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{{History of Georgia (country)}} |
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[[File:Colchis and Iberia, 1706.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Map of Iberia and Colchis by [[Christoph Cellarius]] printed in Leipzig in 1706]] |
[[File:Colchis and Iberia, 1706.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Map of Iberia and Colchis by [[Christoph Cellarius]] printed in Leipzig in 1706]] |
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In [[Prehistoric Georgia|earliest times]], the area of Caucasian Iberia was inhabited by several related tribes stemming from the [[Kura-Araxes culture]], collectively called [[Caucasian Iberians|Iberians]] (or Eastern Iberians) in [[Greco-Roman ethnography]{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}]. |
In [[Prehistoric Georgia|earliest times]], the area of Caucasian Iberia was inhabited by several related tribes stemming from the [[Kura-Araxes culture]], collectively called [[Caucasian Iberians|Iberians]] (or Eastern Iberians) in [[Greco-Roman ethnography]]{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}]. |
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The [[Moschi]], mentioned by various classic historians, and their possible descendants, the Saspers (who were mentioned by [[Herodotus]]), may have played a crucial role in the consolidation of the tribes inhabiting the area{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. The Moschi had moved slowly to the northeast forming settlements as they traveled{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. One of these was [[Mtskheta]], the future capital of the Kingdom of Iberian. The Mtskheta tribe was later ruled by a principal locally known as ''mamasakhlisi'' (“father of the household” in Georgian){{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. |
The [[Moschi]], mentioned by various classic historians, and their possible descendants, the Saspers (who were mentioned by [[Herodotus]]), may have played a crucial role in the consolidation of the tribes inhabiting the area{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. The Moschi had moved slowly to the northeast forming settlements as they traveled{{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. One of these was [[Mtskheta]], the future capital of the Kingdom of Iberian. The Mtskheta tribe was later ruled by a principal locally known as ''mamasakhlisi'' (“father of the household” in Georgian){{citation needed|date=August 2014}}. |
Revision as of 14:19, 10 August 2014
Kingdom of Iberia | |||||||||||
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ca. 302 BC–580 AD | |||||||||||
Status | Kingdom | ||||||||||
Capital | Armazi Mtskheta Tbilisi | ||||||||||
Common languages | Georgian | ||||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||
Historical era | Antiquity | ||||||||||
• Pharnavaz I's reign | ca. 302 BC | ||||||||||
• Adoption of Christianity as state religion | 326 ? AD/337 ? AD | ||||||||||
• Disestablished | 580 AD | ||||||||||
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Today part of | Georgia Turkey Russia Armenia Azerbaijan |
In Greco-Roman geography, Iberia (Greek Ἰβηρία, Georgian: იბერია [ibɛriɑ]) was the name for a kingdom of the Southern Caucasus, centered on present-day Eastern Georgia. Iberia, also known in Georgian as Kartli (Georgian: ქართლი), after its core province, was during Classical Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages a significant state in the Caucasus, either as an independent state or as a dependent of larger empires, notably the Sassanid and Roman empires.[1] Its population, known as the Caucasian Iberians, formed the nucleus of the Georgian people (Kartvelians), and the state, together with Colchis to its west, would form the nucleus of the medieval Kingdom of Georgia.[2][3]
The term Caucasian Iberia is used to distinguish it from the Iberian Peninsula in Western Europe[citation needed].
Name
The provenance of the word "Iberia" is unclear. One theory on the etymology of the name Iberia, proposed by Giorgi Melikishvili, was that it was derived from the contemporary Armenian designation for Georgia, Virkʿ (Armenian: Վիրք, and Ivirkʿ [Իվիրք] and Iverkʿ [Իվերք]), which itself was connected to the word Sver (or Svir), the Kartvelian designation for Georgians.[4] The letter "s" in this instance served as a prefix for the root word "Ver" (or "Vir"). Accordingly, in following Ivane Javakhishvili's theory, the ethnic designation of "Sber", a variant of Sver, was derived the word "Hber" ("Hver") (and thus Iberia) and the Armenian variants, Veria and Viria.[4] According to another theory, it is derived from a Colchian word, "Imer", meaning "country on the other side of the mountain", that is of the Likhi Range, which divided Colchis and Iberia from each other.[citation needed]
History
Early history
Part of a series on the |
History of Georgia |
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In earliest times, the area of Caucasian Iberia was inhabited by several related tribes stemming from the Kura-Araxes culture, collectively called Iberians (or Eastern Iberians) in Greco-Roman ethnography[citation needed]].
