Re: Hayasa's Relation in Hayastan's History
I didn't say the peoples of Urartu weren't culturally united, I simply said the political organization was by nature a federation. Armenian churches throughout the Bagratuni domains also displayed similar architecture to one another, but we know that it was more or less a federation of several Armenian royal houses, with each different local ruler deriving his power from the Bagratunis. This is not much different than the political system during the Urartian era, in which you had the Urartian heartlands directly administered by the ruling dynasty, then the territories designated as provinces directly under central authority but which still retained a degree of independence, and then independent kingdoms/principalities which were allied to Urartu for military, economic, or political reasons. This is essentially the same type of political organization as every independent Armenian dynasty, all the way up to the fall of the Bagratunis.
Speaking of pillared halls, I have heard people claim the Urartian halls were early prototypes of later Median and Achaemenid royal halls (unless that same style of halls existed in the 2nd millenium B.C. outside of Urartu...)
Originally posted by bell-the-cat
Speaking of pillared halls, I have heard people claim the Urartian halls were early prototypes of later Median and Achaemenid royal halls (unless that same style of halls existed in the 2nd millenium B.C. outside of Urartu...)
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