{{short description|Armenian ruler of Khachen}} {{Infobox royalty |name = Atrnerseh<br/>Ատրներսեհ |title = Prince of Khachen |image = |image_size = |caption = |succession = |reign = 840–865<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rayfield |authorlink=Donald Rayfield|first=Donald |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PxQpmg_JIpwC&pg=PA60 |title=Edge of Empires: A History of Georgia |date=2013-02-15 |publisher=Reaktion Books |isbn=978-1-78023-070-2 |pages=60 |language=en}}</ref> |regent = |coronation = |predecessor = Sahl Smbatean |successor = Grigor Hamam |spouse = Spram |issue = |full name = |house = Arranshahik, Syunik<ref name="hewsen">{{cite journal |last1=Hewsen |first1=Robert H.|date= |title=The Meliks of Eastern Armenia: II |url= |journal=Revue des études arméniennes |volume=10 |issue= |pages=286 |doi= |access-date=}}</ref> |house-type = Dynasty |father = |mother = |birth_date = |birth_place = |death_date = |death_place = |burial_place = |religion = Monophysitism }} '''Atrnerseh''' ({{Langx|hy|Ատրներսեհ}}) was an Armenian ruler of the Principality of Khachen. He was the son and successor of Sahl Smbatean.<ref>[http://www.vostlit.info/Texts/rus/Drash/primtext3.phtml См. комм. 106]</ref>
According to the 10th century Armenian historian Movses Kaghankatvatsi, Atrnerseh's family was descended from the Arranshahiks, the ancient ruling dynasty of Caucasian Albania, although the historian Robert H. Hewsen considers Atrnerseh and his father as members of a branch of the Armenian House of Syunik.<ref name="Atlas">Hewsen, Robert H., ''Armenia: A Historical Atlas''. The University of Chicago Press, 2001, pp. 119, 163.</ref> In 822, Atrnerseh married the last heir of Mihranid dynasty (which previously ruled Caucasian Albania), princess Spram. Subsequently, the princedom of Atrnerseh's father Sahl expanded to the east and included the territories of Artsakh and Gardman.<ref name="Atlas"/>
Atrnerseh's possessions mainly covered the region of Upper Khachen, also known as Tsar. His residence was at Handaberd, a fortress he built in the second quarter of the 9th century.<ref name="karapetyan">{{cite book |last=Karapetyan |first=Samvel |date=1999 |title=Հայ մշակույթի հուշարձանները խորհրդային Ադրբեջանին բռնակցված շրջաններում |trans-title=Armenian cultural monuments in the regions annexed to Soviet Azerbaijan |url=http://tert.nla.am/archive/HAY%20GIRQ/Ardy/1981-2000/karapetyan_1999.pdf |language=hy |location=Yerevan |publisher=Armenian National Academy of Sciences Publishing House |pages=24–30}}</ref> Together with his father and brother John, he participated in the anti-Arab uprising of 854, as a result of which he was arrested by the Arab commander Bugha al-Turki and sent to exile in Samarra.<ref>[http://www.vostlit.info/Texts/rus/Drash/frametext3.htm Иованнес Драсханакертци. История Армении, гл. XXVI]</ref> However, he was freed from exile, unlike his brother, whose estates were inherited by Atrnerseh. Atrnerseh ruled over an area approximately corresponding to the historical Armenian province of Artsakh.<ref name="hewsen"/>
==References== {{reflist}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Atrnerseh}} {{authority control}} Category:Year of birth unknown Category:House of Aranshahik Category:9th-century Armenian people Category:Princes of Khachen