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  • Armenian architecture and its European impact

    Armenian architecture and its European impact

    Published: Saturday May 17, 2014

    The Cathedral of Mren, built in Armenia in the 7th century, when
    stone-mason technologies were in declin elsewhere in the world. Via
    Fresno State University

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    CAMBRIDGE, MASS. - Dr. Mark Jarzombek, Professor of the History and
    Theory of Architecture, is the Associate Dean of the School of
    Architecture and Planning at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In
    2006 Dr. Jarzombek co-authored and published A Global History of
    Architecture (Wiley), a fundamental encounter of history of
    architecture from prehistoric period to the end of the twentieth
    century. In 2011 the second edition of the book was published.

    The book places a strong emphasis on the role Armenian architecture
    played in the shaping of medieval stone building tradition and links
    the spread of stone architecture to Armenian masons who worked outside
    Armenia, from Europe to India. Dr. Anahit Ter-Stepanian, architectural
    historian from Armenia, asked Dr. Jarzombek to further elucidate the
    topic of involvement of Armenian builders in the development of
    architecture in the global context.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: Dr. Jarzombek, your Global History of
    Architecture is the only major fundamental encounter of history of
    architecture that places a considerable emphasis on Armenian
    architecture. I first came across your book shortly after it was
    published in 2006. I was pleasantly surprised that you viewed Armenian
    architecture as the main source for medieval knowledge of the
    principles of stone architecture. Later I attended your virtual
    presentation on the book organized by Wiley, where you discussed your
    theory using Armenian medieval architecture as an example of how
    engineering ideas emerged in one geographic location and were later
    adopted by other cultures. Armenian architecture is underrepresented
    in architectural history, your research is clearly a breakthrough. How
    did you arrive to this idea?

    Mark Jarzombek: It was just a slow process of thinking about it. My
    research and lectures always try to emphasize connections across space
    and time and when I began to write the chapter on the year 600 AD, it
    became clear that Armenia was a significant player in the cross Asian
    trade at that time, thus its wealth and thus also its capacity to make
    extraordinary buildings. Then the question came, how did those
    buildings - as designs - come about? There is a lot of good
    scholarship, especially in the context of early Christian
    architecture, but I wanted to go a bit past what we can know to focus
    on the unusual connections to Hellenistic architectural practices.

    So my emphasis was less on the new religion = new architecture and
    more on the continuity of skills, namely high-end masonry. The Church
    of the Vigilant Powers (Zwartnots, AD 641-666) or the Cathedral at
    Mren from that period are typical. But my point was that advanced
    stone masonry by 600 AD was a dying art in the rest of the world. It
    was not practiced in Europe before 800 AD, not practiced in Byzantium
    (which emphasized brick), nor in Persia (mud brick), nor even in India
    (wood). In other words, during the time period between 400 and 800 AD
    Armenia/Syria was the only place in the world where advanced stone
    masonry was still practiced. That is the key to understanding the role
    of Armenia in the history of architecture.

    This tradition did not come from nowhere. It came from Hellenistic
    practices and of course prior to that from Greek practices, who in a
    sense got it from the Egyptians. So it has a long tradition, but one
    that was on the verge of dying out around 500 AD. The last hold-out
    between 400 and 800 was in Syria and then Armenia

    Because churches were made with heavy, though finely carved stones and
    not with bricks or stone rubble, the buildings were a lot smaller than
    the great brick-based buildings of Byzantium (such as the Hagia Sophia
    - which is completely made of bricks) or the rubble-based walls of the
    great Basilica of St. Peters in Rome. Stone churches in Armenia are
    not only smaller, but have to be governed by the tradition of geometry
    that was the root of all stone masonry skills.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: You make a valid point in your book, masonry
    skills allow us to hypothesize about continuity of building tradition
    in the intercultural context. Precisely this emphasis on masonry skill
    makes your study particularly valuable. I would like to add that one
    of the writing assignments in my History of Armenian Art course at
    Southern Connecticut State University is based on your presentation in
    Texas, where you made Armenian architecture the focal point of your
    talk.

