- The
House of
Kamsarakan (Armenian: Կամսարական) was an
Armenian noble family that was an
offshoot of the
House of Karen, also
known as the Karen-Pahlav...
-
Simon Kamsarakan (Simon
Rafiki Shahazizyan) (Armenian: Սիմոն Կամսարական, 1950,
Ashtarak – 2011, Yerevan) was an
Armenian physicist,
public activist, a...
- orthography: Պահլաւունի) was an
Armenian noble family, a
branch of the
Kamsarakan, that rose to
prominence in the late 10th
century during the last years...
-
Nerseh or
Nerses Kamsarakan (Armenian: Ներսեհ Կամսարական) was the
presiding prince of
Armenia in 689–691,
backed by the
Byzantine Empire.
Armenia had been...
-
Arshavir II
Kamsarakan (Armenian: Արշավիր Կամսարական) was an
Armenian prince from the
Kamsarakan family. He was the son of
Gazavon II, who
immigrated to...
- were
identified as one of the so-called "Parthian clans". The
Armenian Kamsarakan family was a
branch of the
House of Karen.
Following the
defeat of the...
-
mother was of
Parthian descent (from "the
Armenian Arsacid family of
Kamsarakan"); her name is
reported variously,
among others Maryam. Mani was raised...
-
belonged to
Mesopotamian Kurdish tribe of Babir, or
ancestry from
Armenian Kamsarakan dynasty.
Alexei Lidov, 1991, The
mural paintings of Akhtala, p. 14, Nauka...
- noble,
ruled as the
Hethumid dynasty until 1342. Toumanoff, C. (2010). "
KAMSARAKAN". In Yarshater,
Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica,
Volume XV/5: Ḵamsa...
- and a
possession of the
Armenian Kamsarakan dynasty. By the
early 9th century, the
former territories of the
Kamsarakans in
Arsharunik and
Shirak (including...