Talk:Urartu
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[edit] In Armenian and Turkish nationalism
The reason why its indicated in nationalism in both of these states is that, both states use history for solving some current problems. To proove that some lands belong to one or another. That there indicated Armenia and Turkey doesnt mean that Urartuans were ancestors of one of these.. Have peace and get rid of cheap nationalism... Nakh 12:59, 1 June 2010 (UTC)
This is the article of Urartu. You are saying "there is such a thing as Turkish nationalism". This is certainly correct, but you want to discuss that at Turkish nationalism. The entire reason this article mentions nationalism at all is that the Armenian national mysticists are obsessed with Urartu and wouldn't give Wikipedia any peace before the article made reference to Armenia. Rather than allowing pseudo-historical bullshit into the article, we took the course of mentioning the nationalists themselves. This must be done in all brevity, as this is clearly an article about the Iron Age, and the childish antiquity frenzy most people from the region seem to suffer from today is not really relevant to the topic. --dab (š³) 07:52, 2 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, preach it brother! That sort of rubbish clogs up way too many Wikipedia discussion pages.Iacobus (talk) 22:55, 2 June 2010 (UTC)
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- But if we are going to mention it, can we at least do it with at least the pretension of adhering to WP:POV? How often does one come across such ridiculously POV statements as the following: "Armenian chauvinists must explain why Urartian epigraphy is in the non-Indo-European Urartian language."? That line is not placed in quotations, since it is clearly the words of another author, and I cannot imagine reading another article where it actually demands that one side must explain themselves for their actions. And Dab, how much more longer are you going to bandy about the "Armenian national mysticists" line? It's getting quite nauseating after hearing it for all these years now. And all this pontificating is highly unnecessary; even if all the evidence indicates that Armenia and Urartu are two entirely separate entities, scholars, including historians such as Diakonov, have never ruled out a linguistic, cultural and ethnic connection between the two, however slight. No book written by a respected scholar has ever failed to mention them in connection to Armenia, even if they do conclude that Armenia was not the same as Urartu. Such illustrious and important ancient and medieval Armenian families as the Artsrunis, the Bagratunis and the Rshtunis are considered to have survived the collapse of Urartu since their "uni" suffix was Urartian in origin. Other examples can be given. Please discuss future edits instead of trying to pigeonhole this or that POV into this article. --Marshal Bagramyan (talk) 15:45, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
There is an obvious problem here, Dab is presenting a quotation as part of the text, without citation. There is obviously two problem doing that. First, a secondary source by itself is the point of view of an author. An encyclopedia is a tertiary source, by it's tone and synthesis of information, a secondary source can not be a tertiary source by simply failing to present it as a citation. The second problem is that the sentence is the intellectual property of the author and publisher, the version which Dab is reverting to, the citation is made as part of the text of the article. In both cases Dab version fail to mention the author of that position. Not surprising that the tone is pushed toward being a POV, as it never was meant to be a tertiary source to be sounding as a neutral language. Ionidasz (talk) 22:40, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
- Also, the argument of being both newcomers even if presented as a supposition does not make sense. Either case, comparing the map of the Phrygian Kingdom [1] and Urartu [2] have them both in present day Turkey. Ionidasz (talk) 22:54, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
Given there are very documented evidences that Armenians were very influenced by both, if any mixture there was, it would be just between those two nations and overlapping the West of one and East of the other. Tagging something which has some truth as simple nationalism, without presenting what makes actually sense and documented as simple scholarship is plain stupid. Ionidasz (talk) 22:58, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
Marshal there is only 2 edits on 4th, and three different edits on 3rd of June. I see no problem there. you always invite me to join, so why dont you join the discussion concerning navigation template and Armenian natism section. It does makes sense that if I find 20 men to edit war, than I can write that Urartuans are ancestors of Scott's. You don't show any evidence to prove your claims. Iron age is much better navigation template for this page than Armenian History. Armenisation of Urartu is really target of Armenian Natists so why do you remove thiese topics and templates? Nakh 06:58, 4 June 2010 (UTC)
- But are you meaning to say that absolutely no connection exists between the two? I dislike the manner in which everyone is railing against "Armenian nationalists" when nobody here is proposing that the Urartu = Armenia. No credible scholar, especially one who believes that the Armenians migrated to the Armenian Plateau ca. 1200 B.C., has tried to disassociate the two. Almost all of them agree that the Armenians were, at the very least, the cultural inheritors of Urartu, and that some remnants of Urartian society was able to adapt and assimilate into the Armenian milieu (like the noble Armenian families I mentioned above). That by itself ensures the History of Armenia template a position on the article.
- Regarding the "nationalism" section. Unfortunately, the authors cited to support the work are not very well read up. It should be noted that until the 1980s, all scholars, whether they were Armenian or not, agreed, with a caveat or two, that the Armenians had migrated to the Plateau. Recent archaeological evidence has now led some to revise their positions but it's astonishing that when the current section was replaced with a far more neutral one many months ago, it was immediately reverted. I believe that that section is a far better alternative to the current one and I have reproduced it, , with some minor revisions and corrections, below:
Urartu has come to play a role in 19th to 20th century Armenian nationalism. Up until the late 1980s, all scholars, Armenian and non-Armenian alike, agreed with the classical theory of the origins of the Armenian people.[1][2] However, recent archaeological findings in Armenia in the 1980s and linguistics studies such as the hypothesis posited by scholars Gamkrelidze and Ivanov, have led some to the belief that Armenians were indigenous to Anatolia and the Armenian Plateau.[3][4] Some scholars have attempted to explain this by arguing that Armenians are motivated by āthe desire to prove Armenian priority relative to the Turks, who cannot claim presence in Anatolia prior to the Seljuk conquests of the 11th century.ā According to Anne E. Redgate, āIdentification with the ādistant glories of Urartuā can be used to reassert Armenian āindigeneityā and ācompensate for modern miseries.āā [5]
[edit] Notes
- ^ For example, see the first chapters of the first volume of (Armenian) ÕÕ”Õµ ŌŗÕøÕ²ÕøÕ¾ÖÕ¤Õ« ÕÕ”ÕæÕ“ÕøÖÕ©ÕµÕøÖÕ¶ (History of the Armenian People), vol. 1. Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1970.
- ^ George Bournoutian. A History of the Armenian People. Costa Mesa: Mazda, 2006, p. 17.
- ^ Bournoutian, p. 17.
- ^ Robert H. Hewsen. Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2001, p. 24.
- ^ Anne Elizabeth Redgate, The Armenians, Cambridge University Press, 1995, ISBN 9780521480659, p. 276.
- And so on. I think this would actually work better than the insulting section that was up just one day ago. Rewordings are more than welcome.--Marshal Bagramyan (talk) 19:08, 4 June 2010 (UTC)
If there is an insult, than it is from Armenian Nationalists which invented many theories for Armenian history without any education in history or linguistics. (check on youtube: Armenians: First inhabitans in Britain there are many same bigotries. You can read some Soren Ayvazyan's articles. These people and their articles are the most insulting things. Nakh 10:57, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- So what, this is your revenge for these "most insulting things"? If you're not able to make the difference between WP and youtube or I don't know what, please stop contributing to this article. And remember that this talk page is not to be used as a forum.
