HISTORICAL BUILDINGS

Card image cap

UMESHINI CANAL – ETCHMIADZIN CHANNEL, KARMIR BLUR CANAL


7th century BC


State index: 1.7.7
Founder: King Rusa II of the Kingdom of Van (Urartu)

The canal was constructed by Rusa II, ruler of the Kingdom of Van (Urartu) (685–645 BC). It is mentioned in a cuneiform inscription discovered during the 1900 excavations of the Cathedral of Etchmiadzin Cathedral, which states: “I led a canal from the river Ildaruni. Its name is ‘Umeshini’.” The inscription also refers to the construction of a new city, the irrigation of desert lands of the Kuarlin plain using the canal’s waters, and the establishment of orchards and vineyards.

The identification of the Umeshini canal with the Karmir Blur canal was proposed in 1944 by Boris Piotrovsky.

The canal originates near Yerevan Lake from the right bank of the Hrazdan River. In the gorge section, one bank is bordered by natural basalt cliffs, while the other is reinforced by an artificial embankment later replaced with a stone wall. Upon reaching the fortress of Teishebaini (Karmir Blur) Fortress, the canal enters a rock-cut tunnel and emerges on the opposite side of a ridge about 15 m high. From there, irrigating the lands, it reaches Zvartnots and Vagharshapat.

The tunnel is 78 m long, with a discharge capacity of 4.3 m³/s, and the total canal length is 23.6 km. In the 1930s, the outlet section was extended with a stone retaining wall to prevent bank collapse.

The canal has been renovated many times. The first restoration took place in the late 17th century, when the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin acquired the canal. It was also restored in 1815 during the rule of the last Persian governor of Yerevan, Hossein Qoli Khan. Attempts were made in 1912–1913, but only in 1920–1923 was it fully restored. In the early Soviet period, retaining walls and water-control structures were built, some sections were lined, and the bed was reinforced. Lining works continued until the 1970s. At the beginning of the 19th century, the canal irrigated 625 hectares of land, and in the 1960s about four times more.

In 1968, a basalt memorial dedicated to the Umeshini canal was erected on Admiral Isakov Avenue, designed by architect Gevorg Musheghyan (state index: 1.7.7.1). The front face of the rectangular stone slab bears an inscription, while the other side shows a map of the surrounding area.

The Umeshini canal is an integral part of the Karmir Blur archaeological complex. Its tunnel is a unique hydraulic structure, demonstrating the high level of water engineering development in the Kingdom of Van.

 


On the right bank of the Hrazdan River