Echmiadzin (known as Vagharshapat before
1945) was founded by King Vagharshak (117-140) in the place of
Vardkesavan,
an ancient settlement of the third-second centuries B.C. In view of the might
of the town's fortifications-fortress walls, ramparts and moats-the Romans,
upon the second destruction of Artashat in 163, transferred the capital of Armenia
to Vagharshapat which, after Christianity was proclaimed the state religion
in 301, became country's religious centre as well. Vagharshapat was repeatedly
destroyed by enemies. In particular, it was left in ruins by Persian troops
in 364-369. However, the improvement of economic welfare in the long periods
between wars made it possible to do extensive construction work and to erect
in the town large structures which played an extraordinary role in the development
of national architecture. On the territory of Vagharshapat there have survived
monuments of various periods of Armenia's history. Urartu arrows have been found
in the temples of Zvartnots and Echmiadzin, and remnants of an ancient hearth
of a heathen tabernacle - in the altar part of the latter. Greek and Latin epigraphic
inscriptions, cut on tombstones, date back to the epoch of the Armenian Hellenistic
culture. Architectural fragments, found by chance, such as an ornamented cornice
in the masonry of the foundation of Hripsime church, are evidence of a high
artistic standard of the structures of that time. Echmiadzin cathedral was the
main Christian temple of Vagharshapat. Gayane, Hripsime, Shoghakat and other
churches, built at various times in the place of small and not too expressive
fourth-century chapels, complement it from the point of view of architecture
and layout. Situated relatively close to Echmiadzin cathedral, they are perceived
as important components of a single architectural ensemble with changed after
each new temple was built. The low residential structures all around set off
to the best advantage the grandeur of these edifices their domination in various
parts of the city. Echmiadzin cathedral ("the place where the homogeneous
come together") is the most ancient Christian temple of Armenia. It was
built in 301-303 by Grigor Lusavorich (Gregory the Enlightener), the founder
of the Armenian Gregorian church ,next to king's palace, in place of a destroyed
heathen basilica. The monastery which took shape around the cathedral is the
residence of Catholics, the head of the Armenian clergy. Scientists` opinions
as to the original appearance of Echmiadzin cathedral vary. According to T.Toramanian's
hypothesis, the cathedral had the shape o f a basilica at the beginning of the
fourth century and, after reconstruction at the end of the fifth century, its
plan became rectangular, with a four-apse cross and rectangular corner annexes
fitted into it. The building had five domes. In the seventh century the apses
were moved outside the limits of the rectangle, which gave the building the
cross-cupola outside shape. Proceeding from the material of excavations, however,
A. Sainyan established that the basilical composition of the original temple
was changed to cross-shaped one with the central dome in 483. What remained
of the basilica were only small vary-colored cubes in the altar apse (remnants
of the stone and small mosaics, often gilded, which decorated it) and the bases
of four pylons which were used as the inner abutments of the central-dome building.
That was one of the most ancient Christian temples of that type, which played
a tremendous role in shaping thconcentric buildings of the early Christian period
in Armenia and which makes it possible to ascertain the origin and classification
of types. At the beginning of the seventh century the buildings wooden
dome, probably octahedral and shaped like the roof of the Armenian peasant home
(as the domes of Khaikavanke and Horashene churches in Van) was replaced by
a stone one. This composition of the cathedral has come down to our day almost
unchanged. The cupola's abutments, cross-shaped in plan, are connected with
each other and with the walls by arches underlying the vaults - cross-shaped
in the corner sections and semi-circular in the middle sections; the apses are
crowned with conchs. The arrangement of the ceilings at various levels causes
the interior to taper off to the central dome. Harmonious proportions and sharpness
of individual elements impart great artistic expressiveness to the interior
whose shapes are simple and clear-cut. The building's outward appearance, which
underwent certain changes in the 17th and subsequent centuries, was no less
clear-cut. In the 17th century (1653-1658), for instance, a new cupola and a
three-tier belfry were built, the latter in front of the western entrance to
the cathedral. The decoration of the cupola and, especially, of the belfry is
in sharp contrast with the ascetic shapes of the ancient parts of the cathedral.
