Armenians in Iran
(ca. 1500-1994)
Prior to
the third century A.D., Iran had
more influence on Armenia's
culture than any of its other
neighbours. Intermarriage among
the Iranian and Armenian
nobility was common. The two
peoples shared many religious,
political, and linguistic
elements and traditions and, at
one time, even shared the same
dynasty. Sasanian policies and
the Armenian conversion to
Christianity, in the fourth
century, however, alienated the
Armenians from Zoroastrian Iran
and oriented them toward the
West. The Arab conquests which
ended the Iranian Empire and the
conversion of Iran to Islam in
the seventh century culturally
separated the Armenians even
further from their neighbour. In
the eleventh century, the Seljuk
Turks drove thousands of
Armenians to Iranian Azerbaijan,
where some were sold as slaves,
while others worked as artisans
and merchants. The Mongol
conquest of Iran in the
thirteenth century enabled the
Armenians, who were treated
favourably by the victors, to
play a major role in the
international trade among the
Caspian, Black, and
Mediterranean seas. Armenian
merchants and artisans settled
in the Iranian cities bordering
historic Armenia. Sultanieh,
Marand, Khoi, Saimas, Maku,
Maraghe, Urmia, and especially
Tabriz, the Mongol center in
Iranian Azerbaijan, all had,
according to Marco Polo, large
Armenian populations.
Ottoman-Safavid Rivalry and the
Depopulation of Armenia
Tamerlane's invasion at the end
of the fourteenth century and
the wars between the Black and
White Sheep Turkmen dynasties in
the fifteenth century had a
devastating effect on the
population of historic Armenia.
The latter part of the fifteenth
century witnessed the weakening
of the White Sheep and the
attempts of the Ottoman sultan,
Bayazid 11 (1481-1512), to take
advantage of the situation and
to extend his domains eastward
into Armenia and northwestern
Iran. At the dawn of the
sixteenth century, however, Iran
was unified under a new dynasty,
the Safavids (1501-1732) and
after some nine centuries once
again acquired the sense of
nationhood which has continued
into the present.
The Safavids assumed importance
during the early fourteenth
century when Sheikh Safi ad-Din
established his Sufi order in
Iranian Azerbaijan.
A
century later, the order, now
known as the Safavi, had assumed
a wholly Shi'i nature and began
gathering support among the
Turkmen tribes of northwestern
Iran and eastern Anatolia. The
order obtained the support of a
number of major Turkic tribes,
who called themselves the
kizil-bash, or "red heads" (from
the red caps that they wore). By
1501 the Safavid leader Isma'il
seized Transaraxia from the
White Sheep and declared himself
shah. Ten years later he managed
to gain control over Iran,
historic Armenia, and much of
eastern Transcaucasia, and he
founded a theocratic dynasty
that not only claimed to be
descended from 'Ali, the
son-in-law of the prophet
Muhammad, but that also
portrayed the shahs as
reincarnations of the Shi`i
imams or saints. Shi' ism thus
became and remains the state
religion of Iran.
The emergence of the Safavids
and the rise of Shi'ism in
eastern Anatolia were major
threats to the Ottomans, whose
claim to the caliphate and the
leadership of the Muslim world
was challenged by the new
Iranian dynasty. In 1514 Sultan
Selim I (1512-1520) crossed the
Euphrates River and for the
first time entered historic
Armenia. Shah lsma'il was not
ready to fight the Ottomans and
withdrew his forces, burning
many villages en route to
forestall the advancing Ottoman
army. Thousands of Armenians
were force to leave their land.
The Ottomans pushed deep into
Armenia and on August 23, 1514,
at the Battle of Chaldiran,
destroyed the Iranian army
through superior numbers and
artillery. Although Selim
captured Tabriz, the
admimistrative center of the
Safavids, he had to withdraw a
week later, as Ottoman military
leaders refused to winter in
Tabriz or to pursue the enemy
into the Iranian highlands.
