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Theodore Rshtuni, also spelled Theodoros Ṛštuni (, ; AD 590–655 or 656), equated with Pasagnathes (Πασαγνάθης), the "'' patrikios'' of the Armenians" from the chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor,Pasagnathes 1
at, ''
Prosopography Prosopography is an investigation of the common characteristics of a group of people, whose individual biographies may be largely untraceable. Research subjects are analysed by means of a collective study of their lives, in multiple career-line an ...
of the Byzantine Empire 641-867'' (PBE I) online edition,
King's College London King's College London (informally King's or KCL) is a public research university located in London, England. King's was established by royal charter in 1829 under the patronage of King George IV and the Duke of Wellington. In 1836, King's ...
. Accessed 2021-09-16.
was an Armenian ''
nakharar ''Nakharar'' ( hy, նախարար ''naxarar'', from Parthian ''naxvadār'' "holder of the primacy""նախարար" in H. Ačaṙean (1926–35), ''Hayerēn Armatakan Baṙaran'' (Yerevan: Yerevan State University), 2nd ed., 1971–79) was a heredi ...
'', famous for resisting the first Arab invasions of Armenia. After the previous '' ishkhan'' (prince)
David Saharuni David Saharuni ( hy, Դաւիթ Սահառունի, ''Dawit' Saharuni'') was '' sparapet'', ''curopalates'', '' ishkhan'', and presiding prince of Byzantine-controlled Armenia from 635 to 638. David was a nakharar from the princely noble House of ...
was overthrown by other ''nakharars'' in 638 or 640, Theodore Rshtuni became the leading prince of Byzantine Armenia under the same title as his predecessor, "Prince of Armenia" (''išxan hayoc‘''). Contains commented references to all primary sources which mention Theodore Rshtuni.


Arab invasions

The chronology of the Arab Muslim invasion of Armenia is not clear, Arab and Armenian sources making contradictory statements, with some clarity possible only in regard to the start of the aggression in the 640s, and Theodore Rshtuni's submission in 653. Prior to the Arab invasions, Rshtuni had been appointed the ''
sparapet ' ( hy, սպարապետ) was a military title and office in ancient and medieval Armenia. Under the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia, the ' was the supreme commander of the kingdom's armed forces. During the Arsacid period and for some time afterwards ...
'' (commander-in-chief) of the Armenian forces in the Armenian Marzpanate and was appointed as the '' marzban'' of Armenia in 634. Vardanyan, Vrezh M. ''«Թեոդորոս Ռշտունի»'' (Theodoros Rshtuni). Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia. vol. iv. Yerevan, Armenian SSR: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1978, p. 172. He defended, alongside the Byzantine general Procopius, against the first, unsuccessful Arab attack into Armenia in 640. A maneuver that went wrong allowed the Arabs to pillage the capital of Dvin (ancient city), Dvin and take 35,000 inhabitants into slavery. However, in 641, Byzantine Emperor Constans II (Byzantine Empire), Constans II followed the advice of Armenian Catholicos Nerses III the Builder, Nerses III, made Theodore commander in chief of the Armenian troops and gave him the title of a ''patrikios''. He gained a victory over the Arabs, for which he was recognized as ruler of Armenia by Constans in 643, but failed to coordinate with a second army under Procopius, who suffered a severe defeat for which the Byzantines put the blame on Theodore. It was the Arabs of Adurbadagan, Atropatene, which became known as Azerbaijan, who attacked in 642-3 and 650. Constans paid special attention to his family's imperiled homeland of Armenia, and he favored Byzantine generals of Armenian extraction to halt Arab advances. Faced with the impending loss of the province, he marched in, spent the winter of 652–3 at Dvin, and returned to Constantinople the next year after leaving an army in place. The three-year peace with the Arabs broke down in 653, followed by the final Arab conquest of 654. Constans attempted to impose Chalcedonian doctrines, such as Monotheletism, on the Armenians, which offended both their clergy and ruling elites. When the Muslims managed to defeat the remaining Byzantine troops in 653, Theodore Rshtuni participated in pushing out the Byzantines and he again recognized Muslim overlordship on very convenient conditions. Theodore's truce with then-governor of Syria and future caliph, Muawiyah I, Muawiyah, left Armenia with a relatively high level of autonomy, and Arabs concentrated their efforts against the remaining pockets of resistance in the Sassanid Empire. Another chronology proposes 651 as the year Rshtuni accepted the first truce with the Arabs, and that by 652 he accepted Muawiyah's suzerainty and was appointed Principality of Armenia, ruler of Armenia. The Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia of 1978 states that in response to Theodore Rshtuni's treason, Constans personally marshaled his forces and led them to Armenia despite a growing plot against him in Constantinople, ironically by the Armenian commander of the army of Thrace. Constans secured Armenia and deposed Theodoros, who took refuge on the island of Akhtamar. Byzantine commander Maurianus was given the task to defend the Armenian frontier. In 654 Maurianus was driven out of Armenia into the Caucasus and Theodoros was restored. Deciding that Theodoros was untrustworthy, the Arabs sent him to Damascus, where he died in captivity the following year. Alternative years are 655 for the Muslim campaign during which Theodore Rshtuni was taken to Syria, and 656 for his death. He was replaced as prince by his son-in-law, Hamazasp Mamikonian. His body was brought to his home district of Rshtuniq, Rshtunik, where he was buried in the tomb of his forefathers.


Legacy

According to Manuk Abeghian and a number of other scholars, the popularity of Rshtuni in Armenia manifested itself in the character of K'eṛi T'oros in the epic poem of ''David of Sasun''. The Armenian writer Tserents also wrote a historical novel called ''Theodoros Rshtuni''.


Notes


Further reading

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Rshtuni, Theodoros 590 births 655 deaths Byzantine generals Byzantine people of Armenian descent Sparapets 7th-century Byzantine people 7th-century Armenian people Princes of Armenia, Theodore Kouropalatai