- On top, this would in any case certainly not justify the insertion of the insulting and unsourced sentence "Armenian chauvinists must explain why Urartian epigraphy is in the non-Indo-European Urartian language" (my emphasis). Sardur (talk) 12:31, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
The main reason we keep the "in nationalism" section around is the fact that this page keeps being trolled by Armenian nationalists. The topic is not really important to the article topic. We can try losing that section altogether, but this will probably result in attempts to insert the nationalist discourse in the "ethnogenesis" section. I don't have a fixed opinion on this.
The purpose here is not to "insult" anybody but to document the fact that Armenian nationalists may harbour sentiments associated with Urartu. This is probably of very little interest to anyone interested in the Iron Age state, but it is very useful for understanding the constant bickering we have to put up with here on talk. --dab (š³) 18:32, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Armenians, or as mentioned by some Wikipedia anti-Armenian Turks, "Armenians nationalists" or "Armenian trolls," in Wikipedia have only stated that Armenians are the cultural successors of Urartians, as is stated by the majority of historians specialized in the field, while anti-Armenian Turks have insisted that there should be a separate section in the article on "Urartu" called "in Armenian Nationalism," to turn the generally unanimous belief, among historians specialized in the field, that Urartu became Armenia, into a "convention among Armenian chauvinists."
- The section of "In Armenian Nationalism" is as useless in this article as it is in the "Mount Ararat" article. Its only purpose is to express the views of those who think that linking Urartu and Mount Ararat to Armenia are negative things.
- I have nothing against the crescent moon and star, and I am proud of Turks who are proud of their national symbols. I ask them to acknowledge our history with Urartu and Mount Ararat, and respect them as our national symbols, regardless of whether or not they belong to Armenians today. The moon and stars in space surely don't belong to Turkey, yet it is their national symbol. There is no fascism in this, and there is no need to point out the fact that some fascists will use it against their enemies. Same applies to Urartu and Mount Ararat. The act of pointing out this fact is, in itself, fascism. "Armenian nationalists" don't go to the Wikipedia articles on "The Moon" or "Star" and add a section about "Turkish nationalism" and present a negative point of view, calling the Turks that feel represented by, and are proud of, the crescent moon and star as "chauvinists."
- Another thing I'd like to mention is "Armenians migrated to Urartu." Armenians didn't exist in the times of Urartu. Urartu was a federative kingdom of many tribes. Tribes speaking a proto-Armenian language probably migrated to Urartu, but NOT "Armenians." Armenians emerged from the ashes of Urartu as a Satrapy called "Armina." Armenia is the completion of the amalgamation of the indigenous tribes into a unified nation -- in these were Scythian settlers, Cimmerian settlers, Biainillians, etc. Please don't say "Armenians" migrated to Urartu, because its anachronous. It's like if I said the "English" migrated to the Island of Britain in the 5th century, when there was no such thing as an "English people" (they were Anglo-Saxon peoples). Saying "Armenians" migrated to Urartu is misleading and inaccurate. Say instead "proto-Armenian speaking peoples."
- @Nakh, if Armenians make statements that are backed by an overwhelming majority of scholars in the field, does that make them "Armenian nationalists," or their statements "bigotry"? It seems some of these statements work against your nationalist beliefs, therefore, you negatively refer to them as "nationalists," when in reality, they are simply enriching Wikipedia with facts they have read in books by qualified linguists & historians in the field, and anti-Armenians come along and troll articles that are linked to their history that come into conflict with their nationalist beliefs.āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 23:55, 30 June 2010 (UTC)
[edit] Protected
Due to the recent edit warring this page has been protected indefinitely. Please discuss the matter here and come to a consensus on what should and shouldn't be included on the page. If an urgent edit needs to be made during the protection, please place the template {{editprotected}} here with details of the edit that needs to be made and justification for the edit, and an administrator will come by to make the edit. When you have agreed and resolved the dispute, please make a listing at requests for unprotection for the page to be downgraded to semiprotection. While it is also possible to make such requests on my talk page, it would be quicker for you to use those previous methods. Thank you. Stifle (talk) 08:22, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Apologies if the protection is on m:the Wrong Version. I will be going through the page history carefully and issuing sanctions against anyone who engages in edit-warring. Stifle (talk) 10:07, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Now unprotected. Play nice. Stifle (talk) 15:17, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- And here we are again, with dab inserting without any discussion an unsourced sentence of the same kind as the former problematic sentence :
- "There is a conviction among Armenian patriots that the Armenians are the "original inhabitants" of much of the territory of historic Armenia, motivated by the desire to prove Armenian priority relative to the Turks, who cannot claim presence in Anatolia prior to the Seljuk conquests of the 11th century."
- What is "Armenian patriots"? Sardur (talk) 18:33, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Now unprotected. Play nice. Stifle (talk) 15:17, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
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- And why is this OR there and other referenced information deleted without discussion?
- Why is another part deleted too: "A competing theory suggested by Thomas Gamkrelidze and Vyacheslav V. Ivanov in 1984 places the Proto-Indo-European homeland in the Armenian Highland, see Armenian hypothesis, which would entail the presence of Proto-Armenians in the area during the entire lifetime of the Urartian state."? Because it's count to be a blatant lie by the editor or not but he need references? Aregakn (talk) 20:54, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
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I did not "insert" anything, I restored the content that was lost in your stupid edit war. The Gamkrelidze & Ivanov (1984) publication remains duly referenced, I don't see how you can claim it has been "removed". There is no need to mention it three times in a row now, is there? Especially as it has received no support whatsoever in the 25 years since it was published.
As for the tedious "patriotism" issue, you are the ones that won't let that die, not me. I have already said I would be willing to drop this forever. An account of Urartu as part of the Armenian national mythology is in Redgate (1995) and the article is summarizing her account. There aren't hundreds of scholarly sources discussing Armenian nationalism to choose from, but you are welcome to provide others. In fact, seeing that Armenian nationalism is the only thing you seem to care about, why don't you build the Armenian nationalism article instead of playing your games with this one. --dab (š³) 12:07, 12 June 2010 (UTC)
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- You deleted the paragraph of the theory of the origins of Armenia willing for only 1 to be mentioned. This is the deletion of a referenced info. You kept only the language part and you claim you didn't delete any refed info.
- If you call an 3rd party RS a nationalist Armenian point of view, that's your problem, but don't present your POV as a fact and start accusing others in nationalism.
- Another referenced info was deleted as follows from the role in nationalism part: " However, recent archaeological findings in Armenia in the 1980s and linguistics studies such as the hypothesis posited by scholars Gamkrelidze and Ivanov, have led some to the belief that Armenians were indigenous to Anatolia and the Armenian Plateau.< ref > Bournoutian, p. 17.< /ref> < ref >Robert H. Hewsen. Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2001, p. 24.< /ref> "
- Will you again argue you deleted nothing referenced and that all your contributions to the article are wrongly opposed by "nationalist" edits as you called the "95%" of those? Aregakn (talk) 13:01, 12 June 2010 (UTC)
sorry, but if you just keep repeating yourself it isn't going to become any truer. Gamkrelidze and Ivanov published in 1984. Hewsen (2001) may mention them, along with countless other sources, but I don't see why Hewsen (2001) should be cited rather than the original 1984 publication.