This pattern was to be repeated
a number of times, particularly
during the reign of Shah Tahmasb
I (1524- 1576), who also pursued
scorched-earth policy when he
had to face the mighty Sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent
(1520-1566). The harsh Armenian
climate and difficulties in
transportation and in
communications with
Constantinople made it possible
for the Safavids to repeatedly
survive such defeats. Although
the Safavids managed to recover
Tabriz, Iran relinquished most
of eastern Anatolia.
The first peace agreement
between the two powers in 1555
left the western parts of
historic Armenia in Ottoman
bands, while the eastern parts
ended up under Iranian control.
Realizing the vulnerability of
Tabriz, Tahmasb moved the
capital south to Qazvin. The
uncertain situation over
Tahmasb's succession encouraged
the Ottomans to invade Armenia
again in 1578 and to continue
their campaign until 1590,
taking most of Transcaucasia and
once again occupying Tabriz.
Caught in the middle of these
warring powers, some Armenians
were deported by the Ottomans to
Constantinople from Tabriz,
Karabagh, and Nakhichevan and
others, by the Iranians, to
Iranian Azerbaijan from Van. To
replace them, Sultan Selim and
his successors settled Kurdish
tribes in Armenia, a policy
which continued into the
seventeenth century.
Indo-European speakers like the
Armenians, the Kurds were
Muslims who were divided into
Sunni, Shi'i, and Yezidi sects.
They were a nomadic people who
were exempt from cash taxation,
but had to present a quota of
their herds and guard the border
regions.
Their settlement in historic
Armenia was to create a major
problem later for the Armenians
when the state was powerless to
control the Kurds or, conversely,
when it actually used them
against the Armenians. The
protracted Ottoman-Safavid war
and the resulting forced
migrations depopulated parts of
historic Armenia, and the
Kurdish settlement changed its
social and ethnic balance.
The Great Migration
It was Shah `Abbas the Great
(1587-1629) who left the
greatest imprint on modern Iran
and the Iranian Armenian
community. Recognizing the
comparative weakness of the
Iranian army, he quickly
concluded a treaty with the
Ottomans in 1590, Ceding eastern
Armenia and parts of Iranian
Azerbaijan. He then began the
Formation of a new force,
recruiting Georgian and Armenian
mercenaries and Converts as
sharpshooters, and, with
European help, fashioned an
artillery and the basis of a
modem army. He moved his capital
from Qazvin to Isfahan, a safer
location. Isfahan was also
closer to Baghdad, the soft
underbelly of the Ottoman
Empire.
By the start of the seventeenth
century `Abbas felt strong
enough to break the peace he had
made with the Ottomans in 1590.
In the autumn of 1603 the shah
advanced to retake Iranian
Azerbaijan and to force the
Ottomans out of Transcaucasia as
well. He succeeded in taking the
cities of Tabriz, Marand,
Ordubad, Akulis, and the
province of Nakhichevan, which
included the town of Julfa. The
shah was greeted as a liberator
by the Armenians, who could no
longer endure heavy Ottoman
taxes, and the Shi`i Muslims,
who were tired of religious
persecutions. The Armenian
merchants of Julfa, who had been
engaged in international trade
for some time, were especially
happy with the Iranian capture
of Julfa. According to one
primary source, the Sunnis of
Nakhichevan province were killed
and their villages were razed by
the Safavid army. The same
source adds that `Abbas deported
the Armenian merchants of Julfa
to Iran at this time in order to
prevent the region from
regaining its economic viability.
All other contemporary sources,
however, indicate that only the
main fortress of Nakhichevan was
destroyed in 1603 and that the
Armenian population was not
moved until 1604.
In November 1603, `Abbas laid
siege to the fortress of Yerevan,
a formidable bastion constructed
by the Ottomans. The siege
lasted over seven months and
resulted in the conscription of
over 10,000 local Armenians and
Muslims, which. in turn, spelled
an economic and demographic
decline of that province. In the
summer of 1604, at the news of
an Ottoman counteroffensive, `Abbas
laid waste much of the territory
between Kars and Ani and
deported its Armenians and
Muslims into Iranian Azerbaijan.
