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  • Richard Hovannisian Participates In A Seminar On The First Georgian

    RICHARD HOVANNISIAN PARTICIPATES IN A SEMINAR ON THE FIRST GEORGIAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC

    By admin

    http://massispost.com/archives/9101
    Updated: July 29, 2013

    TBILISI - Professor Richard Hovannisian was invited to Tbilisi
    (Tiflis) by the Georgian National Archives to participate in a
    week-long seminar, July 17-23, on the First Georgian Democratic
    Republic. As a pioneering historian of the First Armenian Republic,
    Hovannisian was seen as a model for the young Georgian, Armenian,
    Azeri, Russian, Lithuanian, Polish, Italian, French, British, and
    American scholars in attendance.

    During the presentations by Georgian lecturers on the historical,
    constitutional and legislative, political, social, economic,
    cultural, educational, religious, military, and interethnic aspects
    of the Georgian Republic, Professor Hovannisian regularly offered
    constructive comments and comparative insights. The seminar included
    excursions to the old city of Tiflis, its former Armenian upper
    class Solalaki quarter, Freedom (formerly Yerevan) Square, Rustaveli
    (formerly Golovinsky) Prospect, with its government buildings and grand
    former Armenian mansions, the Georgian National Library and Manuscript
    Center, the Opera and State Museum, and the historic capital city
    of Mtskheta. In addition, a day was spent on the heights of Kojori,
    where the final battles took place before the Red Army advanced into
    Tiflis in March, 1921 to end the Georgian Democratic Republic and
    begin the period of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic.

    While in Georgia, Richard Hovannisian was invited by the Armenian
    Prelate of the Georgian Diocese, Bishop Vazgen Mirzakhanyan and head
    of the Legal Division, Mr. Levon Isakulyan, to address Armenian youth
    leaders at a summer training program at nearby Tserovani.

    Representatives from throughout Georgia-Tbilisi, Batum, Tsalka,
    Marnaul, Bolnis, Akhalkalak, and Akhaltsikh-heard Hovannisian speak
    about the First Armenian Democratic Republic and issues relating to
    the 100th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, in which the Georgian
    Armenian youth showed great interest.

    Hovannisian joined His Eminence and the youth group on a pilgrimage
    to the Armenian Pantheon, a small part of the former vast Armenian
    Khojavank cemetery in the Halvabar quarter of Tbilisi to plant a tree
    near the monuments of Raffi, Sundukian, and other noted Armenian
    writers and intellectuals. Much of Khojavank and its Church of
    Holy Mother of God (Astvatsadzin) were demolished at the command of
    Stalin's henchman, Lavrenty Beria, in the 1930. Recently, the enormous
    Georgian Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Trinity has been built on the
    site of the cemetery, exposing numerous tombs, about which various
    protests proved to be of no avail. Down the hill from the cathedral
    is the Armenian "Etchmiadzin" Church and just across the Kura River,
    the Armenian Cathedral of Saint Gevorg.

    The week of conferences, talks, and excursions proved both interesting
    and instructive for the seminar participants. It was apparent that
    until recently the Georgian scholars and public had far less knowledge
    and awareness of the First Georgian Republic than Armenians had about
    their First Republic, perhaps because of the existence of a large
    Armenian Diaspora during the Soviet years.

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