That said, Gamkrelidze and Ivanov (1984) have nothing whatsoever to do with Urartu. Please check the article title. Why do you keep trying to discuss Armenians, Armenians and again Armenians? Try Origins of Armenians. If you are unhappy about the presentation of Gamkrelidze and Ivanov (1984), I suggest we remove any mention of them, as the reference is off topic tangent. None of your references even mention Urartu. Stay on topic please. --dab (š³) 14:22, 12 June 2010 (UTC)
- I see, that you have little knowledge of Urartu yourself. Are you aware of the location of the kingdom? OK, I'll tell that the location is called the Armenian Highlands. And as you seem knowing at least a bit, the subject research is about the Armenian highlands being the very native land for Armenians (proto-Armenians) which makes Urarto not even indirectly, but very directly relevant to Armenians. If you had not seen this relevance, I am sorry for that. Reevaluate your knowledge and jurgement and make no changes before discussing. Aregakn (talk) 17:07, 13 June 2010 (UTC)
[edit]
Firstly Iron Age is most objective, it doesn't serve anyones nationalistic aims and also no one has doubt that Urartu is Iron Age kingdom. Its easily provable there are many evidences for it, and all the scholars agree on it. While role of Urartu in Armenian history is highly disputed by many scholars, (not agree ones; I.M. Diakonov, S.S. Starostin, John A.C. Greppin, B.B. Piotrovsky, V.A. Schnierelmann, L.B. Alaeva, Lechi Ilyasov, P.L. Kohl in his book "Nationalism, politics, and the practice of archaeology" and many many more.), of course some scholars defended this theory (as S. Ayvazyan, R. Ishkhanyan, M. Kavokjian, A. Movsisyan, L. Shainyan, A. Teryan, K. Sukiasyan -mostly Armenian-) This why I believe it will be unfair if wiki supports one side of yet disputed theory. I replace "Armenian History" template with "Iron Age" Nakh 07:57, 14 June 2010 (UTC)
- One more note, template has an impact on not well informed the reader. Since the issue is not solved by scientists, Encyclopedia should remain neutral, not make early conclusions, and not misinform readers. Nakh 08:07, 14 June 2010 (UTC)
@Nakh Yet "Gauls," who didn't speak French - who were overlapped by "French-speaking peoples" - who were assimilated into the newly formed Franko-Roman civilization, which inherited Gaulish words and culture -- which is a disputed, yet a generally accepted belief among historians in the field, are legitimately part of French history...
But....
"Urartians" who didn't speak Armenian - who were overlapped by "Armenian-speaking peoples" - who were assimilated into the newly formed Armeno-Iranian civilization, which inherited Urartian words and culture -- which is a disputed, yet a generally accepted belief among historians in the field, are NOT legitimately part of Armenian history (according to you).
Tell me why Urartians and Armenians can't be compared to Gauls and Franks, then tell me why Gauls can fit in French history, yet Urartians must absolutely be removed from Armenian history. Removing Urartu from Armenian history only serves the nationalistic aims of anti-Armenians who need Armenians to not be indigenous to their homelands since most anti-Armenians are not indigenous to their homelands. If you are so fond of separating Armenians and Urartians, then, for the same reason, you must be fond of separating the French from the Gauls. I will return this to "Armenian History" and I want you to remove "Gauls" from French history before you remove Urartu from Armenian history. Otherwise, you must have reasons beyond objectively providing accurate information to Wikipedia to change it, reasons such as biased nationalistic aims. āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 00:38, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
- Comparison between Gauls to French and Hurrian to Armenian is nonsense. I dont know the similarities and difference between Franc and Gauls cultures. But at least both of them were speaking Indo-European language. In Armenian situation Hurrians were speaking TOTALLY different language, their socio-politic structure was different and so on. With your pholosophy you can add Byzantum, Alexanders Macedonia, Rome, Caliphate, Tatar and Turkic hordes, Acheamenide and Parthian empires to Armenian history there also passing this region during a period of time, werent they? Connection of French and Gauls is not evidence prooving connection Armenians and Urartuans so please stop adding that bigotry. Nakh 05:28, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
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- The fact that it was Indo-European or not has nothing to do with this discussion. Russian and Spanish are Indo-European languages, but they are entirely different languages, and if one invaded the other, it would not be different if one spoke an Altaic language. Gaulish and French are TOTALLY different languages, branched off from a common ancestor some thousands of years ago. The idea that with my philosophy I can add Byzantum, Alexanders Macedonia, Rome, Caliphate, Tatar and Turkic hordes, Acheamenide and Parthian empires to Armenian history is entirely your invention, and isn't an intelligent way of disproving my comparison, and honestly, would fall into the "bigotry" category in my book. On the contrary, with your logic, we cannot include ancient Egypt in the history of modern Egypt simply because they spoke totally different languages, and used different names for their kingdoms (ancient Egyptians didn't call their kingdom "Egypt.") The ancient Azerbaijani language was Indo-European, and today Azerbaijanis speak a Turkic language, which are also different language groups. Why can Azerbaijan claim historical continuity with Atrpatakan, if, according to your logic, historical continuity can only be accepted if the language spoken today is part of the same language group as in ancient times.
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- (for the sake of clarity, I have put titles for my arguments)
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- Socio-political aspects
- The region known as Urartu became part of Media, and then Persia, with Persian satraps ruling the region. Of course many socio-political aspects of the region changed, but as is mentioned by scholars specialized in the field, many aspect persisted. The socio-political aspects of Greece changed after Ottoman Rule, yet they are still Greeks. The socio-political aspects of Russia changed, yet they are still the successors of the Soviet Union.
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- Urartu didn't simply vanish into thin air simply because you wish it did. The region known as Urartu became known as Armina or Armenia by the contemporary superpowers, and almost immediately after the fall of Urartu. Still, Babylonians called it "Urashtu (Urartu)" while the new name "Armenia" already existed. The Behistun Inscription CLEARLY equates the two. Armenia is not the DIRECT successor of Urartu, BUT it IS the geopolitical successor, much like France became the geopolitical successor of Gaul. If you don't like this because it destroys your nationalistic, political aims, that's your problem, but I'd like you to check out the Gauls and Franks and see the similarities with Urartu/Armenia before you blatantly make changes in Armenian history.