`Abbas was sure that the
Ottomans would not launch an
attack so close to winter and
according to some sources,
demobilized most of his army in
the fall. The Ottomans, however,
did advance, catching the shah
unprepared. Orders went out from
`Abbas to forcibly remove the
entire population residing in
the regions of Bayazid, Van, and
Nakhichevan and to carry out a
scorched-earth policy.
Primary sources estimate that
between 1604 and 1605 some
250,000 to 300,000 Armenians
were removed from the area.
Thousands died crossing the Arax
River. Most of the Armenians
were eventually settled in
Iranian Azerbaijan, where other
Armenians had settled earlier.
Some ended up in the Mazandaran
region and in the cities of
Sultanieh, Qazvin, Mashhad,
Hamadan, Arak, and Shiraz. The
wealthy Armenians of Julfa were
brought to the Safavid capital
of Isfahan. The Julfa community
was accorded special care and
seems to have suffered less in
their migration. They were
settled across the banks of the
Zayandeh Rud and in 1605 a town,
called New Julfa (Nor Jugha),
was constructed especially for
them.
Persian masons, together with
Armenian craftsmen, built the
new settlement. Many churches
were constructed, thirteen of
which survive today. Armenians
had rights, which were denied
other minorities. They elected
their own mayor, or kalantar,
rang church bells, had public
religious processions,
established their own courts,
and had no restrictions on
clothing or the production of
wine. No Muslims could reside in
New Julfa.
The Armenian mayor was given one
of the shah's royal seals in
order to bypass bureaucratic
tangles and had jurisdiction
over the two dozen Armenian
villages around Isfahan. He
collected and paid to the throne
a poll tax in gold, which was
gathered from each adult male.
In time, the Armenian population
of New Julfa and the surrounding
villages grew to some 50,000.
Here they were granted trading
privileges and a monopoly on the
silk trade, which transformed
the community into a rich and
influential one and New Julfa
into a main center of trade
between Iran and Europe.
Interest-free loans were granted
to the Armenians to start
businesses and light industries.
Soon a major part of Iran's
trade with Europe, Russia, and
India was handled by the
Armenians, who enjoyed the
shah's protection and who had
outbid the British on the silk
monopoly.
The New Julfa merchants formed
trading companies, which
competed with the Levant, East
India, and Muscovy companies,
and established businesses in
Kabul, Herat, Qandahar,
Marseilles, Venice, Genoa,
Moscow, and Amsterdam, and in
cities of Sweden, Poland,
Germany, India, China, Indonesia,
and the Philippines. `Abbes
would spend time in New Julfa at
the houses of the most
successful merchants, known as
kolas. or notables, whom the
silk monopoly had made extremely
prosperous. Sources describe
their fabulous houses, decorated
with Oriental and Western
artwork, with tables set with
gold utensils.
The Armenians paid a set fee for
each bale of silk and most of
their profits remained in Iran.
Ottoman profits from overseas
trade fell and the Persian Gulf
became a center of trade with
Western ports. The military
decline of the Ottoman Empire
encouraged the West to establish
new contacts in the East.
Western diplomats, visitors, and
merchants were dispatched to
Iran and most were housed in New
Julfa. The Armenian merchants'
contacts with the West made them
a conduit through which the shah
was able to secure diplomatic
and commercial alliances against
the Ottomans.
The Armenians of New Julfa
became a unique part of the
diaspora in other ways as well.
They formed a separate
ecclesiastical unit under their
own bishop, appointed by
Etchimiadzin, which had
jurisdiction over all Armenians
of Iran and Iraq. New Julfa soon
became a cultural center. A
school was opened for the sons
of the kolas as well as
for some of the talented boys
from less prominent Armenian
families.
The future catholicos, Hakob
Jughaetsi (1655-1680), was among
its graduates, as were a number
of historians and translators.
One graduate, a priest, was sent
to Italy to learn the art of
printing and brought back the
first printing press in Iran.
