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VISHAP OF BUZHAKAN

 

VISHAP STONES OF ARMENIA

 

In the high mountains of Armenia unique monuments have been preserved, which traditionally are called by the people "Vishap/Dragon stones".

Like Khachkars (cross-stones) also the Vishaps are distributed only within the Armenian Highland. The centers of their spreading are Aragats and Geghama mountains. Ca. 150 examples of these monuments are known today.

Vishaps are 150-550 cm high, they are made of grayish stones – andesite or basalt, and, according to their forms and the iconography, they can be divided into three groups:

1. Bull shaped (four-sided stelae, with an image of bull's head and extremities fallen down in the frontal part),

2. Fish-shaped (carved in the form of a fish),

3. Fish and Bull shaped (contains the details of the previous two types).

Vishaps were widely used in the Bronze Age, particularly in the 2nd millennium BC, however, it is possible that their origins go back to the earlier periods.

Vishaps are originally placed at an altitude of up to 3000 m above sea level, in a standing or lying position. In ancient times, most of them were standing. As a rule, they appear in groups, a few of them - alone, in water-rich flat areas and in round stone platforms; there are tombs, petroglyphs and tower-like structures in their vicinity.

 

Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport, RA

Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, NAS RA

Ararat-Eskijian Museum, Los Angeles

ArchaeoArt and LAB NGO, Armenia

«Vishap» Project, Armenia-Italy

 

 

Fig.1. Distribution and quantification of Vishap stones

 

 

Fig. 2. Types of Vishaps

 

 

 

VISHAP OF BUZHAKAN

 

Name – Buzhakan 1

Type – Bull shaped

Material – Gray-brownish basalt

Preservation – Satisfactory (Details are partly visible due to the fact that it is unfinished or represents a local style)

Size – 227x72x46 cm

Original place – 1.5 km west of Buzhakan village, Tsaghkunyats Mountains

Altitude above the sea level – 1820 m

Context – Unknown: the immediate context destroyed by agricultural works (perhaps it was situated inside a cromlech-platform). There are a fortress-settlement and cemetery in the vicinity

History of discovery – During agricultural works the stela was removed from its original location and replaced to a small accumulation of stones on the border of the field. The stela was discovered and recorded to the State List of Monuments in 1996 by the cultural heritage specialist and epigraphist Gagik Sargsyan.

 

 

Fig. 3. Buzhakan 1 during the 2012 visit

 

 

                

Fig. 4. Drawing of Buzhakan 1