Sanesan (Armenian: Սանեսան) or Sanatruk (Armenian: Սանատրուկ) was the king of Maskut in the early 4th century. Sanesan's people, the Mazk'kut'k, have variously been identified as the Massagetae or as the Meskheti.[1]
^Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen, ed. Max Knight, The World of the Huns: Studies in their History and Culture, University of California Press, 1973, p. 458.
Sanesan (Armenian: Սանեսան) or Sanatruk (Armenian: Սանատրուկ) was the king of Maskut in the early 4th century. Sanesan's people, the Mazk'kut'k, have variously...
Arsacid king of Armenia Sanatruq I, king of Hatra Sanatruq II, king of Hatra Sanesan or Sanatruk, king of Maskut This disambiguation page lists articles about...
Manavazians and the Ordunis. Vache also successfully defended Armenia against Sanesan, the invading king of the Maskuts, slaying the latter in a battle near...
Armenian sources, Faustus of Byzantium (the 5th century) writes: “Maskut King Sanesan, extremely angry, was filled with hate for his tribesman, Armenian King...
son of Khosrov II Khosrov III "the Small", 330–338, son of Tiridates III Sanesan, a Sasanian-backed usurper belonging to the Arsacid dynasty, held much...
III. An Arsacid prince named Sanatruk (whom Faustus of Byzantium calls Sanesan, king of Maskut, and identifies as Khosrov's brother) raised a rebellion...
consolidate the area under a more centralized administration. In c. 335/6, Sanesan, the king of Maskut, occupied a portion of Balasagan, while at least acknowledging...
missionaries managed to turn three of Sanesan's own sons into Christianity.[citation needed] Suspicious of St. Grigoris, Sanesan ordered to execute the saint on...
in the year [340 AD], martyred in the year [348 AD] in Derbend, by King Sanesan of the Mazkuts; his holy remains were brought to Amaras by his pupils,...
to have been conquered in the early 330s by the Arsacid noble Sanatruk/Sanesan, who made its chief city his temporary capital and attempted to usurp the...