Archaeological evidences testify that the ancient Armazi was far more extensive than it is today. Armazi's strategic situation was dictated by its ready access to the
Daryal Pass, the main road over the
Greater Caucasus, through which the
Scythians invaded the ancient
Near East. The name of the city and its dominant
acropolis, Armaz-Tsikhe (literally, "citadel of Armazi"; არმაზციხე), is usually taken to derive from
Armazi, the chief
deity of the pagan Iberian pantheon. He was either a shortened form of Armazd or Ahur Mazda, the Zoroastrian God. Or he was derived from the Vedic God Armah which means the Moon God in Sanskrit. The latter is thought to be the correct one because of the findings of moon god relics. The name first appears in the early medieval Georgian annals though it is clearly much older and reflected in the
Classical name Armastica or Harmozica of
Strabo,
Pliny,
Ptolemy and
Dio Cassius. According to a collection of medieval Georgian chronicles, Armaztsikhe was founded, in the 3rd century BC, by king
Pharnavaz I of Iberia at the place hitherto known as
Kartli. This fortress stood on the modern-day
Mount Bagineti, on the right bank of the
Mtkvari River (Kura), at its confluence with the
Aragvi. The other citadel,
Tsitsamuri (წიწამური) or Sevsamora of the Classical authors, stood just opposite, on the left bank of the Aragvi and controlled the road towards
Mount Kazbek. This defense wall constructed in a unique position to block the southern exit of the Daryal Pass before it widens into the plain of modern Tbilisi was presumably a preventive measure against the
Alans who frequently raided the Roman frontiers from across the Caucasus. . During this period, Armazi was governed by a hereditary
pitiakhsh, whose rank approximated to that of
viceroy or
satrap, and was second in the official Iberian hierarchy after the king. The excavations of the hereditary necropolis of this dynasty yielded
engraved gems bearing portraits of two of these viceroys,
Asparukh (probably the contemporary of the Roman emperor
Hadrian, 117-138 AD) and Zevakh (
fl. 150 AD), a rare example of authentic, pre-Christian Georgian portraiture.
Aramaic inscriptions from Armazi mention also the royal architect and the
epitropos ("
Lord Chamberlain"). Armazi played a central role in ancient Georgian cultural life and in the evolution of local epigraphy in Georgia, prior to the invention of the
Georgian alphabet in the 5th century. Among a number of curious inscriptions found at Armazi, the most important is the bilingual
Greco-Aramaic tombstone inscription commemorating the short-lived Serapita and her noble lineage. It contains an unusual, in its ductus and some of its forms, version of the Aramaic alphabet which came to be known as the "
Armazi script" although it can also be found outside Armazi, in other parts of Georgia. With the transfer of the Georgian capital to
Tbilisi in the late 5th or early 6th century, Armazi went into a gradual decline. It still had its own high-ranking commandant, a post held in A.D. 545 by a certain Wistam. The city was finally destroyed and razed to the ground in 736 by the
Arab commander
Marwan ibn Muhammad (the future
Umayyad Caliph Marwan II). The city of Armazi has never been revived since then, but a
Georgian Orthodox monastery of
St. Nino was constructed there between 1150 and 1178. This is a six-apse
hall church which, as well as its associated structures, is now largely in ruins and only some fragments of the 12th-century murals have survived. == See also ==