In accordance with the artistic tastes of that epoch, they were decorated with
abundant
decorative carvings. The ornaments are not only geometrical, but floral as well,
the latter taking up large spaces. The columns of the arcature of the cupola
drum and of the lower tiers of the belfry are twisted. The representations of
ox and snake heads are of symbolic significance. In the corners of the gables
of the belfry's facades there are busts of clergymen; on the vaulted ceilings
sixwinged seraphs; and on the medallions of the tympanis of the dome's
arcature - saints. The six-column rotundas on four-pillar bases, built at the
beginning of the 18th century over the northern, eastern and southern apses,
have given the cathedral a five-dome crowning. The interior murals, created
by the Armenian painter Nagash Ovnatan in 1720, was restored and elaborated
upon by his grandson, Ovnatan Ovnatanian, in 1782-1786. In 1955 -1956, the interior
murals of the cathedral and of the belfry were renewed by a group of Soviet
artists under the leadership of L.A.Durnovo. This rich and variegated floral
ornament - orange-red on the altar wall and lilac-blue in other places - is
an outstanding work of the 18-century Armenian art. Ovnatan Ovnatanian also
painted on canvas pictures on religious themes for Echmiadzin Cathedral (some
of them are on display in Yerevan picture gallery). These early works of Armenian
painting already show features of realism. Rich gifts of church-plate and valuable
works of applied art kept pouring into Echmiadzin as the residence of the Catholics.
Three premises, now housing the monastery's museum, were annexed to the eastern
side of the cathedral in 1869 to keep these gifts i n. The architectural elements
of the annex - twin windows with transom bars, protruding lock plates and frontons
- show the influence of Russian architecture of the second half of the 19th
century. Meriting special attention among the museum exhibits are gorgeous church
attires embroidered with gold and pearls, printed curtains, embroidered coverlets,
crosses, crosiers, all kinds of ritual vessels of silver, gold, ivory, adorned
with filigree work and jewels. Most of these articles date back to the 17th-19th
centuries. There are older works of art, too. A tenth-century crucifix of Avutstar
monastery is one of the oldest wooden bas-relieves in Armenia to have come down
to this day. The plasticity of the naked body, the expressiveness of the faces
and the tension of poses are conveyed most convincingly. In G.Ovsepians
opinion, the presence of beads in the ornament implies that there existed in
Armenia metal crucifixes which have not rvived. Of interest are the chairs of
the 17th century Catholicoses decorated, besides mother-of-pearl
and ivory incrustation, with a complicated geometrical and floral carving and
wroughtiron heads and paws of lions. There are also rare ancient coins, various
relics and ancient manuscripts with headpieces and miniatures. The most valuable
of Echmiadzins manuscripts is the world famous "Echmiadzin Gospel"
of 989, now in Matenadaran (Ancient Manuscript Research Institute of the Armenian
Academy of Sciences, No. 2374), a copy of the ancient original made by scribe
Ovanes in Bkheno-Noravank monastery, the summer residence of Syunik bishops.
This is a monument of three stylistically different epochs. The end miniatures
of the 6th-7th centuries, reflecting the influence of Hellenism, are close in
their color scheme and pastel technique to the encaustic icons of the 5th-6th
centuries and, in the expressiveness of the typically Armenian faces, to the
interior murals of Stepanos church in Lmbat (the early 7th century). In the
"Adoration of the Magi" gold, in combination with dense and vibrant
tones, makes for utter expressiveness. The national types of faces, with large
features and intense look in their eyes, are also most expressive. The opening
miniatures of the late 10th century stand out for vivid color, gracefulness
and smoothness of ornament and realistic representation of birds and plants.
In the galleries there are marble columns with magnificent capitals. The representation
of Christ as a young man and the Apostles is quite unusual. They are shown in
light-toned dresses. The monumentality and laconicism of style make these miniatures
akin to the murals and bas-relieves of the Church of the Cross (915-921) on
Akhtamar island. The ivory binding is a superb work of art by Byzantine carvers
of the 6th-7th centuries. It is composed of relief plates showing scenes from
the Gospel. At the top there are flying angels carrying a cross framed in a
wreath - a theme well known from Byzantine works of Constantinople, Ravenne
and Alexandria and from earlier stone relief's of Armenia such as those of Ptghni
temple of the 6th century and from later khatchkars, such as Amenaprkich in
Haghpat (1273). The centre of the front part is taken up by a representation
of the Holy Virgin with the
infant;
all around it there are various scenes from the Gospel. Some of the exhibits
of Echmiadzin monastery are put on display on the territory of the monastery's
yard. Meriting attention are the khatchkars - one of the Amenaprkich type of
1279, and the other from the old Djugha cemetery (the 17th century) covered
with intricate floral and geometrical ornaments, pictures of birds and animals
and various scenes featuring figures of men and saints. On the monastery yard
there are the buildings of the Catholicosat, a school, a winter and summer refectories,
a hostel, Trdat's gate and other structures. They were built in the 17th-19th
centuries in place of earlier buildings. Hripsime church, one of the finest
works of Armenian architecture of the classical period, a variant of the centrical
domed compositi on, stands on a slight elevation, at the eastern edge of Echmiadzin.
