The name Vaspurakan is of Iranian origin. It is related of the
Middle Persian word
vāspuhr, meaning "senior, heir, prince". In Middle Persian,
vāspuhrakān referred to the top nobility of the
Sasanian Empire. In Armenian,
vaspurakan was also rarely used as an adjective meaning "noble"; for example,
vaspurakan gund ("army/troop of nobles"). Thus, Vaspurakan can be translated as "noble land" or "land of princes". Alternative interpretations of the name include "having a special position" or "royal domain". Armenologist
Heinrich Hübschmann considered it likely that the name originated as a shortening of the
koghmn Vaspurakan Gndin ("land of the army/troop of nobles") mentioned by the 7th-century historian
Sebeos. Some scholars believe that Vaspurakan is mentioned by
Strabo as Basoropeda (). Hübschmann argues that if the province was already commonly called Vaspurakan by Strabo's time (1st century BC-1st century AD), then it should also be found in the works of the early Armenian historians, but it is not mentioned by most of them.
Movses Khorenatsi (traditionally dated to the 5th century) is the first to refer to the province by that name, and only on one occasion. Later Armenian historians (e.g.
Łewond,
Hovhannes Draskhanakerttsi,
Tovma Artsruni) refer to the province more frequently, especially after the emergence of the
Artsruni-ruled principality in Vaspurakan. ==History==