
INVENTION OF HISTORY: Azerbaijan, Armenia and the Showcasing of Imagination
By Rouben Galichian In the middle ages (Caucasian) Albania was situated north of the Arax river, near Armenia and Iberia. During the eleventh to twelfth centuries this Christian country disappeared from the maps and after the Arab invasion and the onslaught of the Mongols and Seljuks, various Khanates such as Shirwan, Ganja, Shamakhi, Karabagh, Talesh, and others appeared in the territory, ruled mainly by the Persians. In 1918, when the regional countries became independent, there appeared a new country named Azerbaijan, which was the same, as the name of the Persian province of Azerbaijan across the Arax river. Since the early 1960s various local historians and scientists of this newly founded country have been trying to prove that the population of this land are the direct descendants of the Christian Albanians, as well as those of the Mongols and Seljuks, which allows them to claim that multitude of the Christian monuments existing in the region have Albanian, and not Christian Arme