The first printed book in Iran,
in any language, was an Armenian
translation of the Book of
Psalms, produced in 1638.
Manuscript illuminators
developed a distinct New Julfa
style, beginning in the first
half of the seventeenth century,
with the work of Mesrop of
Khizan, originally from Armenia.
A few artists even began to copy
European works brought to New
Julfa by the kolas. Prior
to 1600, Armenian merchants had
for some five hundred years
conveyed Eastern technology to
Europe. From the seventeenth
century onwards, beginning with
the New Julfa merchants, the
Armenians were one of primary
channels for the introduction of
Western technology and culture
to Asia.
European sources of the
seventeenth century portray `Abbes
as a great benefactor of the
Armenians, who secured them from
the Turks and who made them
wealthy in New Julfa, Armenian
historians of the time, however,
such as Arakel of Tabriz, view
Shah `Abbes' deportations and
the Turko Iranian conflict in
Armenia as a major catastrophe,
during which the land and the
people suffered terribly, with
the resulting depopulation
making the Armenians a minority
in most of their historic land.
`Abbes' policies did indeed have
varying short-term effects, in
the long term, however, the
forced deportations established
the basis for the Armenian
diaspora in Iran and India,
communities which, as we will
see, were to play an important
role in the Armenian cultural
and political revival of the
nineteenth century.
One of the intangible benefits
of Armenian economic power in
Iran was the transformation of
the Armenian self-image. After
centuries of conquest by Muslim
invaders, Armenians were granted
equal and at times even greater
privileges than Muslims. This
increased prestige extended to
the Church as well, and enabled
the leaders at Etchmiadzin to
regain some control over
outlying dioceses and
communities and to establish
ties with the patriarchs of
Constantinople and Jerusalem.
This new status also allowed a
number of Armenian secular
leaders to achieve recognition
and to rally support. This was
particularly true of the lords,
or meliks, of Karabagh
and Zangezur who, under the
patronage of the shahs, the
Church, and the Armenian
merchants, retained and expanded
their ancestral fiefdoms in
Karabagh. The meliks were
the last scions of Armenian
nobility in eastern Armenia.
They lived in mountainous
regions and usually paid tribute
directly to the shah. Unlike the
Church leaders, they lacked
unity and had to contend with
Muslim rulers, who viewed any
landed and armed Christian
nobility as threat. Their
autonomy and occasional defiance,
however, attracted some popular
support, and, as will be seen,
they initiated, together with
some Armenian merchants and
clerics, the Armenian
emancipation movement.
Eastern Armenia (1639-1804)
|
The Treaty of Zuhab
partitioned historic
Armenia in 1639 between
the Ottomans, who took
western Armenia, and the
Safavids, who took
eastern Armenia. Eastern
Armenia was itself
divided into the
beglarbegi of
Chukhur Sa'd (the
regions of Yerevan and
Nakhichevan), and the
beglarbegi of
Karabagh (the regions of
Karabagh-Zangezur and
Ganja). The first was
thus composed of
sections from the
historic Armenian
provinces of Ayrarat,
Gugark, and Vaspurakan;
the second from Artsakh,
Siunik, and Utik (see
map 3). Administered by
khans, mostly from the
Qajar clan, the regions
were under the
supervision of a
governor-general
stationed in the city of
Tabriz, in Iranian
Azerbaijan. The
beglarbegi of
Chukhur Sa'd was
especially important,
for its main city,
Yerevan, was a center of
Iranian defence against
the Ottomans.
Although `Abbes
protected the Armenians
of New Julfa and
prevented the Catholic
missionaries from making
major inroads in the
community, his death and
the eventual decline of
the Safavids in the
second half of the
seventeenth century
forced some of the
kolas to emigrate to
India and Italy, where
they established
branches of their
trading houses. The
absence of an Iranian
merchant marine meant
that the Armenian
merchants of New Julfa,
over time, could not
keep up with the large
English or Dutch
joint-stock venture
companies such as the
East India Company,
which, by the
mid-eighteenth century
had taken over much of
the trade of the region.
