Categories: HistoryPeople

The Origins of the Armenian People – Can Historical Data Eliminate Falsifications?

In the below video, historian Artak Movsisyan talks in detail about the origins of the Armenian ethnos. The data is delivered by Armenian, Greek, Georgian, Arab, and Jewish historical sources.

We have repeatedly covered the topic of the falsification of the Armenians’ history, including their origins. In this regard, Alexander the Great tried to “rewrite” history and make the Armenians the descendants of the Greeks. One of the reasons for such history alterations was that Alexander sought to justify his military campaign by some idea of reunification rather than just his imperialistic goals.

The course of falsifications changed in the years of the Soviet Union. The Bolsheviks tried to prove that Russians had originated in Transcaucasia. Their theorized region included the whole Armenian Highlands, not to mention the territory of the Byzantine Empire, which is now loudly asserted to be the predecessor state of Russia.

Furthermore, today, the Chechens have joined this general tendency. They now wish to prove that ancient Nakhichevan (pronounced and written as “Nakhijevan” in Armenian) is not an Armenian gavar (province) but the homeland of Chechens’ ancestral tribes.

The Chechen tribes are called Nokhchi and their language is called “Nokhchiin mott”. So here is where the name Nakhichevan comes from, they say! An interesting logical chain, isn’t it? Just replace a couple of letters, and you have a ready history of antiquity!

The Bolsheviks falsified anything possible, including the names of states, cities, settlements, and rulers of the Kingdom of Van. For example, the name of Hrachya, a ruler of the Kingdom of Van, is “correctly” transliterated as Rusa!

How the history was actually written in USSR can be seen from the memoirs of Diakonoff.

But anyway, the latest archaeological finds on the territory of modern Armenia and the Armenian Highlands, as well as DNA analyses, suggest that everything, including the Armenian history, eventually returns to its rightful place.

Հայերը – Ծագում

Vigen Avetisyan

Recent Posts

Armenian Orphan Girls in New York (1917): A Forgotten Act of Witness and Relief

In 1917, at the height of global upheaval during World War I, a small but…

5 days ago

The Armenian Genocide: State Crime, Mass Participation, and the Burden of Historical Responsibility

The Armenian Genocide (1915–1921 ...) was not an accident of war, nor a tragic byproduct…

1 week ago

The First Printed Armenian Bible (Amsterdam, 1666–1668)

Introduction The first printed edition of the Bible in the Armenian language stands as one…

2 weeks ago

Armenopolis (Gherla): An Armenian “Ideal City” in the Heart of Europe

Armenopolis (modern-day Gherla, Romania) is a remarkable example of how the Armenian diaspora not only…

2 weeks ago

Statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia

Regarding the Remarks of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group at the Permanent Council…

2 months ago

The Armenian Genetic Code: An 8,000-Year Unbroken Journey

While empires rose and fell and borders shifted across millennia, one remarkable constant has endured:…

3 months ago