hundred in Galata but their number
continued to grow steadily from the reign of Murad III (1574-1595). After the
capture of Erivan and Tabriz, they immigrated from the regions of the Iranian
border and, at the beginning of the seventeenth century from the Caucasus.
During the Celali insurrections in Anatolia, they had to leave their homes and
take refuge in Constantinople. In 1673 there were 8,000 Armenian households in
the city, most of them on the Marmara shores, but there were also Armenian
quarters in Balat, between Topkapi and Edirnekapi, near the walls, and in
Üsküdar (Scutari), while small groups mixed with the Greeks in the Bosphorus
villages. During the reign of Murad IV (1623-1640) there was an order of the
Council of State that the Armenians should be sent home, but this was probably
never enforced. They were expert builders, stone cutters and traders and had a
strong hold on eastern trade, and money to organise caravans to the east. In
1895 the Armenians in Constantinople were estimated at some 180,000 but in the
incident following the Armenian seizure of the Ottoman Bank in Galata (August
1896) some 6,000 Armenians were slaughtered in a well-organised massacre in the
capital. At the beginning of the twentieth century there were 104,856 Armenians
out of a population of 1,150,000.
Like
the Greek Patriarchate, the Armenians suffered severely from intervention by the
state in their internal affairs. Although there have been 115 pontificates since
1461, there have only been 84 individual Patriarchs. Karapet II served five
separate pontificates (1676-79, 1680-81, 1681-84, 1686-87 and 1688-89). In 1896
Patriarch Matteos III Izmirlian was deposed and exiled to Jerusalem by Sultan
Abdul Hamid II for boldly denouncing the 1896 massacre and was only permitted to
return in 1908 when the Sultan himself was deposed. The national Constitution
granted to Armenians (Sahmanadrootiun) by Sultan Abdul-Aziz in 1861, which had
been abrogated for nearly twenty years, was also restored.
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| The Armenian Genocide and its aftermath |
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Although the Armenian community was accorded the title of "most loyal nation"
by the Ottoman sultans, growing nationalism and fear of their minorities led to
the rise of persecution and genocidal slaughter in the latter part of the
nineteenth century. In 1878 the Congress of Berlin compelled the Sultan to
promise protection to the Armenians, who were suffering at the hands of their
bitter enemies, the Kurds and Circassians, who were receiving encouragement from
the Ottoman authorities. The efforts of the Great Powers to protect the
Armenians proved ineffectual and it gradually became clear to the Ottoman
authorities that they would not offer any serious intervention. Massacres in
1894-96, 1904 (Mush), 1908 (Van) and 1909 (Adana) claimed 200,000 Armenian
deaths. During 1915-1918 over 1,000,000 Armenians were systematically
slaughtered; several hundred thousand perished in the course of the Turkish
attempt to extend the genocide to Russian Armenia in the Transcausus in the
Spring and Summer of 1918; and in the Autumn of 1920 when the provisional
government in Ankara's ordered General Karabekir's army to physically annihilate
Armenia.
In 1914 the Patriarchate exercised authority over 55 dioceses or territorial
districts, comprising some 1,778 parishes; 1,634 churches and an official
membership of 1,390,000. This included the dioceses of Cyprus, Bulgaria,
Roumania and Greece. Following the Great War and the Armenian Genocide all but
the Patriarchate and bishops appointed to administer different quarters of
Istanbul were spent away. The Catholicosate of Aghtamar, which had been vacant
since 1895, was absorbed into the Patriarchate of Constantinople.4 By 1922 the
Armenian population of Turkey had shrunk to 281,000, of whom 100,000 lived in
Istanbul.
After the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the secularist Republic of Turkey
abrogated the Sahmanadrootiun and deprived the Patriarchate of properties and
institutions. The Turkish government, wishing to weaken the spiritual authority
of the Supreme Catholicos in Etchmiadzin attempted to dissolve the Patriarchate
of Constantinople and attach it to the Cilician Catholicate and the Jerusalem
Patriarchate. Patriarch Zaven Ter Eghiayan (1913-1915) was sent into exile to
Baghdad and Catholicos Sahak II Khabayan (1902-1939) of Cilicia was appointed
Catholicos-Patriarch of all Armenians in Turkey, with his see at St. James's
monastery in Jerusalem. After the Armistice this uncanonical arrangement was
reversed and Patriarch Zaven returned to Istanbul for a second term (1919-1922),
but was finally driven into exile in Bulgaria.
The
Turkish government remained ambiguous about the position of the Patriarchate,
refusing to confirm the elections of subsequent Patriarchs, yet recognising them
as having been elected as such by the Armenian National Assembly. Patriarchs
Mesrop Naroyan (1927-1944) and Karekin I Khachatoorian (1951-1961) were both
elected after several years' interregnum. Today the government's only official
involvement on being notified of a Patriarch having been newly elected is to
send him an official letter signed by all members of the cabinet, authorising
him to wear his official robes in public.
This compares favourably with other Christian communities in Turkey: 12,000
Syrian Orthodox; 4,000 Roman Catholics; 3,000 Protestants; 2,000 Greek Orthodox
and 2,000 Arab (Antiochian) Orthodox. The clergy comprise three bishops
(including the Patriarch), one archimandrite, three hieromonks; twenty-six
married priests and thirty-two full deacons. The full deacons all follow
suitable secular occupations (commerce is not regarded as suitable) and serve as
non-stipendiary ministers.