By the beginning of the
eighteenth century,
growing Shi'i
intolerance and new laws
unfavourable to the
Armenians also created a
difficult situation for
the kolas, and
more of them emigrated
to Russia, India, the
Middle East, and Western
Europe. Insecurity at
home also meant that
Armenians would look to
Catholic Europe and
especially Orthodox
Russia for protection or
even deliverance. The
fall of the Safavids and
the Afghan occupation of
Isfahan and New Julfa in
1722 marked the end of
the influence of the
kolas, but did not
end the Armenian
presence in Iran. Large
Armenian communities
remained in Isfahan, New
Julfa, and a number of
Iranian cities. |
The fall
of the Safavids encouraged Peter
the Great to invade the Caspian
coastal regions, while the
Ottomans broke the peace of
Zuhab and invaded eastern
Armenia and eastern Georgia in
1723. In two years' time the
Ottomans were in control of the
entire region, save for Karabagh
and Siunik, where Armenian
meliks under the leadership
of David Beg, Avan Yuzbashi, and
Mekhitar Sparapet held them off
for nearly a decade. The
Ottomans installed garrisons in
Tiflis (present-day Tbilisi),
Nakhichevan, Ganja, and Yerevan.
The fortress of Yerevan was
repaired and served as the
administrative headquarters of
the Ottoman military-governor of
eastern Armenia.
|
By
1736 a new ruler, Nader
Shah (1736-1747) and a
new dynasty, the Afshars,
had restored order in
Iran, had convinced the
Russians to withdraw,
and had pushed the
Ottomans back to the
boundaries of 1639.
Rewarding the Armenian
meliks for their
stand against the
Ottomans, the shah
exempted them from
tribute and recognized
their autonomy.
Catholicos Abraham
Kretatsi (1734-1737),
who had befriended the
shah, was a guest of
honour at Nader's
coronation. The new shah
not only visited
Etchmiadzin but
reconfirmed its
tax-exempt status. Nader
removed a number of
Turkic tribes from
eastern Armenia,
especially Karabagh, and
divided the region into
four khanates: Yerevan,
Nakhichevan, Ganja, and
Karabagh.(see
map 4). |
Nader's
assassination in 1747 unleashed
a fifteen-year period of chaos
in eastern Armenia. The exiled
Turkic tribes returned and, led
by the Javanshir clan,
established a strong presence in
the plains of Karabagh. The
highlands of Karabagh, composed
of the five districts of
Gulistan, Khachen, Jraberd,
Varanda, and Dizak, as well as a
number of districts in Siunik,
as noted, had been controlled by
Armenian meliks and
became known as Mountainous
Karabagh and Zangezur,
respectively. The region had its
own See in Gandzasar. The
lowlands, stretching to the Kur
River, were populated by Turkic
and Kurdish confederations.
By allying
themselves with Melik
Shahnazarian of Varanda, Panah
Khan Javanshir and his son
Ibrahim Khan managed to gain a
foothold in a part of the
exclusively Armenian stronghold
of Mountainous Karabagh. By 1762
another ruler and dynasty, Karim
Khan Zand (1750-1779). took
control of most of Iran and was
recognized as their suzerain by
the khans of eastern Armenia.
His seat of power was in
southern Iran, however, and
Transcaucasia was left to
Ibrahim Khan of Karabagh and
King Erekle II (1762-1798) of
eastern Georgia, both of who
divided parts of eastern Armenia
into two zones of influence. The
death of Karim Khan in 1779
started another fifteen-year
conflict among Ibrahim, Erekle,
the khans of Yerevan and Ganja,
and the Armenian meliks.
More Armenians emigrated from
the khanates of Yerevan and
Karabagh to Russia and Georgia.
Tiflis, the main city of eastern
Georgia, became a major Armenian
center.
Russia's annexation of the
Crimea and its 1793 Treaty of
Georgievsk with Erekle once
again involved Russia in
Transcaucasian affairs. The
khans of the region rushed to
make their own separate peace
agreements with each other, and
with Georgia, Russia, or Iran.
