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Ani, The Mighty Armenian Capital of One Thousand and One Churches

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  • Ani, The Mighty Armenian Capital of One Thousand and One Churches

    Ani, The Mighty Armenian Capital of One Thousand and One Churches

    Wednesday, December 31st, 2014 | Posted by Matthew Karanian

    The silhouette of the Chapel of Soorp Grigor makes a solitary stand at
    the Armenian capital of Ani. Photo (c) 2014 Matthew Karanian, Reprinted
    with Permission.

    BY MATTHEW KARANIAN


    Ani is the fabled city of one thousand-and-one churches and the
    capital of a once-mighty Armenian kingdom. The city flourished during
    an Armenian silver age that lasted for about a century beginning in AD
    961.

    For the past three hundred fifty years, however, the city has been
    largely abandoned, and it has been completely uninhabited for the past
    century. Many people today call Ani a ghost town. For Armenians,
    however, the city is alive. There is no place else in the world with a
    greater concentration of Armenian churches and artifacts than within
    the walls of Ani.

    The remains of the city's massive walls, stately arches, and carved
    domes "testify to the audacity of the people who built this place,"
    wrote the New York Times in a cover travel story that was published
    shortly after Turkey first eased its ban on travel to Ani. The Times
    celebrated Ani, without equivocation, as an Armenian capital.

    Ani sits directly on the current border between Armenia and Turkey and
    is located within the region of Kars on the Armenian Plateau. The
    shallow Akhurian River keeps this part of historic Armenia separate
    and apart from the current Republic of Armenia.

    It is unlikely that there were ever really 1,001 churches at Ani.
    Still, the actual number must have been substantial--and close enough
    to the truth that the number has persisted in our consciousness for a
    millennium.

    The modern history of Ani has been heartbreaking.

    At the end of the nineteenth century, Ani and the surrounding region
    of Kars were within the Russian Empire. A Russian archaeologist
    recognized the historic value of the site, and he began excavations at
    Ani in 1892. After more than two decades of work, he had stored
    thousands of artifacts at a museum he had opened within the city's
    walls.

    Many of these artifacts were looted or destroyed when Turkey captured
    the site from Armenia in 1918.

    Armenia couldn't recover the lost artifacts, but it was able to
    reassert its control over Ani. When the independent Republic of
    Armenia was established later in 1918, Ani and the surrounding region
    of Kars were both included within Armenia's borders.

    The Republic of Armenia's control of Ani and Kars lasted just about two years.

    Turkey invaded Armenia in 1920, seized Ani and Kars, and incorporated
    them both into the newly formed Republic of Turkey. The same year,
    Armenia was overrun by the Soviet Union. The USSR in 1921 signed a
    treaty with Turkey officially ceding to them Ani and Kars. Armenia
    wasn't consulted.

    One of Turkey's first acts of sovereignty over Ani, in 1921, was to
    order that the monuments of the city be eradicated.

    This obscene order was not completely fulfilled, but many Armenian
    churches and monuments in Ani were nevertheless destroyed. Graves were
    plundered. And the evidence of the Russian excavations that had begun
    in 1892 was obliterated.

    For most of the past century, Turkey has characterized the region of
    Ani, which sits directly on the modern border of Turkey and Armenia,
    as a military zone. Tourists needed a special permit to enter the
    region and they had to travel to a military office in Kars, at a
    distance of about 45 kilometers, in order to get it. This red tape
    discouraged visitors generally, and visitors with Armenian surnames,
    particularly, from visiting Ani.

    Photography was strictly prohibited. Uniformed soldiers patrolled the
    site to ensure there were no violations of this rule.

    Today, however, the military designation has been lifted, and tourism
    at Ani is encouraged. Photography is permitted. The sight of a tour
    bus in the parking lot outside Ani is no longer remarkable.

    During the past several years, the Turkish authorities have even
    rebuilt some structures at Ani. Some have said that their motivation
    for this reconstruction is political. The architectural methods used
    in the so-called "restoration" of Armenian churches have also been
    criticized, with justification.

    Apart from the criticism, however, the opening of Ani, and the
    attention that has been given to rebuilding some of the ruins,
    suggests that the current custodians of this area see Ani as a site
    that is now worth saving and showcasing. That 1921 government order to
    destroy the place has apparently been repudiated.

    For the first time in a century, pilgrims can freely visit what's left
    of the Armenian capital of Ani. The site is still uninhabited, but the
    privilege of full access has made it possible for us to imagine an Ani
    that is once again thriving and vibrant.

    Adapted from 'Historic Armenia After 100 Years,' (Stone Garden Press,
    $39.95, Pub. Feb. 2015) by Matthew Karanian. Pre-order now for $35
    postpaid in the US from: Stone Garden Productions; PO Box 7758;
    Northridge, CA 91327 or pay with credit card by requesting an invoice
    from [email protected]

    http://asbarez.com/130342/ani-the-mighty-armenian-capital-of-one-thousand-and-one-churches/

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