Page:The Greek and Eastern churches.djvu/565

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CHAPTER VI

THE ARMENIAN CHURCH

(a) Langlois, Collection des Historiens Anciens et Modernes de l'Arménie, including Agathangelos, Moses of Chorene, "the Herodotus of Armenia" (5th century), etc.; Vartabet Matthew, Life of St. Gregory the Illuminator (trans. by Malan); The Divine Liturgy of the Armenian Church (trans. by Malan); Vitæ Sanctorum Calendarii Armeniaici (12 vols. pub. Venice, 1814); Asseman ii.; Le Quien, Oriens Christianus, vol. i.

Armenia is a name used for a country of indefinite and varying extent, centred at the southern slopes of the Caucasus and the high table-land which is a western projection of the plain of Iran, and which culminates in Mount Ararat. At the time of the Romans it was divided into Armenia Minor, west of the Euphrates, and Armenia Major, east of that river. Situated at the meeting point of vast and ambitious empires, Armenia has been tossed to and fro between them as the repeated victim of their shifting fortunes. After having been conquered by Alexander the Great and then placed under Macedonian supremacy, Armenia obtained a partial independence from the Romans, who set up a kingdom there, not attempting to incorporate it in their empire. But Parthia and Persia in turn seized hold of the country, which came to be divided between the Byzantine and Persian powers, with different degrees of autonomy in successive ages, until the Mongolian invasions swept over

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