Iran, in the meantime, was in
the throes of another dynastic
struggle. By 1794, Aqa Mohammad
Khan, the leader of the Qajar
clan, had subdued all other
pretenders to the Throne and now
swore to restore the territory
of the former Safavids. Most of
the khans of eastern Armenia
soon submitted, but Erekle of
Georgia, relying on Russian
protection, refused. Aqa
Mohammad invaded Georgia, sacked
Tiflis in 1795, and on his
return was crowned shah (1796).
To restore Russian prestige,
Catherine the Great declared war
on Iran and sent an army to
Transcaucasia.
Her death,
shortly after, put an end to
that campaign, however. Aqa
Mohammad soon contemplated the
removal of the Christian
population from eastern Georgia
and eastern Armenia. His new
campaign began in Karabagh,
where he was assassinated in
1797. Aqa Mohammad Khan, who had
been castrated by his enemies as
a youth, was succeeded by his
nephew, Fath `Ali Shah Qajar. At
the dawn of the nineteenth
century, the new shah had to
face a third and final Russian
challenge.
Socio-economic Conditions in
Eastern Armenia (17th-early 19th
centuries)
During the seventeenth century
the Safavids transformed Iran's
economy. A number of towns in
eastern Armenia, located on the
trade routes between Asia and
Europe, served as depots for
goods from India, China, and
Iran, which, in turn, found
their way to the markets of
Russia, the Ottoman Empire, and
Western Europe. Well-maintained,
safe roads, uniform tariffs. and
comfortable caravansaries aided
in the transfer of merchandise.
Eastern Armenia itself exported
wheat and silk from Karabagh and
dried fruit, salt, hides, and
copper from Yerevan. The large
nomadic population supplied wool
and Caucasian carpets and rugs
woven by Armenians and Turkic
craftsmen, which were valued for
their colours and design.
The population of eastern
Armenia prior to the Russian
conquest consisted of a Muslim
majority and an Armenian
minority. The Muslims were
divided into Persians, who
formed much of the
administration and part of the
army; the settled and semi
settled Turkic tribal groups,
who were either engaged in
farming or formed the balance of
the army; and the Kurds, who led
a traditional nomadic existence
and who formed a part of the
Iranian cav- alry. Although the
Armenians were engaged in trade
and formed the majority of the
craftsmen, most of them were
farmers.
The khans were responsible for
the defence and the collection
of taxes and were usually the
sole authority in their khanates.
They themselves were exempt from
taxes and received lands from
the crown in recognition of ser-
vice. When the central
government was weak or had
collapsed, the khans tended to
become the hereditary owners of
their domains. Tax collectors,
accountants, scribes, police
officers, judges, and other
officials managed the
administration. Various property
and personal taxes and a rigid
land tenure system supplied the
revenues and compensated the
administrative officials.
Corvee, or forced labour, was
performed by most peasants.
The Armenian villages were
supervised by their elders or
belonged to the Church as
endowed and charitable
tax-exempt property, or waqf.
The Muslim villages were
supervised by their own elders
(begs). Since eastern
Armenia was a dry region,
irrigation played a crucial part
in the life of the inhabitants.
Canals, some stretching twenty
miles, were common, and
officials in charge of
irrigation followed a rigid set
of rules to supply all farmers
with water.
Large villages fanned communally,
while small settlements were
generally farmed by large clans.
Agricultural lands followed a
primitive two-field rotation
system; half the plot planted,
half left fallow. Oxen and
wooden plows were used, and
manure was used both as a
fertilizer and as a fuel. Honey,
nuts, millet, barley, and
various oil seeds were the
mekior crops. Cochineal insects,
the source of the famed Armenian
red dye, were highly prized.
Gardens and orchards were
especially abundant and produced
a large variety of fruit,
especially grapes, and
vegetables. Since the peasants
surrendered dared much of their
harvest as taxes to the state or
the lord, life was frugal. Rice,
meat and high-quality wheat were
reserved for holidays. Yoghurt,
cheese, and bread baked in clay
ovens, accompanied by greens and
vegetables, were the main diet.
