Armens
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Armens | |||
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Kingdom of Urartu | |||
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Topical |
Armens (Armenian: Արմեններ, Առամեններ), were Armenian tribes, the people are called Arman, Armenic or Armanen. They correspond with the Hayasa-Azzi Tribes. The Armans united with the tribes of Hayasi. Recent linguistic studies present strong evidence that the Indo-European language group originates in Anatolia.[1] According to most accounts, the Armens were generally tall, blond-haired, and blue-eyed in appearance, in contrast to their Urartian cousins who tended to be slighter with black hair and black eyes.[2] The Urartian state, which existed there prior to the coming of the Indo-European-speaking "Armen" tribes from the west, was a federation of many peoples.
History
At the end of the second millennium BC, another Indo-European ethnic group, closely related to Thracians and Phrygians and referred to by the Greeks as Armens, migrated to the Armenian Highland from Northern Balkans.[3]
One theory suggests that the Armens were of Thracian origin, and related to the Phrygians.[4] The Armens were near the head waters of the Halys, to the west of the Euphrates.[5] The Armens seemed to have mixed blood with another Asiatic element whose patronymic Hai, became in time their national designation. The country where the Armens settled were a mountainous region, traversed by deep valleys and smiling plains.
Etymology
The word Armani, (mentioned in Akkadian inscriptions as early as 2400 BC) an early form of Armen-Armin or Arman denotes the national affiliation, as with many cultures standing for the particular nation thus, the God AR being the primary deity in the Indo-European (aka Aryan) pantheon - thus AR MAN denotes—Men of Ar or Children of Ar, again initially AR standing for ARAREL-ARARICH [hence Ar-Ar-At the Place of ARAR] -- Create-Creator, also Sun, Light, Life and Love.[6]
References
- ↑ A History of Armenia by Vahan M. Kurkjian
- ↑ Elisabeth Bauer. Armenia: Past and Present, p. 49. ISBN B0006EXQ9C
- ↑ Ancient Armenia (3500 BC - 520 BC)[dead link]
- ↑ Armenia and the Armenians from the Earliest Times Until the Great War (1914) By Kevork Aslan, Pierre Crabitès - Page 15
- ↑ An inscription of Menousas reveals the existence of a people known as the Urmani or Armeni, living to the west of Ourartou.
- ↑ Gevork Nazaryan - The Armenic and Armania