    Let's move to the next question. In your opinion, why is Armenian
    architecture misrepresented and underrepresented in the architectural
    historical discourse in the West? We understand the implications of
    the Cold War, language and political barriers. But the Cold War ended
    a long time ago, Armenia has been an independent country for more than
    two decades, we have a new post-cold-war generation of architectural
    historians. Why nothing has changed? Are there any political reasons
    or just lack of information?

    Mark Jarzombek: There are many reasons. Language, access, and archives
    figure among them. But the main issue, I believe, is not so much about
    Armenia itself, as about how we understand architectural development.
    The Romanesque Style in Europe, for example, has in it the word
    `Roman', since it was assumed that the main influences on early
    medieval German architecture came from Rome. Whereas Rome did play an
    important part, it was by no means the only part, especially since
    Rome in the year 800 did not produce advanced stone masonry buildings.
    In a sense, the style may have been Roman, but the contractors were
    Armenian.

    A second problem is in how Armenia appears on maps. It is in the
    extreme right hand corner of European maps and at the extreme left on
    Asia maps; it thus appears marginal in both instances. Though this is
    a symptom rather than a source of the problem, it is hard to tell the
    story of Armenia if it always in the margins of maps.

    Another problem might be that because Islamic culture takes off in the
    9th and 10th centuries we tend to forget that a place like Ani,
    between 961 and 1045 was a major metropolis too. But sadly because so
    little is now left, there is little to go on.

    And finally, one can say that part of the problem is in connecting the
    dots. We know that Armenians helped build mosques in Cairo-- probably
    by then converted to Islam. We know of Armenians who were brought to
    India by the Islamic invades. We know of Armenians in southern France
    building churches etc. So the diaspora of Armenian mason guilds and
    the diffusions of Armenian stone masons needs to be understood as
    significant.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: Dr. Jarzombek, your research is very important,
    particularly because you place an emphasis on building technologies,
    an area that is rarely discussed in architectural historical
    discourse. I believe that an architectural historian should be trained
    as an architect, which is not the case in American educational system.
    Architectural historians are trained as historians, as a result they
    have limited engineering knowledge and focus mainly on formal,
    aesthetic, religious, liturgical, historical aspects. Is it possible
    that this lack of knowledge of building technologies is the reason for
    not recognizing the role of the Armenian architecture for the
    development of Western architecture?

    Mark Jarzombek: Possibly, but it is not so much training in
    architecture and engineering that will change how we write history,
    though it does inflect it. The real question is still basically how
    historians think and develop their arguments and conjectures.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: Since the beginning of the twentieth century,
    the debate around the role of the Armenian architecture was mainly
    focused on its influence on the emergence of the Gothic style. In
    addition, we see the impact of Armenian architecture on Islamic
    structures, particularly of the Seljuk and Fatimid periods. However,
    your idea about the Armenian factor for the development of stone
    architecture in India is an eye-opener!

    Mark Jarzombek: It has to be. Stone architecture appears quite rapidly
    in India around 800 and there can be no doubt that Armenian craftsmen
    played a part at least in the initial phases. The question remains how
    to prove it. The problem is that specialists in Islamic architecture
    rarely think outside of that category. Specialists in Hindu
    architecture have the same problem. With the Armenian diaspora, we
    have multiple religions and regions.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: In professional literature Armenian architecture
    is viewed as an offspring of Syrian architecture, although even the
    earliest basilicas in Armenia clearly display features that are
    uniquely Armenian. I attended the webcast presentation organized by
    Wiley. I remember one of the attendees asked why you chose Armenian
    architecture and not Syrian. Your answer was brief, you were in the
    middle of explaining something else and didn't go into a detailed
    explanation for making the choice. Why did you choose Armenian
    architecture over Syrian?