Few people had beds, most slept
on mats and used wooden utensils.
Family life was patriarchal.
Men worked in the fields or
pastures, while women,
supervised by the oldest female
(tantikin), threshed the
grain, spun wool, and made
carpets. The oldest male (aqu,
tanmetz, or tanuter) headed
the clan and had the final word
on most matters. Sons inherited,
while daughters generally
received a dowry. Just like
their Muslim counterparts,
Armenian women rarely spoke in
the presence of men or strangers,
covered their faces, and were
secluded. Apart from religion
and customs concerning marriage
and divorce, there were few
differences between Muslims and
Armenians. Age-old habits,
prejudices, and superstitions
were shared by both groups.
Armenians in Nineteenth-Century
Iran
In 1801, Russia annexed eastern
Georgia and began its final
penetration of Transcaucasia. In
1804 Russia started the First
Russo-Iranian war (1804-1813)
and a year later, with the
assistance of the Armenians of
Karabagh had captured half of
eastern Armenia.
|
The chaotic political
and socio-economic
conditions of the
previous century and the
departure of many
Armenians to Georgia
hurt the economy of
Yerevan, the center of
the Iranian defence of
Transcaucasia. Iranians,
in order to save the
rest of eastern Armenia,
heavily subsidized the
region and appointed a
capable governor, Hosein
Qoli Khan, to administer
it.
The khan, together with
the Iranian crown prince,
`Abbes Mirza, initiated
a number of
administrative and
military reforms and,
aided by Napoleon's
campaigns in Europe,
managed for two decades
to thwart Russian
designs on the remaining
territories in eastern
Armenia. In the end,
superior Russian forces
conquered all the lands
north of the Arax River
during the Second
Russo-Iranian war
(1826-1828).
Transcaucasia became
part of the Russian
Empire, and the fate of
eastern Armenia,
henceforth known as
Russian Armenia, was
inextricably tied to
that of Russia (see map
5). Some 30,000
Armenians left northern
Iran and settled in
Russia. |
The Armenian
community in Iran revived in the
second half of the nineteenth
century, thanks to commercial
ties with Armenian merchants in
Russia and to the benevolence of
the Qajar shahs. New Julfa
re-emerged as well and its
cathedral-monastery complex of
the Holy Saviour organized an
excellent library. The first
Armenian periodical, and a
history of the Armenians of New
Julfa were published in 1880.The
Armenian school in New Julfa
received a state subsidy,
Armenian clergy and churches
were exempted from taxes, and
confiscated Church property was
returned. Armenian merchants
opened new trading houses in the
Caspian and Persian Gulf regions
and traded with Russia, India,
and Europe.
Dried fruit, leather,
and carpets were
exported, and machinery,
glassware, and cloth
were imported. Royal
sponsorship brought
Armenians to Tehran,
where, taking advantage
of their linguistic
abilities and foreign
contacts, Nasr al-Din
Shah (1848-1896) used
them as envoys to Europe.
Some of them, like Mirza
Malkum Khan, David Khan
Melik Shahnazar, and
Hovhannes Khan Maschian
were responsible for the
introduction of
Freemasonry, Western
political thought, and
technological
innovations into Iran.
Armenian tailors and
jewellers introduced
European fashions, and
Armenian photographers
were among the first in
that profession.
Armenians were also
among the first
Western-style painters
and musicians. By the
end of the nineteenth
century there were some
100,000 Armenians living
in a dozen cities in
Iran (see map 6). The
Armenians in Iranian
Azerbaijan were soon
exposed to the national
and political ideas of
the Armenians in
Transcaucasia and, as
will be seen, were to
play a significant role
in the history of
twentieth-century Iran. |
|
Armenians in Twentieth-Century
Iran
By the twentieth century, Iran,
like Egypt, was a major center
of Armenian life in the Middle
East. As we have seen, by the
end of the nineteenth century,
there were some 100,000
Armenians in Iran. The proximity
of the Armenians in Iranian
Azerbaijan to Transcaucasia and
eastern Anatolia brought them
under the influence of the
political activities of Russian
and Turkish Armenians. Armenakan,
Hnchak and Dashnak cells opened
in Tabriz and Salmas and a
number of Armenian
revolutionaries sought refuge
from the tsarist and Turkish
police there. The massacres of
1895-1896 brought Armenian
refugees to north-western Iran.