The Moschi, mentioned by various classic historians, and their possible descendants, the Saspers (who were mentioned by Herodotus), may have played a crucial role in the consolidation of the tribes inhabiting the area[citation needed]. The Moschi had moved slowly to the northeast forming settlements as they traveled[citation needed]. One of these was Mtskheta, the future capital of the Kingdom of Iberian. The Mtskheta tribe was later ruled by a principal locally known as mamasakhlisi (“father of the household” in Georgian)[citation needed].
The written sources for the early periods of Iberia's history are mostly medieval Georgian chronicles, that modern scholarship interpret as a semi-legendary narrative.[5] One such chronicle, Moktsevai Kartlisai (“Conversion of Kartli”) mentions that a ruler named Azo and his people came from Arian-Kartli – the initial home of the proto-Iberians, which had been under Achaemenid rule until the fall of the Persian Empire – and settled on the site where Mtskheta was to be founded. Another Georgian chronicle, Kartlis Tskhovreba (“History of Kartli”) claims Azo to be an officer of Alexander’s, who massacred a local ruling family and conquered the area, until being defeated at the end of the 4th century BC by Prince Pharnavaz, at that time a local chief[citation needed].
The story of Alexander’s invasion of Kartli, although legendary, nevertheless reflects the establishment of Georgian monarchy in the Hellenistic period and the desire of later Georgian literati to connect this event to the celebrated conqueror.[6]
Pharnavaz, victorious in a power struggle, became the first king of Iberia (c. 302-c. 237 BC){{citation needed}. According to the later Georgian chronicles, after driving back an invasion, he subjugated the neighboring areas, including a significant part of the western Georgian state of Colchis (locally known as Egrisi), and seems to have secured recognition of the newly founded state by the Seleucids of Syria[citation needed]. Pharnavaz is also said to have built a major citadel, the Armaztsikhe, and a temple to the god Armazi, and to have created a new system of administration, subdividing the country into several counties called saeristavos.[citation needed]
His successors managed to gain control over the mountainous passes of the Caucasus with the Daryal (also known as the Iberian Gates) being the most important of them[citation needed].
The period following this time of prosperity was one of incessant warfare as Iberia was forced to defend against numerous invasions into its territories[citation needed]. Some southern parts of Iberia, that were conquered from Kingdom of Armenia, in the 2nd century BC were reunited[citation needed] to Armenia and the Colchian lands seceded to form separate princedoms (sceptuchoi). At the end of the 2nd century BC, the Pharnavazid king Farnadjom was dethroned by his own subjects and the crown given to the Armenian prince Arshak who ascended the Iberian throne in 93 BC, establishing the Arshakids dynasty[citation needed].
Roman period
This close association with Armenia and Pontus brought upon the country an invasion (65 BC) by the Roman general Pompey, who was then at war with Mithradates VI of Pontus, and Armenia; but Rome did not establish her power permanently over Iberia. Nineteen years later, the Romans again marched (36 BC) on Iberia forcing King Pharnavaz II to join their campaign against Albania[citation needed].
While another Georgian kingdom of Colchis was administered as a Roman province, Iberia freely accepted the Roman Imperial protection[citation needed]. A stone inscription discovered at Mtskheta speaks of the 1st-century ruler Mihdrat I (AD 58-106) as "the friend of the Caesars" and the king "of the Roman-loving Iberians."[citation needed] Emperor Vespasian fortified the ancient Mtskheta site of Arzami for the Iberian kings in 75 AD[citation needed].
