چکیده:
Imported Armenian pottery vessels from the 9th to the 14th centuries AD are one of the most important branches of this country's commercial-economic history in the Islamic Middle Ages, which are examined in this writing. Based on archaeological discoveries, the growth of the pottery industry in Armenia, especially in the sites of "Dvin" and "Ani", as well as neighboring countries, has led to the economic growth of cities from the 9th to the 14th centuries AD. The study of typology, classification, and also the type of technical function of these centers, the qualitative characteristics of productions, diversity, aesthetic evaluation, painting style, and the evidence and identifiers discovered from the sites, show the cultural and economic relations between Iran and Armenia. From another perspective, a comparative study of pottery and other findings from the sites and settlements established in Armenia with archaeological discoveries in Central Asia and China confirms the economic, commercial, and cultural developments of this country with other countries in the region during this historical period. The consistent discoveries of the city of Dvin with the discoveries of other countries have provided the possibility to identify the historical developments, economic changes, and trade relations of these countries.
خلاصه ماشینی:
Iran-Armenia Relations Based on Archaeological Findings from the "Dvin" and "Ani" sites in the ninth to fourteenth centuries AD 1 Parisa Pourmohammadi Abstract: Imported ceramic vessels in Armenia from the ninth to the fourteenth centuries AD are one of the most important branches of this country's commercial-economic history during the Islamic Middle Ages, which are discussed in this writing.
This great scholar in 1926 referred to the Institute of Caucasian Archaeology and also the Embassy of Armenian Education and Sciences so that more precise investigations could be carried out regarding the list of artifacts obtained from the city of Ani. In this connection, this task was performed by Mesrian, one of the famous scholars of Armenia; he begins the investigations very meticulously and examines piece by piece every fragment of metal, ceramic, glass, and carvings, parts of which are located in the museums of Armenia, and for this reason, these investigations are of special importance and show what the history and economic, commercial, social, and cultural relations in Armenia were like in the ninth to fourteenth centuries.
The first collection obtained from this section was qualitatively considered one of the discoveries of the industry of the Islamic world; the samples produced from the Dvin excavations in the 10th century show that these vessels were imported from Mesopotamia, and these objects also indicate how the level of Armenia's economic and commercial relations with this part of the world was.