This kind of composition is characteristic only of the Christian countries of
the Transcaucasus. Its expressive silhouette, seen from afar, stands up sharply
against the background of an emerald-green valley dominated by the snow-capped
Mt. Ararat. St. Hripsime church, completed in 618, is a vivid example of a structure
distinguished by the unity of layout and decoration in which the central-dome
system is brought to perfection. The interior layout is subordinated to the
vertical axis of the under-cupola space, which makes it crystal-clear and solemnly
monumental. The plan is basically a square with the semi-circles of apses at
the sides. The corners of the central crossing are premises, three-quarter in
the plan, which serve as passages to the square annexes complementing the plan
of the building to a rtangle stretched out from west to east. This is achieved
through increasing the depth of the appropriate apses. The cupola, which covers
a substantial proportion of the floor area, subordinates all the interior space
of the church. The building of the three-quarter (in the plan) passages to the
annexes was made necessary by the need to distribute the weight of the cupola
over more abutments which, for greater strength, are made organic parts of the
massive walls. The leading constructive role of the wall, characteristic of
Armenian architecture, shows most clearly here. The transition from the square
base of the plan to the circumference of the cupola drum is effected through
a system of complicated large stepped and small tromps which create a certain
rhythm of the transition from the interior proper to the cupola crowning it.
The millings intensifying the cupola's sphere make the upper part of the interior
very imposing. The church interior is distinguished by its laconicism. The compositional
combination of its individual elements emphasizes the integrity and concentricity
of the domed edifice. The outward appearance of the church is also clean-cut.
As distinct from its predecessor - the cathedral in Avan(589-609), Hripsime
church clearly reflects the inner structure in its outward monumental and, at
the same time, simple image. The twin deep trapeziform niches, as high as the
facades, emphasize the inner layout of the building on the outside and impart
special expressiveness to it. At the same time they make the stone masonry between
the apses and annexes look lighter. By dividing the walls, the niches, crowned
by thin cornices, add plasticity to the outward appearance of the building.
The outside niches, which appeared in Hripsime church for the first time, presently
became a characteristic feature of Armenian architecture in the feudal epoch.
The sixteen-facet cupola is commensurable with the main part of the building.
Its size and proportions emphasize the dominating importance of the under-cupola
space in the structure's interior. The round towers at the base of the cupola
do not only strengthen its weak places structurally, but visually dovetail its
polyhedral shape with the rectangular
building
it crowns. By emphasizing the rhythm of vertical divisions, created by the facade
niches, and lightening the building's top, the towers reveal its dimensions.
The harmonious combination of individual components imparts monumentality and
grandeur to Hripsime church which is relatively small. The decoration of the
buildings is extremely modest, and actually limited to the unpretentiously-shaped
cornices, rosettes of concentric circles on the inner surface of the cupola,
multi-petal ornaments on the smaller tromps and varied but chiefly geometrical
motives on the window edges. St. Hripsime church is among outstanding works
of Armenian architecture. Its type was repeatedly reproduced in other structures
of the Transcaucasus. The simplicity and clarity of the concept, the laconic
shapes and the interior layout had a decisive influence on the subsequent development
of Armenian architecture. Later, the church unde rwent certain changes; in particular,
the western and southern entrance porticos were pulled down, and the side windows
of the altar apse were walled up. In 1790, a two-tier bell-tower with an eight-column
belfry was added to it. As far as the church's furnishing is concerned, of interest
is the inlaid mother-of-pearl altar piece of 1741 which indicates a high level
of Armenian applied art of the 18th century. The composition of the ornament,
made up of framed interwoven branches with stylized leaves and various fruit
and blooms, arranged around an encircled Greek cross, is most original. Gayane
church, built in 630 (according to a chronicle), belongs to another architectural
type also worked out in the epoch of early Christianity in Armenia. This is
a domed basilica with an octahedral drum resting on four internal pillars which
divide the interior of the structure into tee naves. A semi-circular apse with
two annexes, rectangular in the plan, on its sides is fitted into the clear-cut
outline of the building. The middle sections of the side naves are elevated
slightly over the corner ones and roofed with vaults across the building, forming
a transversal nave. The outward appearance of the structure is completed with
a cross cupola emphasized on all the four facades by large gables. Characteristic
of Gayane church, just as of similar temples in Odzun, Bagavan and other places,
is the laconicism of architectural and structural shapes and their harmonious
unity. In itself, the irreproachable smoothness of the stone surfaces of the
arches, vaults and tromps is an artistic merit of the structure. The interior
and the outward appearance of the church are distinguished by balanced composition,
graceful proportions which emphasize the height of the structure. The same is
true of architectural details - the frames of the doors and windows, cornices
and shelves livened up by carved floral ornaments. In I652 the church underwent
capital reconstruction, and in I683 a gallery - a sepulchre for the prominent
figures of the Armenian church - was added to its western facade. This is a
five-span gallery. Its three central spans with large arched openings are roofed
with domes, and the side ones, which are slightly lower, vaulted and blank,
with graceful six-column belfries. The architectural features of the gallery,
typical of the 17th century, do not contrast with the overall artistic image
of Gayane church. Zvartnots, a complex of structures erected in the middle of
the 7th century near Echmiadzin, is of extreme architectural value. The complex
consisted of St. George temple or Zvartnots ("vigil forces", "celestial
angels") and the palace of Catholicos Nerses III, known as "Builder".
