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         Armenian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Studies in Armenian Literature and Christianity (Collected Studies, 451) by R. W. Thomson, 1994-06
  2. Anthology of Western Armenian Literature
  3. Hay grakanutiwn: viii tari [ Armenian literature for the VIII class]. by S.S.; P.M. Margarean Tarontsi, 1969
  4. History of Armenian Literature: Fifth to Thirteenth Centuries by James Etmekjian, 1988-12
  5. Hay grakanutiwn: v tari [ Armenian literature for the V class]. by V.A.; Varsian Sh. A; Sevan G.L Petoian, 1969
  6. Armenian Literature by Anonymous, 2010-03-07
  7. Texts and Concordances of the Armenian Adam Literature: Vol. I, Genesis 1 4, Penitence of Adam, Book of Adam by Michael E. Stone, 1996
  8. Armenisch - Turkisch. Etymologische Betrachtungen ausgehend von Materialien aus dem Hem_ingebiet. (Dutch Studies in Armenian Language and Literature 4) ... in Armenian Language and Literature ;) by Uwe Blasing, 1995-01
  9. A bibliography of classical Armenian literature to 1500 (Corpus Christianorum) by Robert W Thomson, 1995
  10. The Magical Pine Ring: Culture and the Imagination in Armenian/American Literature by Margaret Bedrosian, 1991-12
  11. A History of Armenian Literature: From Ancient Times to the Nineteenth Century by Srbouhi Hairapetian, 1996-02
  12. Armenian and Iranian Studies (Harvard Armenian Texts and Studies) by James R. Russell, 2005-03-01
  13. Rewriting Caucasian History: The Medieval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian Chronicles: The Original Georgian Texts and the Armenian Adaptation (Oxford Oriental Monographs)
  14. Armenian Wisdom: A Treasury of Quotations & Proverbs

21. Armenian Literature: Information From Answers.com
Armenian literature. The Armenian Church fostered literature, and the principal early works are religious or hagiographical, most of them translations. The first major
http://www.answers.com/topic/armenian-literature

22. Armenian Literature — Infoplease.com
Encyclopedia Armenian literature. Armenian literature. The Armenian Church fostered literature, and the principal early works are religious or hagiographical, most of them
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/ent/A0804758.html

23. Chegg.com: Armenian Literature By Arnot, Robert | 1406804363 | 9781406804362
Rent and Save a ton on Armenian Literature by Arnot, Robert.ISBN 1406804363 EAN 9781406804362
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SUMMARY Poetry, drama, and folk-lore translated for the first time SUMMARY Poetry, drama, and folk-lore translated for the first time Customer Service Media Center Mobile Bookstores ... Gift Certificates

24. Armenian Literature
In the early 1800s, further research of Armenian history and literature by European scholars such as A. Meillet and J. Karst, brought forth into the light the lost manuscripts
http://www.angelfire.com/hi/Azgaser/armlit.html
The Role of Literature in Preserving the Armenian National Identity
by Grigor Hakobyan
In the early 1800s, further research of Armenian history and literature by European scholars such as A. Meillet and J. Karst, brought forth into the light the lost manuscripts and ancient writings of the Armenian people. Their remarkable works in the field of Armenian Studies created a new wave of Armenian scholars such as H. Ashcaryan (1876-1953) and M. Abelyan (1865-1944), N. Adonts (1871-1942, T. Toramanyan (1864-1934) who rejuvenated the Armenian folklore, reconstructed more factual history of Armenian people and brought forth the archaic achievements of Armenian architecture. Komitas Vardapet (Solomon Solomonean, 1869-1935, Genocide survivor and spiritual composer of Armenian liturgy) re-created the lost treasures of the uplifting Armenian spiritual music, devising thousands of religious compositions still practiced by the current Armenian churches. His spiritual compositions and inspiring writings of outstanding Armenian writer/poet Raffi, resurrected the creative spirit of Armenian people, reclaiming their attachments to their ancient history, sacred Homeland and spiritual heritage. Sense of national pride and dignity re-emerged among Armenians, giving rise to their new literary works in the face of the coming new century. Critical, journalistic reviews and monographs on contemporary Armenian writers like Y. Ohsakan, Vahan Nalbandean (1876-1902), Nikol Albalean (1873-1947), Simeon Hakobyan (1880-1942), Arsen Terteryan (1882-1953), Haroutiun Surhatyan (1882-1938), Tsolak Hanzadyan (1886-1935), and Polos Makintsyan (1884-1938) began to emerge.

