Armavir (ancient)
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/ Armavir
World / Armenia
archaeological site, tell (mound), interesting place
The mound south west of Haykavan and south of modern Armavir is the site of the historical city of Armavir. Armavir was inhabited from the 5th-6th millennium BC. Various obsidian instruments, bronze objects and pottery have been found from that period. King Argišti I of Urartu built a fortress he named after himself, Argištihinili, at Armavir Blur to the northwest. After 331 BC when Armenia reasserted its independence under the Orontid Dynasty from the Achaemenid Empire, Armavir was chosen as the capital of Armenia. Slabs of clay have been found from the Achaemenid period written in the Elamite language concerning episodes of the Gilgamesh epic. Various inscriptions in Hellenistic Greek carved around the 3rd century BC, include poetry from Hesiod, lines from Euripides, a list of Macedonian months, and names of Orontid Kings.
Armavir was bounded orderly to Seleucids, Parthians, Kingdom of Armenia, Roman Empire, Sassanids and Byzantine Empire before Arabic conquest in 645.
Armavir was bounded orderly to Seleucids, Parthians, Kingdom of Armenia, Roman Empire, Sassanids and Byzantine Empire before Arabic conquest in 645.
Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armavir_(ancient_city)
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 40°4'55"N 44°2'0"E
- Dzoghkert / Menuakhinili 21 km
- Old Bagaran 37 km
- Ruins of Ani 62 km
- Turkey's most eastern point 80 km
- Lchashen 91 km
- summer houses 124 km
- Bagramoghli villas (ruins) 132 km
- Adır (Lim) Island 147 km
- Karaurgan Nahiyesi 156 km
- Bulanik (Kop) 188 km
- Aygeshat 2.3 km
- Argishtihinili 4.5 km
- Armavir District 4.6 km
- Armavir Cannery 6.8 km
- Norapat 6.8 km
- cemetery 10 km
- Military Installation 11 km
- Baghramian District 20 km
- Iğdır Province 22 km
- Ararat valley 25 km