Melikdom of Kashatagh
The Melikdom of Kashatagh was an Armenian melikdom (principality) which existed in the 15th–18th centuries. It was located along the Hakari River, on the southeastern section of the modern border of Armenia and Azerbaijan. The residences of the meliks were located in the villages of Kashataghk and Khnatsakh, in the west of the present Lachin District of Azerbaijan and the east of the present Syunik region of Armenia respectively.
History
The Melikdom of Kashatagh was founded at the end of the 15th century by Melik Haykaz I, also the founder of the Melik-Haykazyan dynasty. Previously, the Kashatagh region was first ruled by the Orbelian family, and then by the Shahurnetsi clan.According to historical evidence such as the accounts of Arakel of Tabriz, Melik Haykazyan, the first dynastic ruler of the melikdoms of Aghahech-Kashatagh, made Kashataghk his capital. The whole region was named Kashatagh after this princely residence. The Melik Haykaz Palace was built at the end of the 15th century on an artificial slope surrounded by a fortified wall with towers and gates. Being constructed in 1480, the complex is one of the earliest surviving examples of secular Armenian architecture.
Melik Haykaz I was succeeded by a son, Hakhnazar I. Hakhnazar died in 1551; his grave survived until the 1930s. Hakhnazar's palace in Khnatsakh has survived to this day.
The most prominent member of the dynasty was Melik Haykaz II, who was melik from 1551 to 1623 and an active supporter of Iran during the Turkish-Persian wars for the possession of Transcaucasia. Arakel of Tabriz mentions him as one of the noble Armenians and advisers at the court of Shah of Iran Abbas I.
According to historian Morus Hasratyan, Haykaz II lived in exile in Iran for 10–15 years due to the Ottoman Empire's brutal policies during the temporary occupation of Transcaucasia in the 1580s or 90s. After the reconquest of the region by Iran in 1606–1607, Haykaz II, as one of the loyal supporters of the Shah, was not only restored to his rights but also received some possessions beyond its borders. A decree of Shah Abbas I contains a list of the services provided by the melik to Iranian authorities. The decree itself has no date, but the date of 999 of the Hijrah exists on the seal used by Abbas I.
In 1699, Melik Emirbek of Kashatagh, son of Melik Martiros, participated in the Angeghakot Assembly where the Armenian meliks decided to authorize a delegation led by Israel Ori to negotiate with the leaders of European powers such as Peter the Great on the liberation of historic Armenia.
The names of Haykaz I, Hakhnazar I, Haykaz II and their descendants are found in tombstones preserved on gravestones from the 16th–18th centuries. A document written in Persian on behalf of the Melikdom of Kashatagh in 1691/92 has been preserved. It includes the joint appeal of Melik Hakhnazar and his subordinate village headmen, addressed to the shah's court. In the document, they appoint as their authorized representatives the son of Melik Hakhnazar, Ilyas, and one of the elders, Gikor, who were supposed to present the problems arising in the region to the shah's court and defend the interests of the local population.
The names of Melik Hakhnazar and his brother Haykaz are marked in the inscription of 1682 on the facade of the entrance to the Church of the Holy Virgin in the village of Mirik of the Kashatagh region.