HISTORICAL BUILDINGS
AGHVESABERD FORTRESS
2nd–1st millennium BC, 2nd–4th centuries AD, 9th–16th centuries AD
State index: 1.8.10
Located
on the left bank of the Getar River, on the western edge of the 3rd district of
the Nor Nork administrative district. On the eastern side of the Fortress are
the buildings of the St. Gregory the Illuminator Medical Center. The western
side and the slopes are covered with private gardens.
The
fortress was discovered in the 1950s by archaeologist Sandro Sardaryan. In the
1960s, archaeological survey investigations were carried out in the area by
archaeologist Grigor Areshyan, who collected Early Iron Age (1st millennium BC)
materials.
The
fortified settlement, with a triangular plan, occupies the entire area of the
promontory. It is surrounded by a defensive wall running along the edge of the
promontory, which is particularly strong in the southwestern section. It is
built of massive, double-row, roughly hewn unworked basalt blocks. Only
fragments of the defensive wall have survived in the northern and southwestern
parts. Traces of residential structures built of small stones are visible in
the area.
The
fortress is multi-layered. The thickness of the cultural layer reaches 4–5 m on
the southwestern side of the fortress. From the surface and from sections of
the cultural layer, fragments of bowls, jars, large storage vessels, and
pitchers with geometric decoration have been discovered, with black, polished,
reddish, and gray surfaces, as well as an ancient grinding stone made of porous
basalt and other finds. The discovered materials indicate that the settlement
was formed in the Iron Age and continued to exist in later periods, maintaining
continuity of habitation.