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- Language in Urartu & Armenia
- I'd also like to add that we have no clear idea of what the common folk in Urartu spoke, nor de have ANY IDEA of what language was spoken in the Armenian state that followed until the times of the creation of the Armenian Alphabet in the 5th century. As we can see, old french and modern French is almost incompatible, and so is old English and modern English, and these languages have existed for only half the amount of years the Armenian state has existed. Who knows what type of language evolution, replacement, etc. occured in the Armenian Highlands from the times of Urartu all the way to the creation of the Armenian Alphabet (a 2,500 year process). If you know linguistics, you should know what 100 years can do to a language, let alone 2,500 years. God know what was spoken at the time of Tigran II the Great. Maybe there were still large pockets of people speaking Urartian. The languages spoken in Ancient Armenia and Urartu are so unclear, it is intellectually dishonest to use "language" as a basis to disassociate the two from each other.
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- But there is one thing other than language, in ancient times, that link the two more than anything else:
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- Khorenatsi's history and coincidences with known Urartian history
- Although we both agree that Movses Khorenatsi is not a 100% reliable historian (as are all ancient historians such as "Homer," Herodotus, etc), in his history, Armenia is often engaged into wars with Assyria. Now Assyria, as a state, ceased to exist before "Armenia" came into existence. Urartu is the only kingdom in the region that was in conflict with Assyria. If his history is at least slightly based on true events told from generation to generation, the only kingdom he could be talking about is "Urartu." We all know that Khorenatsi mentions the Assyrian queen Semiramis (this story is the reason Urartu was rediscovered). We also know that an Assyrian queen Semiramis existed at a time very close to the rule of Aramu, the first known king of Urartu. And we also know that Ara the Beautiful (the king of Van at the time in Khorenatsi's history) was in conflict with Semiramis, and was a very close relative of Aram/Aramu (either a son, or brother). We all know that ancient historians add mythical elements to great rulers, but this doesn't change the fact that they recorded their existence.
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- Some historians say the name "Armenia" comes from the name "Aram," meaning "the land of Aram." We do know Aram, Ara, Armen, and Armin are all people names. Urartu's first known king is "Aramu" and one of the first kings of Armenia mentioned in Khorenatsi's book is "Aram" (assuming "Aram" was not the source of the name "Armenia," Khorenatsi, and the contemporary Armenians, STILL recorded the name "Aram" as one of their first kings, when "Aramu," oldest known king of Urartu, was forgotten by everyone else until the 19th century).
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- The name "Biainili" (native name of Urartu) is widely recognized as the ancestral name of "Van." The first Armenian kingdom in the history of Khorenatsi is the distinct "Kingdom of Van" (Kingdom of Biainili), which was the only kingdom in Khorenatsi's history that fought Assyria (I repeat, Urartu/Biainili was the only kingdom of the region to have fought Assyria), with its capital in Van (Samiramakert or Tosp in Armenian, and Tushp-a in Urartian). Since only the native Urartians called their kingdom "Biainili," and Armenians used that very name (as "Van") to describe a kingdom that coincides with Urartu, wouldn't that make Armenians the only nation that still uses the native name? This would hint that Armenians are the descendants of these natives, or at least in very close contact, and most probably the cultural successors, since if they were outsiders, or invaders, they would have used names such as "Urartu."
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- There are some other connections with Urartian history and Khorenatsi's history of Armenia, but for the sake of this argument, this is enough to claim: Therefore, Armenia, through Khorenatsi's collection of traditional history, is the only nation that preserved Urartian history, although somewhat distorted, and it is presented as its own continuous history, and this is long before the "Armenian nationalist" movement that occurred in the 19th century, 1,500 years before. Now, I know Khorenatsi is not the most reliable source, but we all recognize that his history is the oral traditional history passed on from generation to generation until it reached him. We all recognize that there are distortions and anachronisms (centuries of distortions). But this is not a reason to completely throw Khoreatsi aside. We don't throw Herodotus aside, do we?
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- You may come up with "well these are all coincidences and should not be used as solid evidence for the relationship between Armenia and Urartu," but my answer to that is easy: "It is also not a reason to throw it aside as evidence." It's dishonest to not recognize these coincidences and pretend they didn't exist. I don't say Urartians were Armenians, but you cannot deny that Armenians came into existence from within Urartu, and became the geopolitical successors, and there is so much evidence for this, to not see it is to be blinded. Most probably, this blindness is due to your own personal nationalistic aims. Now, before you change "Armenian History" to "Iron Age," please disprove my arguments with some facts other than your invention about "according to your philosophy..." I have used constructive arguments, and therefore, you have no right to impose your version of this article until you disprove them.
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- Conclusion for your first reply
- Finally, 1. comparing Urartu/Armenia to Gauls/French is not evidence of anything. Its purpose is self-explanatory: comparing. It doesn't equate Armenia to Urartu, it does the opposite, it makes a distinction, just as Franks and Gauls were distinct, but it makes them geopolitical relatives, something you cannot deny. It is only bigotry for someone who wants to make it seem as if Urartu and Armenia were on two different planets and are 100% unrelated, but that is, in itself, bigotry. 2. Calling "Urartu" simply an Iron Age state instead of making it part of "History of Armenia" only serves the nationalistic aims of those who want to degrade Armenians for political reasons. Everyone agrees the region called Urartu is now called Armenian Highlands, so completely separating the two is dishonest and mainly due to political reasons. Ancient Egyptians called their country Kemet, and they spoke entirely different languages, had completely different socio-political aspects, had a complete different culture, religion, even their physical appearance was different, yet they are still a part of Egyptian history. Please answer these before changing anything, and if you are incapable, don't impose yourself. āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 16:08, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
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- Also, just for the heck of it, do you believe Caucasian Azerbaijanis are descendants of Caucasian Albanians?
- If you know linguistic too, than you must know that average 1000 years can change the language beyond recognition. Itās ok, but you also had to know that these changes are not chaotic and there are some rules that makes it possible to recover its earlier form. (Andersenās rule for example) Also even there is 5000 years between older and new language they will stay in one language family. A Celtic (IE Lang) wonāt become Dravidian if thousand years pass. The only way for it happens is assimilation.
By the way there is no Egypt History template on Ancient Egypt page check it out. Related Azerbaijan and others I really donāt know anything, and donāt care. My object of attention is Urartu. Related your philosophy,
The problem is not modern Armenians and Hurrians difference. Problem is that even Orontides were totally different from Urartuans. In each aspects, language, arts, architecture socio-politics.
āBUT it IS the geopolitical successor,ā agree on this (Armenia is also geopolitical successor of Byzantine, Caliphate etc. etc.) Repeat once again, Iām living far away from Armenia and Turkey, ethnically donāt have any connection to both, and donāt care for both Turks and Armenians. If I had to chose one Iād chose Armenians because of my good friend Karen but itās all separate from this issue.
āI'd also like to add that we have no clear idea of what the common folk in Urartu spokeā and still you want to add it into Armenian History? We are quite sure that rulers were speaking dialect of Hurrian which is a disappeared Iron Age language.
āAs we can see, old french and modern French is almost incompatible, and so is old English and modern English, and these languages have existed for only half the amount of years the Armenian state has existed.ā But we donāt class old-french as Altaic. Both old-french and modern were indo-european languages from same branch, while Armenian and Hurrian are far away from each other. Not even far relative.