The next two centuries saw a continuation of Roman influence over the area, but by the reign of King Pharsman II (116 – 132) Iberia had regained some of its former power. Relations between the Roman Emperor Hadrian and Pharsman II were strained, though Hadrian is said to have sought to appease Pharsman[citation needed]. However, it was only under Hadrian's successor Antoninus Pius that relations improved to the extent that Pharsman is said to have even visited Rome, where Dio Cassius reports that a statue was erected in his honor and that rights to sacrifice were given[citation needed]. The period brought a major change to the political status of Iberia with Rome recognizing them as an ally, rather than their former status as a subject state, a political situation which remained the same, even during the Empire's hostilities with the Parthians[citation needed].
Between Rome/Byzantium and Persia
Decisive for the future history of Iberia was the foundation of the Sasanian (or Sassanid) Empire in 224[citation needed]. By replacing the weak Parthian realm with a strong, centralized state, it changed the political orientation of Iberia away from Rome[citation needed]. Iberia became a tributary of the Sasanian state during the reign of Shapur I (241-272)[citation needed]. Relations between the two countries seem to have been friendly at first, as Iberia cooperated in Persian campaigns against Rome, and the Iberian king Amazasp III (260-265) was listed as a high dignitary of the Sasanian realm, not a vassal who had been subdued by force of arms[citation needed]. But the aggressive tendencies of the Sasanians were evident in their propagation of Zoroastrianism, which was probably established in Iberia between the 260s and 290s[citation needed].
However, in the Peace of Nisibis (298) while the Roman empire obtained control of Caucasian Iberia again as a vassal state and acknowledged the reign over all the Caucasian area, it recognized Mirian III, the first of the Chosroid dynasty, as king of Iberia[citation needed].
Adoption of Christianity
Roman predominance proved crucial in religious matters, since King Mirian III and leading nobles converted to Christianity around 317 and declared Christianity as state religion[citation needed]. The event is related with the mission of a Cappadocian woman, Saint Nino, who since 303 had preached Christianity in the Georgian kingdom of Iberia (Eastern Georgia)[citation needed].
The religion would become a strong tie between Georgia and Rome (later Byzantium) and have a large scale impact on the state's culture and society[citation needed].
However, after the emperor Julian was slain during his failed campaign in Persia in 363, Rome ceded control of Iberia to Persia, and King Varaz-Bakur I (Asphagur) (363-365) became a Persian vassal, an outcome confirmed by the Peace of Acilisene in 387[citation needed]. However, a later ruler of Kartli, Pharsman IV (406-409), preserved his country's autonomy and ceased to pay tribute to Persia[citation needed]. Persia prevailed, and Sassanian kings began to appoint a viceroy (pitiaxae/bidaxae) to keep watch on their vassal[citation needed]. They eventually made the office hereditary in the ruling house of Lower Kartli, thus inaugurating the Kartli pitiaxate, which brought an extensive territory under its control[citation needed]. Although it remained a part of the kingdom of Kartli, its viceroys turned their domain into a center of Persian influence[citation needed]. Sasanian rulers put the Christianity of the Georgians to a severe test. They promoted the teachings of Zoroaster, and by the middle of the 5th century Zoroastrianism had become a second official religion in eastern Georgia alongside Christianity.[citation needed]
The early reign of the Iberian king Vakhtang I dubbed Gorgasali (447-502) was marked by the relative revival of the kingdom{{citation needed}. Formally a vassal of the Persians, he secured the northern borders by subjugating the Caucasian mountaineers, and brought the adjacent western and southern Georgian lands under his control[citation needed]. He established an autocephalic patriarchate at Mtskheta, and made Tbilisi his capital[citation needed]. In 482 he led a general uprising against Persia and started a desperate war for independence that lasted for twenty years[citation needed]. He could not get Byzantine support and was eventually defeated, dying in battle in 502[citation needed].
Fall of the kingdom
The continuing rivalry between Byzantium and Sasanian Persia for supremacy in the Caucasus, and the next unsuccessful insurrection (523) of the Georgians under Gurgen had severe consequences for the country[citation needed]. Thereafter, the king of Iberia had only nominal power, while the country was effectively ruled by the Persians[citation needed]. In 580, Hormizd IV (578-590) abolished the monarchy after the death of King Bakur III, and Iberia became a Persian province ruled by a marzpan (governor)[citation needed]. Georgian nobles urged the Byzantine emperor Maurice to revive the kingdom of Iberia in 582, but in 591 Byzantium and Persia agreed to divide Iberia between them, with Tbilisi to be in Persian hands and Mtskheta to be under Byzantine control[citation needed].