25. Authorities & Vocabularies (Library Of Congress): Armenian Literature
Search, download, query and browse Library of Congress Authorities and Vocabularies.
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Library of Congress
The Library of Congress LC Subject Headings Armenian literature
Armenian literature
From Library of Congress Subject Headings
Armenian literature

26. Armenian Literature
The Poetic Prophet of ArmeniaParuyr Sevak Written by Grigor Hakobyan (webmaster)
http://www.angelfire.com/hi/Azgaser/sevak.html
The Poetic Prophet of Armenia-Paruyr Sevak
Written by Grigor Hakobyan (webmaster)
One of the best poets of Armenian Literature was Paruyr (Sevak) Ghazaryan. He was born in 1924,January 24, at the village of Vedi, Armenia. Paruyr Sevak's father, Rafael Ghazari Soghomonyan (1892-1982) was an educated farmer married to Anahit Gaspari Soghomonyan, who was the mother Paruyr Sevak. She was illiterate, village woman, who was very kind, hard working and religious housewife helping her husband with the fieldwork. Their original family epitet contained the prepositional name, "Ter" which meant: lord or spiritual father and made a reference to the family's religious origin. The forefathers of those families who had that prepositional name have been known to be very educated people, who got their education at the Gevorgyan Seminary of Echmiadzin (the world headquarter of Armenian church). Therefore, people who knew Paruyr Sevak's family were expecting him to have preserved the trait of a "prophet", which he have later evolved in a literary sense of the word, becoming a prophetic spokesperson of Armenian people in their struggle for preserving their ancient history and very rich cultural heritage. Universal humanism and passion toward his native culture bounded his poems. Sevak's love for education helped him to get accepted into secondary school at age 6 (while legal age established by government for kids to attend a secondary school was 7). Motivated with passion for learning, Paruyr Sevak graduated 10th grade with honors.

27. Armenian Literature | WordsValley.org
Please Click on the following link to view the desired file . Armenian Literature by Anonymous . View other Books from Author ,Anonymous
http://www.wordsvalley.org/node/23699

28. Armenian Literature -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Armenian literature, body of writings in the Armenian language. Email is the email address you used when you registered. Password is case sensitive.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/35315/Armenian-literature
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Table of Contents: Armenian literature Article Article Classical Classical - Origins and golden age Origins and golden age - Medieval decline Medieval decline Modern Modern Related Articles Related Articles External Web sites External Web sites Citations

29. Armenian Literature By Anonymous - Full Text Free Book (Part 1/4)
Armenian Literature by Anonymous Part 1 out of 4. FullBooks.com homepage; Index of Armenian Literature; Next part (2) Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Susan Skinner and the
http://www.fullbooks.com/Armenian-Literature1.html
Armenian Literature
by
Anonymous
Part 1 out of 4

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team.
ARMENIAN LITERATURE
COMPRISING
POETRY, DRAMA, FOLK-LORE, AND CLASSIC TRADITIONS
TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH FOR THE FIRST TIME
WITH A SPECIAL INTRODUCTION BY
ROBERT ARNOT, M.A. REVISED EDITION SPECIAL INTRODUCTION The literature of ancient Armenia that is still extant is meagre in quantity and to a large extent ecclesiastical in tone. To realize its oriental color one must resort entirely to that portion which deals with the home life of the people, with their fasts and festivals, their emotions, manners, and traditions. The ecclesiastical character of much of the early Armenian literature is accounted for by the fact that Christianity was preached there in the first century after Christ, by the apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew, and that the Armenian Church is the oldest national Christian Church in the world. It is no doubt owing to the conversion of the entire Armenian nation under the passionate preaching of Gregory the Illuminator that most of the literary products, of primitive Armeniathe mythological legends