"Who knows what type of language evolution, replacement, etc. occured in the Armenian Highlands from the times of Urartu all the way to the creation of the Armenian Alphabet (a 2,500 year process)." What ever there happened a language with ergative tense wouldnāt become a IE language without assimilation.
āIf you know linguistics, you should know what 100 years can do to a language, let alone 2,500 years. God know what was spoken at the time of Tigran II the Great.ā It does some systematic changes, āimprovementsā. Its not chaotic and you can track the rules in which these changes happened. Although we both agree that Movses Khorenatsi is not a 100% reliable historian (as are all ancient historians such as "Homer," Herodotus, etc) Yes we did, thatās all.
āThe name "Biainili" (native name of Urartu) is widely recognized as the ancestral na ⦠ā Does it wonder you that some old names survived in Armenian? Armenians replaced Hurrian culture, and of course there must be some loans. Again, Khorenatsi as a medieval historian could read a story that a state was fighting Assyria and come to conclusion that is was Armenia only because its northern than Assyria. Itās a mistake you can widely meet in that period. Tired of answering this personal research.
Making "Urartu" part of "History of Armenia" instead of calling it simply an Iron Age state instead serves the nationalistic aims of those who want to raise Armenians for political reasons. And you have reasons for doing it, unlike us. Nakh 07:57, 2 July 2010 (UTC)
- I don't have time to answer all of your arguments for now (I will), nor have I read them, but I read your first argument, and already saw a flaw.
- "Problem is that even Orontides were totally different from Urartuans. In each aspects, language, arts, architecture socio-politics."
- Problem here is that if you know what language the Orontids spoke, you must have some ancient tablet lying around in your room that no one has seen. Orontid (Yervand) is a Medo-Persian name, not Armenian. It entered Armenians through them. Therefore, I have no doubt in my mind that the socio-political aspects of the Orontids were different than the kings of Urartians. With Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Turks went through an ENTIRE change of socio-political aspects. Does that mean modern Turks are entirely different than Ottoman Turks? Again, my example of Greeks. When the Ottoman turks conquered them, they went through a change of socio-political aspects, but they remained descendants of Byzantines. But seriously, tell me what language Orontids spoke. Do we have ANY evidence of what the Orontids, or let alone the following major Armenian dynasties, spoke until the creation of the Armenian alphabet? The only clue we have is that "Armenians spoke a language that, to the ears of Herodotus, sounded like Persian" (no doubt, since the Orontids were Medo-Persians). Does that statement prove anything? What if the Arshakunis brought the Armenian language with them and the Orontids were speaking Persian? Does that mean that the Urartians, living in the new Armenian satrapy stop being Urartian all of a sudden? Is it not possible that Urartians themselves abandoned their language for Armenian and were amalgamated in the Armenian world that arose in the region? Again, did the Azaris of Iran stop being an Iranian nation because they began to speak Turkic? In the end, refrain from using "language" as an argument because we have NO IDEA of what the official language of the state was, nor how many times it changed in the millennia that followed the collapse of Urartu.
- We don't know what the Urartians spoke, nor do we know what Armenians spoke. From 1200 BC to 500 AD, we have seen Assyrian, Hurrian, Persian & Greek inscriptions in the region, and afterward, we have seen Armenian inscriptions. The only thing we know about the end of Urartu and genesis of Armenia is that Urartu was succeeded by the Satrapy of Armina (which later became an independent region once again, under a Perso-Armenian dynasty), and that's what we should be concentrated on when we say that Urartu is part of Armenian history. The biggest proof that we have that Armenia and Urartu were considered be part of a continuous nation is the Behistun Inscription -- why else would Urashtu (Urartu) be used to describe a nation called "Armenia" in the other languages used in the inscription? Knowing this, the denial of a link between Urartu and Armenia is simply blatant.
- I'd also like you to inform you of genetic studies. DNA tests show that Georgians and Armenians are closest relatives. We all agree that Hurrian is part of a larger Caucasian language group. We all agree that Urartian is part of the Hurro-Urartian group. We all agree that the Georgian language is related to many other Caucasian languages. Genetic studies have also proven that nations (as in, a large group of people) have migrated a lot less than we used to think. Would it not be logical that Urartians, a people related to the broader Caucasian peoples, simply went through a language and identity change sometime in their history? It's either that, or Armenians have lived in the region at the same time as Urartians, making them Urartians as well (this is the most widely accepted theory, in which Hayasans would be those "Armenians" living with Urartians (we also agree Urartu was a federative kingdom of many nations) -- which still means they were a minority in Urartu, and simply became the majority in their own country later on, assimilating the minorities, including the earlier ruling dynasties -- Biainilians). āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 23:57, 3 July 2010 (UTC)
Kentron I must agree with you. I'm also supporter of that theory that genetically Armenians must have big enough contemplate of Hurrian genes. Also Diakonoff notes it that Armenians are amalgam of Armenians Hurrian and Luwians. (See amalgam of Armenians and other) If you will edit page in that way I will be agree with you. But we must moderate some nationalist users which going to a total different way. And lets improve this bloody article instead of trying to impose our versions related nation of Urartuans. Sincerely Nakh 06:49, 5 July 2010 (UTC)
Hmm currently Armenian editor hordes vandalising this page... So sad.. Nakh 06:56, 5 July 2010 (UTC)
- āBUT it IS the geopolitical successor,ā
- agree on this (Armenia is also geopolitical successor of Byzantine, Caliphate etc. etc.)
- No, Armenia was occupied/conquered by Byzantine, the Caliphate, etc. whereas Urartu wasn't conquered or occupied by Armenians, but rather the Armenian nation emerged as the amalgamation of the native tribes in Urartu. There is no record of the existence of Armenians outside Urartu prior to the emergence of Armenia. Armenians emerged as a nation in the same region as Urartu. Therefore, it is not comparable to Byzantine or the Caliphate. It is more comparable to the earliest history of Japan: Urartians were like the Jomon people of the Armenian plateau, while the tribes that spoke a proto-Armenian language are like the Yayoi. Two different groups of people who set the pavement for the creation of a new nation (Japan & Armenia, respectively).
- āI'd also like to add that we have no clear idea of what the common folk in Urartu spokeāand still you want to add it into Armenian History? We are quite sure that rulers were speaking dialect of Hurrian which is a disappeared Iron Age language.
- Again, is history strictly based on language? There is not one nation in the world that speaks its prehistoric language. Some have evolved like in the case of Greeks, while some have changed entirely like in the case of the French and Armenians.
- āAs we can see, old french and modern French is almost incompatible, and so is old English and modern English, and these languages have existed for only half the amount of years the Armenian state has existed.ā
- But we donāt class old-french as Altaic. Both old-french and modern were indo-european languages from same branch, while Armenian and Hurrian are far away from each other. Not even far relative.
- It seems you have not understood my previous argument. Whether the two languages are relatives or not is irrelevant. Gaulish and French are entirely different languages that are derived from the same language thousands of years earlier. Spanish and Russian are Indo-European languages, but they are two entirely different languages at this point. If Spanish people begin speaking Russian, it's not because the language evolved from Spanish to Russian, but that it was replaced, even if both are Indo-European/same language group. I'm not saying Armenian evolved from Hurrian. I'm saying the Urartians stopped speaking their Hurrian language and began to speak an Indo-European language.
