Mkhitar Sparapet

Mkhitar Sparapet
Մխիթար Սպարապետ
The tomb of Mkhitar Sparapet
Died1730
Murdered by Armenian villagers of Khndzoresk.
Buried
A tomb in a gorge near Nerkin Khndzoresk and Old Khndzoresk.
AllegianceArmenian national movement
Years of service1722/5–1728; 1728–1730
RankSparapet

Mkhitar Sparapet (Armenian: Մխիթար Սպարապետ; sparapet meaning "general-in-chief"; died 1730), also known as Mkhitar Bek, was an 18th-century Armenian military commander and participant in the Armenian armed rebellion in the Syunik region of Transcaucasia. He was instrumental in David Bek's victories over the forces of Safavid Iran and the Ottoman Empire in Armenia's Syunik region. Their main headquarters were at the fortress of Halidzor which also served as the administrative center for Syunik. Mkhitar served as chief aide to David Bek and later his successor after his death in 1728.

After the Ottomans captured and destroyed Halidzor fortress, Mkhitar managed to escape towards Kapan and continue a guerrilla campaign against the Ottoman invaders. However, the Armenian forces faced replenished Ottoman forces, lacked a single headquarters and were plagued by internal disagreements.[1] In 1730, Mkhitar was murdered by Armenian villagers of Khndzoresk, who had implored him to have his own fortifications destroyed during his conflicts rather than their village. His head was presented to the Ottoman Pasha at Tabriz, who found this act of treachery detestable and had the murderers decapitated.[2] The tomb of Mkhitar Sparapet is located in a gorge not far from Nerkin Khndzoresk and Old Khndzoresk. The inscription on the tomb, which incorrectly dates Mkhitar's death to 1726, writes that he was "from the land of Ganja" and "died young without having reached his goal."[3]

Mkhitar's death marked the end of the 18th-century Armenian liberation struggle in Syunik.[4] However, oral traditions from Syunik hold that Armenian resistance continued under different leaders until Nader drove out the Ottomans and restored Iranian control over Transcaucasia in 1735.[1][5]

  1. ^ a b Hovhannisyan & Pʻapʻazyan 1972, p. 175.
  2. ^ Kiesling 2000, p. 88.
  3. ^ Dolukhanyan 2014, p. 8.
  4. ^ Adalian 2010, pp. 250–251.
  5. ^ Bournoutian 2001, p. 408.