30. Armenian Literature - Armeniapedia.org
The Armenian literary tradition began early in the fifth century A.D. with religious tracts and histories of the Armenians. The most important of these were written by
http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=Literature

31. Armenian Literature Definition Of Armenian Literature In The Free Online Encyclo
Armenian literature. The Armenian Church fostered literature, and the principal early works are religious or hagiographical, most of them translations.
http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Armenian literature

32. Armenian Literature By Anonymous. Search, Read, Study, Discuss.
Armenian Literature by Anonymous. Searchable etext. Discuss with other readers.
http://www.online-literature.com/anonymous/armenian-literature/
The Literature Network Authors: 261
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33. Armenian Literature :: Modern -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Armenian literature, Modern, Britannica Online Encyclopedia, The 18th century witnessed an Armenian cultural and intellectual renaissance, and, by the middle of the 19th
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/35315/Armenian-literature/284421/Moder
document.write(''); Search Site: With all of these words With the exact phrase With any of these words Without these words Home CREATE MY Armenian lit... NEW ARTICLE ... SAVE
Armenian literature
Table of Contents: Armenian literature Article Article Classical Classical - Origins and golden age Origins and golden age - Medieval decline Medieval decline Modern Modern Related Articles Related Articles External Web sites External Web sites Citations
  • Article Classical
    Modern
    The 18th century witnessed an Armenian cultural and intellectual renaissance, and, by the middle of the 19th century, the time was ripe for the development of a modern Armenian literature. The Armenian language, however, was in a chaotic state, and the question of which form should serve as the vehicle for new ideas led to controversies, in both Turkish and Russian Armenia, between champions of the old classical language and those of the modern spoken languages. Eventually the latter prevailed, with the result that from that point on the eastern literature was written in a modified form of the Yerevan dialect (

34. Armenian Literature
The existing Armenian literature begins around AD 400. History. Early literature Further information Classical Armenian. Armenian literature begins about 406 with the
http://english.turkcebilgi.com/Armenian literature
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Armenian Catholic Church Armenian Evangelical Church Languages and dialects Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Armenian Armenian History Persecution Armenian Genocide Hamidian massacres Adana massacre Anti-Armenianism e The existing Armenian literature begins around AD 400.
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Early literature
The Armenians once had a temple literature of their own, which was destroyed in the 4th and 5th centuries by the Christian clergy, so thoroughly that barely twenty lines of it survive in the history of Moses of Chorene . Their Christian literature begins about 405 with the invention of the Armenian alphabet by Mesrop . This was probably an older alphabet to which Mesrop merely added vowels; but, in order to pacify the Greek ecclesiastics and the emperor

35. Armenian Literature — FactMonster.com
Encyclopedia Armenian literature. Armenian literature. The Armenian Church fostered literature, and the principal early works are religious or hagiographical, most of them
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/ent/A0804758.html

36. ANN/Groong -- TCC - 'XXth Century Armenian Literature' By Azat Yeghiazarian
Why we should read 'XXth Century Armenian Literature issues and authors' by Azat Yeghiazarian 322pp, Yerevan, Armenia, 2002 Armenian News Network / Groong April 19, 2004 By
http://groong.usc.edu/tcc/tcc-20040419.html
Armenian News Network / Groong
The Critical Corner - 04/19/2004
Redistribution of Groong articles, such as this one, to any other media, including but not limited to other mailing lists and Usenet bulletin boards, is strictly prohibited without prior written consent from Groong's Administrator
Why we should read... 'XXth Century Armenian Literature: issues and authors' Home Administrative Introduction Armenian News ... Feedback