- "Who knows what type of language evolution, replacement, etc. occured in the Armenian Highlands from the times of Urartu all the way to the creation of the Armenian Alphabet (a 2,500 year process)."
- What ever there happened a language with ergative tense wouldnāt become a IE language without assimilation.
- Exaclty my point. Urartians were a piece in the puzzle which, when all put together [after the amalgamation, call it assimilation if you wish], became Armenia -- retaining many elements from the first kingdom in the region, Urartu, in the process. For Armenia to be 100% distinct from Urartu, Armenia must have existed separately elsewhere. History shows no trace of anything Armenians outside Urartu (or the region before Urartu's existence). Urartu was a federative kingdom, and Armenians were most probably among the peoples within Urartu. Whether the ancestors of these people migrated some thousands of years ago into the region is irrelevant. If we go this far, we can say all nations are "African invaders." The point is, "Armenia" (the nation) emerged for the first time from the ashes of Urartu, absorbing the previous kingdom, like it has happened many times for almost all civilizations in history. I hope this is clear enough.
- āIf you know linguistics, you should know what 100 years can do to a language, let alone 2,500 years. God know what was spoken at the time of Tigran II the Great.ā
- It does some systematic changes, āimprovementsā. Its not chaotic and you can track the rules in which these changes happened.
- Although we both agree that Movses Khorenatsi is not a 100% reliable historian (as are all ancient historians such as "Homer," Herodotus, etc)
- Yes we did, thatās all.
- You must reformulate this part because it's mixed up...
- āThe name "Biainili" (native name of Urartu) is widely recognized as the ancestral na ⦠ā
- Does it wonder you that some old names survived in Armenian? Armenians replaced Hurrian culture, and of course there must be some loans. Again, Khorenatsi as a medieval historian could read a story that a state was fighting Assyria and come to conclusion that is was Armenia only because its northern than Assyria. Itās a mistake you can widely meet in that period.
- Tired of answering this personal research.
- Your statement returns to the "maybe it's just a coincidence" argument which I already gave my opinion on.
- "Personal researchā¦" You pretend to have the authority to decide whether or not Urartu should be simply "Iron Age" or "History of Armenia," and I wonder what research you base this decision on. Are you a professor in the field? Your research is as "personal" as mine is. Most people providing information to Wikipedia are "personal researchers" which is WHY we need to reference our claims. My claims are based on books by professionals. So what if it's my "personal research"? Does it make it less credible?
- Making "Urartu" part of "History of Armenia" instead of calling it simply an Iron Age state instead serves the nationalistic aims of those who want to raise Armenians for political reasons. And you have reasons for doing it, unlike us.
- Sure, it makes Armenians happier than Azeris and Turks. But it's not because Egypt or France have no "mortal enemy nation" that their ancestors are allowed to be included in their history and not ours. What Armenians try to accomplish with Urartu on Wikipedia is to build the history of their nation using the same standards other nations are using. Apparently, this bothers Turks and Azeris since it proves us right and them wrong on many points (mainly, our nativity claim). For example, the French don't speak Galish anymore, but Gaul is part of the History of France. The Helladic period is part of Greek history, even though the population probably didn't speak an Indo-European language. History of Ancient Egypt is part of History of Egypt, yet they were entirely different, with a different identity, different language of a different language group, different religion, and different physical appearance. There are many other examples like this, but I'm tired of repeating this. My question is, why do all of these cultures manage to be part of the history of their respective successors, but not Urartu in Armenian history, knowing Armenia emerged immediately after the fall of Urartu, in the same region, with a cultural continuity, simply because the language that was probably spoken by the nobility of the region was Hurrian, and 1 millennia later, Armenian (we don't know what was spoken in the region from the fall of Urartu to the creation of the Armenian Alphabet 1 millennia later).āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 04:01, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
- "By the way there is no Egypt History template on Ancient Egypt page check it out."
- Check History of Egypt & History of ancient Egypt. I don't know why the template is not on Ancient Egypt, but that doesn't change the fact that in all history books, and the articles I just presented, Ancient Egypt is considered part of a continuous history of Modern Egypt.
-
- I guess the best comparison I can make are the Mestizos of South America. European Spaniards have intermingled with Amerindians during the age of discovery and the result is "Mestizos." Genetically, they are more Amerindian, but they speak Spanish. Does that mean that the Mestizos (the main ethnic group in Mexico) are completely unrelated to the Amerindians because they speak a language today that isn't in the same language group as their ancestors? Armenians are the result of probably Phrygian & Iranian settlers intermingling with the local Urartian peoples who. The DNA of Armenians is the proof that they are very closely related to their neighbors, but their language suggest a language replacement. If we use the same standards used by all other nations for their history, wouldn't that mean Urartu is legitimately part of Armenian history? āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 20:36, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
Take a step back please and look at this section. How about investing your time in actually improving the article? This article doesn't need a navbox. If people cannot agree on one, it can just do without. Neither the links in the "History of Armenia" nor the links in the "Ancient Mesopotamia" article have any particular relevance to this topic. This is a topic of an Iron Age state, but also the links in the "Iron Age" template aren't terribly relevant here.
Navboxes are for the benefit of the reader, and should be used if there is a group of very relevant, closely related topics. They are not here for cheap pissing contests over who gets to own the article page real estate. --dab (š³) 10:34, 8 July 2010 (UTC)
- @dab How about actually ARGUING with me instead of throwing everything out the window? "We can't decide on one so let's just not put anything" or "why don't you invest time on improving the article" are not arguments and do not refute ANYTHING that I have said, but rather ignores them. They are not eligible reasons to please those who would dissociate Urartu from anything Armenian. We will improve the article when all of us agree that there is nothing else to be said. Otherwise, this article will always be a battlefield. The problem with removing these templates is that I firmly believe Urartu has played a major role in Armenian History, and so do most scholars in the field. Including "Ancient Mesopotamia" helps the read find other kingdoms of its time, and "History of Armenia" helps the reader discover the nation that succeeded it. They are perfectly relevant templates and do nothing else than to benefit the reader.
- I agree, my discussions are long, but we're providing to an encyclopedia here. If you are too impatient to read, then you're at the wrong place. Let me reformulate one of my arguments. Why is there a template for the "History of France" on an article about a nation that is unrelated to the French directly (Gaul), but served as a piece of their ethnogenesis puzzle, and that existed on the territory of modern day France, and was succeeded by the ancestors of the modern-day French under the Roman Empire, MUCH like Urartu served as a piece of the ethnogenesis puzzle of Armenians, and existed on the territory of the Armenian Highlands, and was succeeded by the ancestors of modern-day Armenians under the Median/Achaemenid Empire? Why is it fair that France may include their history template on the article of a state that is as related to them as much as Urartu is related to Armenians? The only difference between Urartu/Armenia and Gaul/France is that the French don't have Turkish historians distorting history in order to degrade them. Urartu is part of Armenian history exactly like Gaul is part of French history, Britons are part of English history, Ancient Egyptians are part of Modern Egyptian history, Amerindians are part of Mestizos' history, the Helladic period is part of the history of Greece, etc. The only reason we have such a hard time deciding whether or not Urartu is part of Armenian history is because Turkish historians have provoked the idea that Armenians are not indigenous to the region, and the best way to make this idea a realty is to dissociate Urartu from Armenians. I still don't think this disproves our nativity," Armenians are still indigenous to the region because the Armenian nation never existed elsewhere, and began its existence in the Armenian Highlands. Armenians are the amalgam of the indigenous tribes within the Satrapy of Armina, which included all of the territory of the Urartian state, in which the proto-Armenian speaking peoples would have taken over the authority.
