Satenik

Painting of Artashes and Satenik at the Kura River, by Zabelle C. Boyajian.

Satenik (Old Armenian: Սաթենիկ, romanized: Sat῾enik; also spelled Սաթինիկ Sat῾inik) was an Alanian princess who, according to Armenian tradition, married Artashes, the king of Armenia. The Artashes in the tradition is identified with the 2nd-century BC king Artaxias I, although it is generally believed that the real historical basis for the story came from the invasion of Armenia by the Alans in the 1st century AD, during the reign of Tiridates I. The story of Artashes and Satenik forms a part of the ancient Armenian epic known as Vipasank῾, fragments of which are presented by the Armenian historian Movses Khorenatsi in his History of Armenia. Movses notes that the story, which he directly quotes from, was a well-known epic during his time among the common people of Armenia told by traveling storytellers and minstrels.[1] The name and character of Satenik are connected with Satana, a figure in the folklore of the Ossetians and other peoples of the North Caucasus.

  1. ^ Movses Khorenatsʻi 1997, p. 165 (2.50).