At the beginning of the 7th century the truce between Byzantium and Persia collapsed[citation needed]. The Iberian Prince Stephanoz I (c. 590-627), decided in 607 to join forces with Persia in order to reunite all the territories of Iberia, a goal he seems to have accomplished[citation needed]. But Emperor Heraclius's offensive in 627 and 628 brought victory over the Georgians and Persians and ensured Byzantine predominance in western and eastern Georgia until the invasion of the Caucasus by the Arabs[citation needed].
Arab period
The Arabs reached Iberia about 645 and forced its eristavi (prince), Stephanoz II (637-c. 650), to abandon his allegiance to Byzantium and recognize the Caliph as his suzerain[citation needed]. Iberia thus became a tributary state and an Arab emir was installed in Tbilisi about 653[citation needed]. At the beginning of the 9th century, eristavi Ashot I (813-830) of the new Bagrationi dynasty, from his base in southwestern Georgia, took advantage of the weakening of the Arab rule to establish himself as hereditary prince (with the Byzantine title kouropalates) of Iberia[citation needed]. A successor, Adarnase II of Tao-Klarjeti, formally a vassal of Byzantium, was crowned as the “king of Georgians” in 888[citation needed]. His descendant Bagrat III (975-1014), brought the various principalities together to form a united Georgian state[citation needed].
Eastern and Western Iberians
The similarity of the name with the old inhabitants of the Iberian peninsula, the 'Western' Iberians, has led to an idea of ethnogenetical kinship between them and the people of Caucasian Iberia (called the 'Eastern' Iberians)[citation needed].
It has been advocated by various ancient and medieval authors, although they differed in approach to the problem of the initial place of their origin[citation needed]. The theory seems to have been popular in medieval Georgia[citation needed]. The prominent Georgian religious writer Giorgi Mtatsmindeli (George of Mt. Athos) (1009–1065) wrote about the wish of certain Georgian nobles to travel to the Iberian peninsula and visit the local Georgians of the West, as he called them.[citation needed]
See also
- Caucasian Iberians
- Dzalisi
- Roman Georgia
- Caucasian Albania
- Iberia
- Iberia (theme)
- Iberian War
- List of monarchs of Caucasian Iberia
References
- ^ Ehsan Yarshater (1983). The Cambridge History of Iran: The Seleucid, Parthian, and Sasanian periods. Cambridge University Press. pp. 520–. ISBN 978-0-521-20092-9. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
- ^ Ronald Grigor Suny. The Making of the Georgian Nation. Indiana University Press, p. 13 ISBN 0-253-20915-3.
- ^ William Coffman McDermott, Wallace Everett Caldwell. Readings in the History of the Ancient World. p. 404.
- ^ a b Template:Hy icon Yeremyan, Suren T. «Իբերիա» (Iberia). Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia. vol. iv. Yerevan, Armenian SSR: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1978, p. 306.
- ^ Stephen H. Rapp. Studies in medieval Georgian historiography: early texts and Eurasian contexts, vol 601. Peeters Publishers, 2003. ISBN 90-429-1318-5, 9789042913189. P. 275. "While P’arnavaz may in fact be a fabrication, it is more feasible that over time the memory of the historical P’arnavaz accumulated a legendary facade."
- ^ Rapp, Stephen H. (2003), Studies In Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts, pp. 141-142. Peeters Publishers, ISBN 90-429-1318-5.
Further reading
- Roger Rosen, Jeffrey Jay Foxx. Georgia: A sovereign country of the Caucasus
- Thomson, Robert W. Rewriting Caucasian History (1996) ISBN 0-19-826373-2
- Braund, David. Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia, 550 BC-AD 562 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994) ISBN 0-19-814473-3
- Lang, David Marshall. The Georgians (London: Thames & Hudson, 1966)
- Toumanoff, Cyril. Studies in Christian Caucasian History. Washington D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1963