- @Nakh, very mature there buddy. Why don't you put " " around all the statements that you are too stubborn to accept have a legitimate place in the article? āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 16:07, 8 July 2010 (UTC)
Replaced photo with Armenian Crosses "that may be parthian" with a photo on that are Armenian letters. Armenian History template moved to it's section, if you dont like remove it at all. Also please note that if you are awaiting some explanation for others edits. Please be so kind and give some arguements for yours. Nakh 14:03, 22 July 2010 (UTC)
"KentronHayastan", if you want to argue with me, argue about the actual article content, not about some navigation template. Also make sure that your argument concerns Urartu, not Armenians. If I wanted to argue about the history of Armenia, I would peruse Talk:History of Armenia. --dab (š³) 08:52, 23 July 2010 (UTC)
A similar argument has been invoked here already, but let me mention this anyway: If Phoenicia is included in the History of Lebanon, a country carved out of the Ottoman Empire and of the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon only in the 20th century, I don't see why Urartu shouldn't be included in the History of Armenia. --Davo88 (talk) 05:57, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
Forst it seems that you dont want to understand?!(Its been told many times, and discussed.) So let try to explain it to you Kentron or Davo doesnt give arguement on why is Urartu related to Armenia just discuss some other articles for ex. France Gaul Phoenicia Lebabanon. Please feel free improving Phoenicia article, but please give up on vandalising Urartu article, and get rid of cheap natism. Nakh 07:21, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
Ahaha by the way, according to researches indicated on the Talk:Phoenicia Phoenicians also had the J2 haplogroup, so you can feel free adding there Armenian History navigation template. Nakh 07:26, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
Another addition, Kentron you mentioned before that Armenians and Georgians were most close to Urartu, youre mistaken. First of all Armenians are far away in this list Cypriots, Ingushs, Iraqis, Lebanese, Chechens, Ossetians, Balkars, Kurds, Yagnobis, are some (not all) of the peoples that have more genetical similarities Armenians.. Kazbegi people in Georgia are closest to Hurrians genetically. So I m going to add a few navigation templates over History of Armenia, and also please be informed that some of these peoples have not only 20% of close genes, but also Architectural and Linguistic connections. (This is horrible we are discussing this hell instead of improving the article). Im agree that if: LebaneseāPhoenician, than:ArmenianāUrartu hypothese is soooo original Nakh 07:56, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
Why is this still about Armenians and navboxes? Isn't anyone on this talkpage interested in Urartu? From your comments, it appears that you think the presence of a navbox is a statement about genetics. It is not. A navbox is a navbox, useful in some cases to point the reader to closely related topic. If you want to discuss genetics, try to edit the content of an article on genetics, not the navboxes in an article about archaeology. Thank you. --dab (š³) 09:19, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
dab, to be honest genetics issue was started by our friend Kentron, this was just response to him. Im personally not interested in genetics that much, moreover I believe that it is toooo early to use genetics to argue some historical issues. Because this branche of science is too young, and some changes become almost each week. Nakh 11:58, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
Once again, dab, you present no arguments. You impose your point of view without an intellectual contribution by undoing my edit. If you think my arguments do not concern Urartu, you need to clean your computer screen. I will answer your useless statement quickly: 1. I am arguing that Armenians and Urartians are close enough to be categorized together. If, to you, this doesn't concern Urartu, then you have a problem I can't solve. 2. I want to argue with you. The first step for this is one side to refute the/agree with the other side's argument(s). You have failed to do so.
"Forst," Nakh, the fact that you are able to say, "Kentron or Davo doesnt give arguement on why is Urartu related to Armenia" proves to me and the rest of the people reading this that you haven't read my arguments. Second, France/Gaul, Phoenicia/Lebanon, Kemet/Egypt, Mestitos/Native Americans, are all perfect examples to explain and compare Urartu/Armenia. Urartians and Armenians have much more in common than Ancient Egyptians and Modern Egyptians. Yet Modern Egypt is allowed to include Ancient Egypt in its history, but Armenians are not allowed to include Urartu in their history. It seems you don't want to understand. You say you are Chechen. Chechens are very fond of Turks. This is the only reason why you are so persistent to dissociate Urartians from the history of Armenia.
"Kazbegi people in Georgia are closest to Hurrians genetically." What a baseless and, honestly, hilarious statement!! Where did you read this? Do we have a Hurrian person alive today to know his/her DNA? I mean, to say one is close to the other, we need to have samples of both. In this case, Hurrians have been extinct for about 2 millenniums.
Now I'm beginning to think that you have a hard time with english, Nakh, from the way you write, and the way you understand things. Please edit articles in which your level of english is acceptable. I say this because you misquote one of my simple arguments. I never said Georgians and Armenians are close to the Urartians genetically. But I DID assume it, and I gave my argument. Armenians are genetically farther from their fellow Indo-European speakers, but rather genetically closer to Caucasian language speakers, mostly Georgians. This would mean Armenians, rather than migrating into the lands, have had their language replaced, as we can comfortably claim that the Georgian language is the evolved result of languages spoken by native people of the region.
On a side note, both of you continuously complain because I don't "improve" the article, while I haven't seen any of you contribute anything other than the removal of edits that don't fancy your point of view. I spend time writing arguments to back my edit, and all you do is judge me, forget to provide a constructive argument, and blatantly undo my edit. And then, you complain because I don't provide arguments! What more do you want?
- Armenia and Urartu share the exact same geographic location
- Many places in Urartu share a striking resemblance to Armenian names
- Some Urartian kings are believed to be of proto-Armenian origin, by some Armenian and non-Armenian historians
- Armenia came into existence immediately after the fall of Urartu (less than a century)
- "Armina" became the name of the satrapy that governed all of the former lands of Urartu
- Urartians didn't just vanish, they were amalgamated into the nation that emerged from the satrapy of Armina, the Kingdom of Armenia
- The Behistun Inscription equates Armenia and Urartu
- Old languages continued to call the Satrapy of Armina "Urartu/Urashtu"
- Armenian is the only language that still uses Urartian words
- Armenians use many Akkadian/Assyrian words, when in reality, Armenians were never under the influence of Assyrians. Urartians were, and it is believed that they became part of the Armenian language through the Urartian language
- Armenians and Urartians share cultural similarities, like dam making
- Armenians and Urartians compare to Gauls/French and Mestitos/Native Americans
- Armenians are closer to Urartians than Egyptians are to Ancient Egyptians
- Armenians (and Assyrians) still use names used during Urartu
- Armenians seem to have the DNA of people who were native, rather than people who have migrated
- Armenians are the only people to have somewhat preserved the memory of Urartu in their history since ancient times
- Assyrians seem to have played an important role in Armenian history, yet Armenia, as we know it, came to be after Assyria fell, thus,
- Many historical elements found in Armenian history coincide with actual events that occurred during Urartu
These are the arguments I can think of for now, which I use to back my claim that, "Urartu is part of Armenian history." If you don't agree, present to me arguments that will outweigh mine. Your usual "you have no arguments" is not eligible as an argument.