A particularly restrictive piece of Turkish republican legislation requires
that the Patriarch, with all bishops and priests serving in the Patriarchate,
are required by law to be Turkish citizens who have also been born in Turkey.
Outside the Patriarchate of Constantinople, today there are only four Armenian
bishops who were born in Turkey.
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| The Armenian Patriarchate |
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Patriarch Karakin II Kazandjian was elected by the National Assembly
in October 1990. Born in Istanbul in 1927, His Beatitude studied at the
Patriarchal Academy and the Patriarchal Seminary in Jerusalem, where he was
ordained to the priesthood in 1950. After serving (1950-1951) as Secretary to
the Patriarchate of Jerusalem during a long interregnum, he returned to serve as
a parish priest in Istanbul from 1952-54. From 1954-1957 her served as first
Dean of Holy Cross Patriarchal Seminary, which had been opened by Patriarch
Karekin I at Üsküdar (Scutari), but which was closed by the Turkish government
in 1971, at the same time as the Greek Orthodox community lost the use of their
famous Seminary at Halki. From 1957-59 His Beatitude served as NCO in the
Turkish Armed Forces before becoming parish priest of the Armenian Church in
Washington 1959-1966. He was raised to the position of Grand (Dzairaguin)
Vardapet at Jerusalem in 1961. He was recalled from America to be consecrated as
Primate of Australia and New Zealand and Patriarchal Delegate for the Far East,
which took place at Etchmiadzin on 1st November 1966. From 1981-1990 he served
as Grand Sacristan of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, at which time he was
elected Patriarch of Constantinople in succession to Patriarch Shnorhk
(1961-1970).
Two
other bishops assisted the Patriarch. Archbishop Sahan Sivaciyan of Scutari
served as Patriarchal Vicar and is a near contemporary of Patriarch Karekin.
Born in Istanbul in 1926, he was educated at the Jerusalem Seminary 1948-1953.
Ordained priest at Jerusalem in 1954 he served as Patriarchal Vicar in Haifa
1954-1957 before returning to become the second Dean of Holy Cross Seminary
1957-62. He too was raised to the position of Grand (Dzairaguin) Vardapet in
Jerusalem in 1961. Consecrated to the episcopate in 1966 he served as an
Auxiliary Bishop and Chairman of the Spiritual Council 1966-1990. He was given
the See of Scutari in 1991 and raised to the dignity of Archbishop in 1992.
Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan of the Princes' Islands served as Chairman of the
Patriarchate's Spiritual Council. Born at Istanbul in 1956, he studied at the
University of Memphis, USA (1974-1979); the Patriarchal Seminary and the Hebrew
University at Jerusalem (1979-1981) and the Pontifical University of S. Thomas
(Angelicum) in Rome (1988-89). Ordained priest in Istanbul in 1979 he served as
parish priest for the island of Kinali (1982-1986); Chancellor of the
Patriarchate (1982-1987) and Co-ordinator of Ecumenical Relations (1982-1990)
being raised to the position of Vardapet in 1983 and Grand (Kerakuin) Vardapet
in 1986 with consecration to the episcopate in the same year. In 1990 he became
Chairman of the Religious Council and in 1993 was raised to the rank of
Archbishop.
On March 10, 1998 - His beatitude Archbishop Karekin II Patriarch of
Constantinople passed away, and was succeeded by Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan.
The community is served by sixteen Armenian Orthodox parish schools whose
staff are paid by the church and controlled by the appropriate parish councils,
although the curriculum is determined by the state. This allows for one period
of religious education per week and five periods for teaching the Armenian
language. There is also none church sponsored hospital (Holy Saviour) in
Yedikule, which has an old peoples' home attached. This takes twenty per cent of
Armenians and the remainder is available to all comers. There is no state health
care system in Turkey.
The Patriarchate publishes an annual review Shoghagat (Rays from Above),
containing theological, liturgical, historical and cultural articles. One
thousand copies in Armenian only are published. A small, illustrated bulletin
Lraper is published weekly in the winter, but monthly in the summer months. One
thousand copies are published in Armenian and a further 9,000 in Turkish and
Armenian.
Turkish
is used for preaching in a number of churches and the scriptures are read in
modern Armenian to make the faith more readily accessible to the faithful.
Although classical Armenian is used liturgically, some popular prayers have been
rendered into modern Armenian and are unofficially used where it is deemed
appropriate.
The Patriarchate of Constantinople plays a highly significant role in the
life of the world-wide Armenian community. Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan serves as
one of the vice-presidents of the Holy Synod of Armenian Orthodox bishops. As an
autonomous church it preserves an independence from possible political pressures
by the Armenian Republic and retains its historic prestige for maintaining the
rich liturgical tradition of the see of Constantinople. Theologically more
conservative than the Cilician Catholicosate, it helps maintain a balance in
Armenian ecclesiology. Always close to the Jerusalem Patriarchate, it cherishes
its heritage of scholarship and, in the absence of its own seminary, encourages
ordinands and clergy to pursue further studies in Jerusalem, Etchmiadzin or in
foreign universities.
Relations with the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate and the Syrian Orthodox bishop
are very fraternal. When the late Supreme Catholicos Karekin I visited the
Oecumenical Bartholomaios, the late Patriarch Karekin II and his clergy hosted
part of the visit. Sadly, relations with the Armenian Catholics, who number less
than 2,000, is poor as a result of insensitive proselytism. All the present
Armenian Catholic clergy in Istanbul were originally members of the Armenian
Orthodox community.
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