The year 2005 marks the 1600th anniversary of the creation of the Armenian alphabet by Mesrob Mashdots.
In 405 A.D., Armenia had already endured over 4 centuries of being divided between two empires. Just years before, in 387, Armenia was partitioned (a formal political split) between the Byzantine Empire and the Sassanid Persians. The Armenian crown and religious leaders saw the potential peril they would face under both administrations. At the same time, the Syrian Church, whose liturgy was used by the Armenian Church, was putting pressure on the power of the Armenian Church. The Armenian Catholicos Sahak and King Vramshapuh realized that the only way to keep political and cultural authority over a partitioned nation was to utilize a common and unique literary system. They asked scholar and clergyman Mesrob Mashdots to create an alphabet that would distinguish Armenia from its more powerful neighbors. Mashdots was born in the Armenian province of Taron (west of Lake Van), and had studied Greek and Syriac, and was employed as a royal secretariat. According to one of his students, Koriun, who later wrote Mashdots's biography, Mashdots had been well taught in military arts and secular law. He knew well enough about the threat of assimilation that the Armenians faced. He traveled throughout Asia Minor and the Middle East, using alphabetical structures of Greek, Syriac, and various other alphabets (including scripts from an earlier attempt at an Armenian alphabet) as his base. Sometime between 400 and 405 A.D. (405 is more generally accepted) he created the 36-letter Armenian alphabet which still remains virtually unchanged to this very day. In the Cilician Kingdom of Armenia, the Armenians added 2 more letters in order to pronounce all the European words, due to strong and continual contact between Europe and Armenian Cilicia.
Fortunately, the Persian Sassanid Monarchs during this time were surprisingly very tolerant, as well as Emperor Theodosius II of Byzantium, and they allowed Mashdots and his students to open up schools throughout Armenia to teach the language with its newfound alphabet.
Mashdots then went on and created alphabets for the Georgians (still in use today) and the Caucasian Albanians. Hats off to a man who gave so many gifts to human culture. Not only to his own Armenian culture, but also to that of his neighbors.
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