Concept

Arsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania

Résumé
The Arsacid dynasty was a dynasty of Parthian origin, which ruled the kingdom of Caucasian Albania from the 3rd to the 6th century. They were a branch of the Arsacid dynasty of Parthia and together with the Arsacid rulers of the neighboring Armenia and Iberia formed a pan-Arsacid family federation. Albania first emerged as an important participant in politics by the end of the 2nd-century BC, most likely in connection to the wars between the Parthian Mithridates II (124-91) and the Armenian king Artavasdes I (159-115). The modern historian Murtazali Gadjiev argues that it was at the end of the 3rd-century that the Arsacids (a cadet branch of the Parthian Arsacids) gained the kingship of Albania, by being appointed as proxies by the Romans in order to gain complete control over the Caucasus. Their accession marked the dominance of Iranianism in the country, and the elevation of Parthian as the language of the educated. In the 330s, the Sasanian King of Kings (shahanshah) of Iran, Shapur II (309-379), forced the Albanian king Vachagan I (or Vache I) to acknowledge his suzerainty. Urnayr fought alongside Shapur II at the Battle of Bagavan in 372, where he was injured by the Armenian general Mushegh I Mamikonian, who spared him. When Urnayr returned to Albania, he sent a message to Mushegh thanking him for sparing his life, and also informed him of a surprise attack planned by Shapur II. Urnayr was succeeded by Vachagan II in 375. In 387, through the machinations of the Sasanians, the Armenian provinces of Artsakh, Utik, Shakashen, Gardman and Kolt were ceded to Albania. In 462, shahanshah Peroz I abolished Arsacid rule in Albania after suppressing a rebellion led by Vache II. Their rule was later restored in 485, when Vachagan III was installed on the throne by Peroz's brother and successor Balash (484-488). A staunch Christian, Vachagan III ordered the Albanian aristocrats who had apostatized to return to their Christian beliefs. Furthermore, he also declared war against Zoroastrianism, Paganism, idolatry and witchcraft.
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