Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Professor Marc Nichanian Lectures On: "From Constantinople To Venice

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Professor Marc Nichanian Lectures On: "From Constantinople To Venice

    PROFESSOR MARC NICHANIAN LECTURES ON: "FROM CONSTANTINOPLE TO VENICE IN THE DAYS OF LORD BYRON."

    AZG Armenian Daily #207
    10/11/2007

    Beirut, November 9, 2007- Renowned Professor Marc Nichanian, delivered
    his first public lecture entitled, "From Constantinople to Venice
    in the days of Lord Byron", on October 31, in Haigazian University
    Auditorium, among a capacity audience of Armenian intellectuals,
    writers, faculty, staff and students.

    Dr. Nichanian, who is currently a visiting professor in the Armenian
    Studies Department, explored the events of the second decade of the
    nineteenth century, i.e. the period when Armenian national philology
    was invented.

    Nichanian noted that that this philology was established through a
    strange play of gazes and sub^_stitutions between Europeans, Greeks,
    and Armenians, or between the raging Phil^_hellenism of the time and
    a nascent "Philarmenism" that the Mekhitarist fathers wanted to foster.

    Nichanian highlighted on the fact that Lord Byron was one of the
    main representatives of this Phil^_hellen^_ism in Europe, and was
    soon converted into a propagator of "Philarmenism".

    Nichanian shared with the audience the mysterious aspect of Lord
    Byron's desire of learning Armenian, immediately upon his arrival to
    Ven^_ice in November 1816.

    During the course of the lecture, based on the heeds of a recent
    article by Giancarlo Bolognesi, Marc Nichanian expounded the historical
    and contextual reas^_ons behind this desire, presenting the colorful
    personality of Ludovico Arborio di Breme, who played a crucial role
    as the intermediary between Lord Byron and the Mekhitarist Fathers.
Working...
X