Zvartnots, built as Armenia's main cathedral in 641-66I, was to suppress Echmiadzin
cathedral by its grandeur. This purpose was served by the original architectural
composition of the building which is an example of a central-dome temple different
in its appearance from the antique and Byzantine structures of this kind. The
plan of Zvartnots is based on the composition of the central nucleus of Armenia's
cross-winged, dome-type structures of the previous times, that is the Greek
cross. However, this cross is harmoniously fitted into a circle rather than
into a square. Zvartnots' architecture was supposed to impress the onlooker
by its extraordinary artistic splendor. This
determined
the size of the temple, its layout and spatial arrangement, its structural features
and its decoration which emphasized the central axis of the building and its
upward sweep. According to Stepanos Taronatsi, an Armenian historian of the
late 10th and the early 11th centuries, (Stepanos of Taron, known as Asokhik),
Zvartnots lay in ruins as early as in the tenth century. He does not mention
the cause of destruction. The remnants of Zvartnots, even in ruins, are a majestic
sight. There survived only the lower parts of the walls and individual fragments,
and scientists' reconstruction's of the temple's orig inal look vary. The best
known reconstruction is that by T. Toramanian. According to this reconstruction,
the building consisted of three polyhedrons, the lower one being 32-hedral,
and the upper one l6-hedral and crowned with a cone-shaped cupola. The central
part of the interior had the shape of a tetraconch in the plan. In the joints
between the apses there were mighty pylons which supported the drum of the cupola
by means of spherical pendentives. Beyond the pylons there were columns arranged
on the radial axis. They and the tops of the tetraconch's semicircles buttressed
the arches which served as the basis for the middle polyhedron. The tetraconch
was surrounded by a two-store gallery fenced on the outer side by a circular
wall with closely spaced windows and, on the inner side, by an open arcade of
the apses. The altar apse was blank. The heaviness of the cupoland of the middle
polyhedron was conveyed by arches and vaults of double curvature to the pylons
and columns of the apses. The decoration of Zvartnots temple followed the principle,
common in the Armenian architecture of the 5th-7th centuries, of bringing out
the basic architectural details: columns, door and window openings, cornices
and archivolts. The outer surfaces of the polyhedrons, especially of the lower
one, were ornamented with a rich arcature. The twin semi-columns were crowned
with capitols with palmettos and acanthuses. On the whole, the motif of sculptural
ornamentation, cut in high relief, was floral (a vine, stylized leaves, branches
of pomegranate with fruit, etc.). The ornamental patterns are clear-cut, expressive,
varied and unconstrainedly rhythmical. Standing out among them were interior
column capitols of an original composition, shaped as wicker baskets with volutes
and a cross or a monogram (with letters standing for "Nerses" and
"Catholicos") between them and decorated with the figures of rampant
eagles which seemed to support the cupola - a symbol of the firmament. In the
spandrels of the outer decorative arcature of the bottom polyhedron there were
half-length representations of men with building tools in their hands. Some
researchers believe them to be portraits of builders (the name of "Ioann"
is cut near one, presumably the main of them, on the archivolt), and others
maintain these are the portraits of the founders of the temple. The portraits
are distinguished by a realistic depiction of faces and clothes and by the individual
features of the figures shown in various postures. The rich and extraordinary
interior decoration of the temple is evidenced, apart from the relief's, by
the pieces of varicolored smelt and tuff mosaic ornaments and fragments of murals
which survived on remnants of plaster. These were found during the excavations
of the altar part. Before the construction of Zvartnots was completed, its architectural
and artistic concept was embodied, by the selfsame Nerses III in the initially
concentric temple in Ishkhan built in 652-659. Presumably, the architect of
Zvartnots knew the Syrian and Byzantine architectural structures of the same
kind. Zvartnots stands out for an unusual composition which differed from that
of these structures. Syria and Byzantium had no structures of this type. This
is confirmed by Movses Kalankatvatsi, a 10th century Armenian historian, who
wrote about the intention of
Emperor
Constantine of Byzantium, who had been present at the consecration of Zvartnots
