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Chapter I: THE
ORIGINS (FROM TIME IMMEMORIAL TO
7th BC)
Noah and Ararat.
Immodestly, Armenians consider themselves direct
descendants of Noah, survivor of the Biblical flood. According to
Genesis, ...the boat came to rest on a mountain in the Ararat
range. Ararat, located in the heart of Armenia, was a Holy
Mountain for the peoples of the ancient world. Many ancient
scriptures placed the Biblical Garden of Eden in the Land of Armenia
also called the Land of Ararat.
Tradition states that Noah founded Nakhichevan, the oldest of the Armenian cities.
Moses Khorenatsi , historian of the 5th century, presents a
detailed genealogy of the Armenian forefather Haik from Japheth,
Noah's son. Thus, the territory of the Armenian Plateau is regarded
as the cradle of civilization, the initial point for the further
spreading of mankind all around the world.
Haik.
The oldest myths reflect the wars of ancient Armenians
against the neighboring Assyrians. Haik, considered the patriarch of
the Armenian people, led his army to defeat the Assyrian giant
Baeleus. By approximately 2100 BC, a prototype of the first Armenian
state was founded. Even now, Armenians call themselves Hai
(pronounced high), and their country - Haik or Haiastan, in
honor of Haik. The Hittite scripts also mention a Haiasa country.
Meanwhile, the Assyrian cuneiform writings designate Armenia as
Urartu (Arartu), which means Ararat. The Old Testament also
associates Armenia with the Mount Ararat (the Kingdom of Ararat).
In ancient times, Armenia was equally associated with the rivers
Tigris, Euphrates, Araks and Kura. That is why the neighboring
Assyrians also called Armenia, Nairi, standing for Riverland,
Country of Rivers. Haik, once thought to be just a hero of an
epic legend, is presently accepted by some researches as an actual
chieftain of Armens in the 3rd millennium BC. Historians proved that
later Haik was deified and proclaimed the prime god in the pantheon
of gods in the pagan Armenia. One of Haik's most famous scions,
Aram, considerably extended the borders of his country, transforming
it into a powerful state. Since then, Greeks and Persian began to
call the country Armenia, i.e. the country of Aram.
Ara the Beautiful.
Aram's son, Ara the Beautiful succeeded him. A
very romantic Armenian legend tells that Ara was so handsome that
the Assyrian Queen Semiramis (the same who founded Babylon and
planted its marvelous hanging gardens) fell in love with him. Ara
repeatedly rejected her love proposals until the desperate queen
began war with him. The Assyrians troops won the furious battle, and
Ara was killed, in despite of Semiramis's order to preserve his
life. Inconsolable Semiramis reputed to be sorceress took his body
and tried in vain to enliven him. When Armenians advanced to avenge
their leader, she disguised one of her lovers and spread the rumor
that Gods brought Ara back to life. As a result, the war was ceased.
Van and Yerevan.
History attributes the building of Van, one of the most
ancient Armenian cities at the shore of the salt lake of the same
name, to the legendary Semiramis. Another ancient Armenian city is
Yerevan, capital of today's Republic of Armenia. Its foundation
dates from 782 BC, which is reported in a cuneiform writing of King Argiste.

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