I'd like to not that these arguments are far more convincing than the arguments used to include Gaul in French history, and Temet in Egyptian history. Why, then, do you still insist that Urartians are completely unrelated to Armenians? I keep using this comparison because it is unfair that Armenians are deprived from the same right to their history as these other mentioned nations are. āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 01:00, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
please stop trying to make a point by including a navigation template. You can discuss the relation of Urartu and Armenia as much as you like, both at History_of_Armenia#Iron_Age and within WP:DUE at Urartu#Armenian_ethnogenesis, but navigation templates are for navigation, not for tagging national article ownership, nor for making any other sort of point. Thank you.
Also, stop the WP:OTHERCRAP arguments. I don't see {{History of Egypt}} slapped on Kemet, or even on Ancient Egypt, nor do I see {{History of France}} at Gaul, or {{History of Switzerland}} at Alemannia, or {{History of Italy}} at Ancient Rome (etc., etc.). I daresay that it is undisputed that Ancient Rome is relevant to the History of Italy. Understand that this fact is in no way grounds for transcluding any sort of navigation boxes. If you have a comment on the templates transcluded in any other article, kindly take it to that article's talkpage. --dab (š³) 10:44, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
Last I checked all of my arguments fall perfectly well in the "Urartu" subject (the fall and legacy of Urartu, more precisely), whereas your arguments used to back the removal of anything related to Armenians in this article ("your arguments are WP:OTHERCRAP", "stop obsessing over this") is the perfect example of WP:OTHERCRAP (because instead of actually using something relevant to the article as an argument, you are using my "obsession" and misjudging my arguments, even though they are backed with reference). And now, I have repeat things I have already answered. Please refer to History of ancient Egypt for Temet. This will also refute your last "argument": History of Italy. I must agree, though, that the "History of Italy" template is not included in the page of Roman Empire, but I see you have taken the bold task of removing "History of France" from Gaul. At least you're more consistent than our friend Nakh. If that is how it will work as of now, on all similar articles, then I agree with the removal of "History of Armenia" from this page. My frustration was simply because other can do it, but not us.
This still doesn't give you the right to remove those small statements which you have decided to remove, because they are perfectly referenced. You are not God. It is an undisputed fact that Armenia replaced Urartu. Nothing in what I said suggested that Armenia = Urartu, but rather Urartu > Armenia. Do you have anything to outweigh those statements? If you do, present them, otherwise, mind your own business and don't impose yourself blatantly. āPreceding unsigned comment added by KentronHayastan (talk ⢠contribs) 20:23, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
- @KentronHayastan youāre correct on many points and make perfect sense. But what you probably donāt understand is that mr. Nakh is a Chechen it is in his name they speak a Nakh language and together with the Ingush people consider themselves Vainakh people. Because of the lack of records about these people, lack of alphabet and writing culture most of what is known about them is from foreign (Russian or Georgian) records. Today with the growing nationalism they feel the need to construct a baseless theory connecting Urartu to their identity eventhough their only connection seems to be a handful of similar words preserved in the mountainous region. Nevertheless they have convinced themselves that they are the sole surviving descendants of Urartu and Armenians were simply invaders who destroyed Urartu and took its place. It fits their anti-Armenian views because Armenia is Christian nation and an ally to their nemesis the Russians. That is why mr. Nakh is neglecting every other perfectly valid argument you are making and focusing so much solely on the language aspect, as if a nation is defined by its language. According to this logic off course the people of Zaire are French and Mexicans are Spanish. As you mention many times many scenarios are possible that would explain the difference between the Armenian language and the Urartian cuneiform. The cuneiform might as well been an elitist court language, much like the Dutch elite used native Indonesian (their colony at the time), while the language of the people Armenian or other form of Indo-European. Similarly Urartians might have been using a language deriving from an unrelated people for trade purposes much like we all write English today. Even bilingualism is a plausible scenario since Urartu was a confederation and most likely not mono-ethnic. Again many scenarios are possible and the true Urartian hieroglyphs might shed more light on this question in the future. But in any case the Armenian connection to the Urartu is undeniable and ridiculous to even debate. Apart from the language which does show a long lasting contact, there is genetic evidence connecting Armenians to the area and recordings describing Armenia as Urartu and vice versa. Like you say in any scenario the fact remains that the Armenian identity and the ethnicity has emerged in the Urartian lands. Dislocating Urartu from Armenia is a joke as with the same logic we could dislocate most ancient kingdoms from the modern republics. Fact remains that Urartu is a part of Armenian history it has been embraced as such from the early middle ages by our ancient historians until today by our people.
- The ridiculous thing is though that their page about the Nakh peoples consists of countless false statements and assumptions. A ridiculous notion that everything that even remotely resembles the word āNakhā is immediately connected to their own people. Like Nakh-ichevan and such. Again with such logic maybe Armenians should claim Ar-gentina or Ari-zona ;) . But no Armenians have to undergo a rigorous testing and retesting and again retesting of their every historic statement. But for some reason the rules of the game do not apply for others. Maybe we should go there set things straight. Nitpick every statement and make it subject to as much rigorous testing as they are doing to this article. Itās noteworthy to state that mr. Nakh is very active on that article and imposes his view as such on this one. My point is not to insult mr. Nakh but simply to elaborate that while mr. Nakh is claiming Armenian nationalism is taboo and should be avoided at any cost in this article, he is making the same mistakes himself by imposing his nationalistic views. He is not free from bias and he has his own agenda that is clear in his statements. If you want to understand this please do read the article on the Nakh Peoples.
- Regards,
- Dr. Greenthumb Dr. Greenthumb āPreceding unsigned comment added by 145.97.241.39 (talk) 07:25, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
[edit] Urartian/Urartean/Urartuan
The article should probably settle on an adjective and use it consistently. Varlaam (talk) 20:17, 12 November 2010 (UTC)
[edit] Khaldian people
Chaldia /Khaldian people: Were they the people of Urartu that went to the Northern parts of Anatolia? Scholars such as Carl Friedrich Lehmann-Haupt (1910) believed that the people of Urartu called themselves Khaldini after their god Khaldi. Bƶri (talk) 07:29, 1 December 2010 (UTC)
sure, it's a possibility, nobody will ever know because they didn't leave behind written sources. Such is prehistory. --dab (š³) 11:54, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
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