    Mark Jarzombek: I guess I focus a bit more on Armenia since the Syrian
    phase ends in the early 7th century with the expansion of Islam,
    whereas the Armenian part of the story continues on for a few more
    centuries. But that is not to underestimate the importance of the
    Syrian Christian churches. The early churches that are now in Syria
    are a key element in the story since they are part of the transition
    from a more classical and Hellenistic experimentalism to the Armenia
    church. For example, St. Babylas (Antioch-Kaiuissie, c 378) and the
    Baptistery at Qalat Siman (c 476-90) and associated church (c. 500)
    and St George, Ezraa (ca. 515) are all "Syrian," and form a continuous
    strand that connects to St. Hripsime (618) and so forth. The Syrian
    phase, so to speak, has more variation. There are basilicas and
    colonnades and the like all of which get edited out by the time
    Armenian churches come into their own. The loss of the south to Islam
    isolated Armenia and in a sense forced it to focus its energies toward
    a more unified style.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: Recently, in textbooks on art history the
    emergence of Gothic architecture, particularly of the pointed arch, is
    being associated with Islamic architecture. Are these statements
    justified? The late Romanesque and Gothic combination of pointed
    arches resting on tall cluster piers as a load bearing system is much
    closer to the structural logic of the Ani Cathedral than to Islamic
    prototypes. Why is there such a resistance against recognizing the
    role of the Ani Cathedral for the development of late Romanesque and
    Gothic architectural vocabulary?

    Mark Jarzombek: I am not an expert on Gothic architecture as such and
    do not want to get involved in this. My guess is that is a
    combination. There is no doubt that Islamic architecture played a part
    in some aspects of the development of Gothic architecture, but the
    Armenian precedents exist as well. The Armenians could have had a
    separate line of influence to Europe since their influence probably
    came first to Europe - though not in the form of a pointed arch. We
    can get lost in the problem of `firsts'. In other words, someone might
    have made the first point arch, but we also have to ask when the
    pointed arch become typological? My emphasis on stone masonry is not
    about arches per se, but about the techniques of cutting and laying
    stone.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: In the first edition of the Global History you
    mention architect Oton Matsaetsi (Odo of Metz), who was of Armenian
    origin. We associate the name of this architect with the church of
    Germigny-des-Pres, one of the most innovative stone structures in
    northern Europe. However, the same Odo of Metz is the architect of
    Charlemagne's Palace Church in Aachen of 794, which displays a
    remarkably high level of stone craftsmanship for northern Europe. We
    discuss the Palace Church as a structure influenced by the San Vitale
    church. San Vitale is made of brick; the Palace Church is built of
    finely dressed stone. Why is Oton's Armenian origin revealed and
    discussed in the case of Germigny-des-Pres, but not in the case of the
    Palace Church?

    Mark Jarzombek: Good question. In my lectures I discuss this point,
    mentioned above about the question of the so-called Romanesque. In the
    book a things sometimes get left out to save space. I should put it
    back in in the next edition.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: I find your ideas not only fascinating, but also
    remarkably brave. Did your ideas meet any misunderstanding and
    hostility among architectural historians?

    Mark Jarzombek: Not really. The field of architectural history is
    quite small and people working on this topic are far and few in
    between. Most scholars I talked to have been quite receptive.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: You made your position very clear in your book
    and in your presentations, have you published your insights anywhere
    other than the Global History? Are you planning to?

    Mark Jarzombek: I probably should, and would like to, but the question
    is where? It is a complicated issue. Actually I have not been to
    Armenia yet, so I have long way to go and much research to do before I
    could publish something like this in the Journal of Architectural
    Historians.

    Anahit Ter-Stepanian: I hope you can find time to visit Armenia in the
    near future, we'll be honored to see you in Yerevan. Thank you very
    much for your time.


    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2014-05-17-armenian-architecture-and-its-european-impact

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