37. Armenian Literature
Armenian literature, body of writings in the Armenian language. There is evidence that a pagan oral literature existed in Armenia before the invention of the Armenian alphabet
http://www.uv.es/EBRIT/micro/micro_33_57.html
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Armenian literature,
body of writings in the Armenian language. There is evidence that a pagan oral literature existed in Armenia before the invention of the Armenian alphabet in the 5th century AD, but, owing to the zeal of the early Christian priests, little of this has been preserved. For about a century after their conversion to Christianity ( c. 300), the Armenians had to rely on Greek and Syriac versions of the Bible and other religious books. These languages were unintelligible to the common people, and to remedy this St. Mesrob (Mashtots) invented the Armenian alphabet ( c. 401). The catholicos Sahak (Isaac) the Great and St. Mesrob formed a school of translators who were reputedly sent to Edessa and to Constantinople to procure and translate Syriac and Greek copies of important works into Armenian. Much of the literary activity of the 5th century, the golden age of Armenian literature, was devoted to such translations. Original works, however, were not wanting, such as the histories of Eghishe and Ghazar of Pharp. The masterpiece of classical Armenian writing is the "Refutation of the Sects" by Eznik Koghbatsi. This was a polemic work, composed partly from Greek sources, in defense of orthodox Christian belief againstand thereby providing valuable information aboutpagan Armenian superstitions, Iranian dualism, Greek philosophy, and the Marcionite heresy. Its pure classical style is unsurpassed in Armenian literature. The work of translation of such authors as Saints John Chrysostom and Cyril of Alexandria continued in the 6th-8th century. The so-called Hellenistic (Yunaban) school produced excessively slavish translations from Greek grammatical, theological, and philosophical works, including those of Plato, Aristotle, and Philo of Alexandria.

38. Oriental Fathers: Armenian Literature
Armenian Literature . The Armenian nation had a long history already by the time of Christ, often as an independent or buffer state between the Roman and Parthian (later
http://www.tertullian.org/rpearse/oriental/armenian.htm
Armenian Literature
The Armenian nation had a long history already by the time of Christ, often as an independent or buffer state between the Roman and Parthian (later Sassanid Persian) empires. The first mentions of Christianity in Armenia date from the 3rd century AD. Eusebius of Caesarea (Church History VI.46.3) records Dionysius, bishop of Alexandria, sent a treatise in the form of a letter, On Repentance , "to those in Armenia whose bishop was Meruzanes." He also records that in 311 the persecuting emperor Maximin Daia ended up at war with the Armenians who, although long-term Roman allies, had become fervently Christian and resisted his attempts to force them to sacrifice to idols. Christianity seems to have come from Syriac and Persian sources initially. Fifth century tradition records that the apostle Thaddeus baptised the Royal family of Edessa, the home of Syriac, and then came to Armenia and baptised the princess Sandukht. Faustus of Byzantium calls the Armenian Catholicosate "the throne of Thaddeus." The oldest theological terms in Armenian come from Syriac, and the Diatessaron circulated in Armenia in the fifth century as it did in Syria. But after the fourth century, Armenian churches emphasised their links with the Greek-speaking world and Constantinople, and later historians tend to obscure the Syriac connection. Christianity proper begins in Armenia with Gregory the Illuminator (ca. 240-332). He baptised King Tiridates and the Royal family in 314 AD. Gregory was quickly consecrated a bishop in Caesarea in Cappadocia, and became the first Catholicos of the Armenian church. He founded a see at Ashtishat in Taron, and his son Aristakes was present at the Council of Nicaea. From these roots the church spread among the nation as a whole.

39. HyeEtch - The Armenians - Literature
HyeEtch (Armenian page) is a compilation of recourse's and material relating Armenians and Armenia, presented in a visually attractive and easy to read layout. Its main aim is
http://www.hyeetch.nareg.com.au/armenians/literature_p1.html
Chronology Language Literature Prominent ... Traditions Armenian Literature This section is divided into several categories to help the reader find the desired subject with ease. Some of the literary works are in Armenian (Western or Eastern dialect d epending on the source ) and some have been translated into English. This Page is both in English and Armenian. To find out how to be able to see the Armenian letters and download a free Armenian font, please click Here The following are the Armenian literature categories: Updated 17 June, 2004
Web Site Design by SSS Graphics

40. AllRefer.com - Armenian Literature (Asian Literature) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete information on Armenian literature, Asian Literature. Includes related research links.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/A/ArmenLit.html
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Armenian literature, Asian Literature
Related Category: Asian Literature Armenian literature. David of Sassoun. See Z. C. Boyajian, ed., Armenian Legends and Poems (2d ed. 1959); J. Etmekjian, An Anthology of Western Armenian Literature
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