Movses Kaghankatvatsi

Movses Kaghankatvatsi (Armenian: Մովսէս Կաղանկատուացի Movses Kaġankatvac’i), or Movses Daskhurantsi (Մովսէս Դասխուրանցի Movses Dasxuranc’i), is the reputed author (or authors) of a 10th-century Old Armenian historiographical work on Caucasian Albania, known as The History of the Country of Albania (Պատմութիւն Աղուանից, Patmutʿiwn Ałuanicʿ).[1][2][3][4]

Authorship

The first historian to mention an author of the work Mkhitar Gosh, referring to him as Movses Daskhurantsi.[5] A later historian, Kirakos Gandzaketsi, referred to a statement in the History itself, to attribute the name of the author as Movses Kaghankatvatsi. The statement in question (Book II, ch. 11) says:

When the enemy became aware of what had happened, they pursued them and overtook a group of them at the foot of the mountain opposite the large village of Kaghankatuk, which is in the same province of Uti where I too am from.

Movses narrates the Khazar invasion of Transcaucasia and other events up to the 7th century in Book I and II of History. Book III of his History differs from the previous ones in style of writing[6] and date. It deals with the Caspian expeditions of the Rus and their conquest of Partav in the 10th century. Because of such time lapse and difference in style, attribution of the work to a single author seems doubtful. For this reason it has been common to assume two consecutive authors or editors, Kaghankatvatsi (7th century) as the author of Books I and II, and Daskhurantsi (10th century) as the editors of Kaghankatvatsi's text and the author of Book III.[5]

Publications & translations

References

  1. ^ Kushnareva, Karinė Khristoforovna (1997). H. N. Michael (trans). ed. The Southern Caucasus in Prehistory. Univ. of Pennsylvania Museum History. p. 196. ISBN 0924171502. "The tenth century A.D. Armenian historian Movses Kalankatuatsi states that ..." 
  2. ^ (German) Gesellschaft, Görres. Oriens Christianus. Leipzig, Germany: O. Harrassowitz 1905, p. 274
  3. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, Arran
  4. ^ James D. Howard-Johnston (2006). East Rome, Sasanian Persia and the End of Antiquity. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. pp. 49. ISBN 0860789926. 
  5. ^ a b Hacikyan, Agop Jack (2000). The Heritage of Armenian Literature. Wayne State University Press. pp. 171–172, 364. ISBN 0814330231. 
  6. ^ Hewsen, Robert H. (1964). Notes and Communications. London: Bulletin of Oriental and African Studies, University of London vol. 27 Museum History. pp. 151–156.