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  1. Artsruni. Gagik I Artsruni ( Armenian: Գագիկ Ա Արծրունի; 879/880 – 943) was an Armenian noble of the Artsruni dynasty who ruled over Vaspurakan in southern Armenia, first as prince of northwestern Vaspurakan ( Gagik III, 904–908) and after that until his death as King of Vaspurakan, also claiming the title of King ...

    • 908
    • 904–937/943
  2. He has joined to his territory Vanadzor, the most part of Artsakh (Khachen) and two main provinces of Vaspurakan: Kogovit and Ttsaghkotn. After his death, his elder son, Hovhannes-Smbat , was crowned king while his younger son, Ashot, rebelled against Smbat and proclaimed his independence in the Kingdom of Lori-Dzoraget .

  3. The Kingdom of Vaspurakan was at its zenith around 929 under the reign of Gagik I, who used the title of King of Armenia. [4] [5] He undertook a series of construction projects, particularly on Aghtamar , an island in Lake Van where one of his residences was located.

    • Monarchy
    • Van
    • Kingdom
  4. Vaspurakan se convirtió en un reino en 908, cuándo Gagik I de Vaspurakan fue reconocido como rey de Armenia por los abásidas como su aliado. Sin embargo, pronto cambió de bando y junto a Ashot II se enfrentó y derrotó a los árabes , siendo reconocido como rey de Vaspurakan por el bagratuni Ashot II .

  5. 19 de ene. de 2016 · Kingdom of Vaspurakan (Վասպուրական) was one of the Medieval Armenian Kingdoms. This kingdom’s territory was almost equal with the Greater Armenia Vaspurakan province territory. Located in what is now called eastern Turkey (Western Armenia) and northwestern Iran, the region is considered to be the cradle of Armenian ...

  6. Historical Tradition, Memory and Law in Vaspurakan in the Era of Gagik Arcruni . Tim Greenwood Scholars of medieval Armenia owe a great debt of gratitude to Step‘anos Ōrbelean, historian and metropolitan archbishop of Siwnik‘ at the end of the thirteenth century.

  7. In 915 Gagik Arcruni of Vaspurakan1 started the construction of a luxurious palace complex with a church on the Island of Ałtʿamar on Lake Van. The Church of the Holy Cross inaugurated in 921 is the only surviving witness to this grandiose project and has justly earned its fame as a jewel of medieval Armenian architecture.