when it was nearing completion in 652, to build a similar structure in his own
capital. This intention failed to materialize due to the architects death
on his way to Constantinople. Zvartnots is a monument which embodies the centuries-old
traditions of Armenian architects. In its artistic image and daring spatial
arrangement, formed by an intricate combination of arches and buttresses, Zvartnots
is an outstanding monument of world architecture, an evidence of the high level
of the development of the artistic and engineering thought in the 7th-century
Armenia. Its architectural idea later became widely spread and developed in
new shapes and new artistic compositions. To the south-west of the temple there
was the Catholicos palace which has also come down to is in ruins. It
was a complex of capitally-built and regularly laid-out presence-chambers, dwelling,
auxiliary and service premises. The scale, as well as the architectural and
artistic features of the palace were coordinated with those of the temple. The
palace building consisted of two parts arranged at an angle to each other and
divided by a corridor. The western part comprised small premises and two halls.
The big summer hall, where reception ceremonies and conferences were held, was
divided by columns into three naves and communicated with the dividing corridor
by an arcade. The second, slightly smaller hall, which served as a refectory
and, possibly, as throne-room, was of a more intimate character. The projections
on its lateral walls reduced the span of the vaulted roofing reinforced by wall
arches. The projections formed arched niches which landed artistic expressiveness
to the interior. The eastern part included dwelling and service premises, such
as storerooms and a bathroom. The latter consisted of the sections, the bigger
one intended for common, and the smaller one for privileged visitors. The bathroom
was equipped similarly to that of Garni. Adjoining it on the southern side was
a small hall-type church of the 5th-6th centuries, south of which there was
a large wine-press. The plan of the palace is almost a square. The small size
and skylight of most of the rooms show that they had wooden roofing's of the
kind used in Armenian peasant homes. The open gallery with an arcade on the
northern side of the eastern part and flat roofs gave this structure of a severe
composition the appearance of a southern-type building. The massive arches of
the arcade resting on buttresses, cross-shaped in the plan, concealed the divisions
between the premises behind it. It did not only decorate the square in front
of the palace, but connected its
architecture
with that of the temple. The palace of Nerses III was the biggest of all the
known civil structures of the 7th-century Armenia. Shoghakat church is a later
monument of Echmiadzins architectural complex. It was built in 1694 near
Hripsime church, on its western side, in place of an ancient structure to which
it obviously owes its size and the composition of the type of the domed hall
common in Armenia in the 6th-7th centuries. The interior of the building was
distinguished by the laconicism of its layout and spatial arrangement which
was fully perceived upon entry trough the only western door. The high octahedral
cupola, resting on wall-side abutments, emphasizes the main and the best illuminated
part of the interior. Architectural details and decoration, which are rather
modest, add to the sharpness of the buildings spatial arrangement. In
it, there are no open galleries common in the 17th-18th centuries. The vaulted
gallery on the western side, built simultaneously with the church, is a closed
premise crowned by a six-column rotund belfry in the middle. The horizontal
orientation of the gallery and the open-work architecture of the low-placed
belfry create the impression of the churchs interior expanding from the
entrance to the top of the cupola and make it look very tall. The entranceway
is a large arched opening in an ornamented frame. The windows and individual
parts of the western façade are also ornamented. The ornament is mostly geometrical,
sometimes thoroughly detailed and unusual pattern of interlaced band frames,
rosettes and khatchkars. This ornamentation has much in common with similar
carvings of the bell-towers of St.Hripsime Church and Echmiadzin temple, which
makes the decoration of all these structures stylistically akin. The 19th-century
dwelling houses of Echmiadzin are of artistic value. They are distinguished
by unusual layout and appearance. The open-w ork carving of wooden street balconies
and yard galleries is a superb piece of folk craftsmanship. The carving motifs
are stylistically connected with the ornamentation of the religious buildings
of Echmiadzin of the 17th-18th centuries.