The Revolution of 1905 in Russia
had a major effect on northern
Iran and, in 1906, Iranian
liberals and revolutionaries,
joined by many Armenians,
demanded a constitution in Iran.
Although the shah signed the
document, his successor
dissolved the majlis or
parliament and it was only in
1909 that the revolutionaries
forced the crown to give up some
of its prerogatives. The role of
Armenian military units under
the command of leaders such as
Yeprem Khan and Keri, in the
Iranian Constitutional Movement
is well-documented.
Thousands of Armenians had
escaped to Iran during the
genocide. The Turkish invasion
of Iranian Azerbaijan during
World War One devastated a
number of Armenian communities
in that region, such as Khoi.
The community experienced a
political rejuvenation with the
arrival of the Dashnak
leadership from Armenia in 1921.
The establishment of the Pahlavi
dynasty began a new era for the
Armenians. The modernization
efforts of Reza Shah (1924-1941)
and Mohammad Reza Shah
(1941-1979) gave the Armenians
ample opportunities for
advancement. Armenian contacts
with the West and their
linguistic abilities gave them
an advantage over the native
Iranians. They soon gained
important positions in the arts
and sciences, the Iranian Oil
Company, the caviar industry,
and dominated professions such
as tailoring, shoemaking,
photography, auto-mechanics, and
as well the managing of cafes
and restaurants. Immigrants and
refugees from Russia continued
to increase the Armenian
community until 1933. World War
Two gave the Armenians
opportunities to increase their
economic power.
The Allies decided to use Iran
as a bridge to Russia. Western
arms and supplies were shipped
through Iran and Armenians, with
their knowledge of Russian,
played a major role in this
endeavour. The Hnchaks,
especially, were active and the
Iranian Communist Party had an
Armenian contingent. The
majority of the Armenians
remained loyal to the Dashnaks,
while the minority, who had
communist sympathies, either
went underground or left with
the Iranian Socialists when they
fled to Russia in 1946. In 1953
the Iranian and few Armenian
communists made a brief comeback
during the Mossadeq period, but
the return of the shah, once
again decimated their ranks.
Most Armenians, under Dashnak
leadership, however, had
remained neutral or loyal to the
regime and were rewarded by the
shah, For the next quarter of
the century Armenian fortunes
rose in Iran, and Tehran, Tabriz,
and Isfahan became major centers
with some 250,000 Armenians.
The shah trusted and liked his
Armenian subjects and Tehran,
like Beirut, became a major
center of Armenian life.
Armenian churches, schools,
cultural centers, sports clubs
and associations flourished and
Armenians had their own senator
and member of parliament, Thirty
churches and some four dozen
schools and libraries served the
needs of the community. Armenian
presses published numerous books,
journals, periodicals, and
newspapers. such as The Wave
(Alik).
The better educated upper
classes, however, were fewer in
number and, compared to their
counterparts in Lebanon, were
relatively unproductive
culturally. Although the Islamic
Revolution has ended the second
golden age of the Armenian
community in Iran. the community
has not lost its prominence
altogether. Ayatollah Khomeini's
restrictions, the Iran-Iraq War,
and the economic problems
resulting from Iran's isolation.
forced the exodus of 100,000
Armenians.
The current government is more
accommodating and Armenians,
unlike the Kurds and Iranian
Azeris, have their own schools,
clubs, and maintain most of
their churches. The fall of the
Soviet Union, the common border
with Armenia, and the
Armeno-Iranian diplomatic and
economic agreements have opened
a new era for the Iranian
Armenians.