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Armenian language is subject of 17th annual Vardanants Day lecture

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  • Armenian language is subject of 17th annual Vardanants Day lecture

    The Library of Congress, DC
    Sept 6 2013


    ARMENIAN LANGUAGE IS SUBJECT OF 17TH ANNUAL VARDANANTS DAY LECTURE



    Renowned linguist Charles de Lamberterie will deliver the 17th Annual
    Vardanants Day Armenian Lecture at noon on Thursday, Sept. 19 in the
    Northeast Pavilion of the Library's Thomas Jefferson Building, located
    at 10 First Street S.E., Washington D.C. Titled "The Armenian Language
    and its Place in the Indo-European Linguistic Family," the lecture
    will be delivered in English.

    In recent decades there has been renewed interest in Indo-European
    linguistics as new theories about the original homeland of the
    Indo-Europeans have been advanced. Some have recently placed the
    origins of this linguistic group, which includes the European Romance
    languages as well as Persian and Armenian, in Anatolia, a region today
    contained within Turkey.

    A professor at the Universite Paris-Sorbonne, de Lamberterie has
    written and lectured extensively on both Armenian and Greek
    Indo-European linguistics. He was inducted into France's prestigious
    Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 2010.

    The lecture series is sponsored by the Near East Section of the
    Library's African and Middle Eastern Division. It is named after the
    Armenian holiday that commemorates the battle of Avarayr (451 A.D.).
    The battle was led by the Armenian General Vardan Mamikonian and his
    compatriots against invading Persian troops who were attempting to
    reimpose Zoroastrianism on the Christian state. As a religious
    holiday, it celebrates the Armenians' triumph over forces of
    assimilation.

    Founded in 1800, the Library of Congress is the nation's oldest
    federal cultural institution. The Library seeks to spark imagination
    and creativity and to further human understanding and wisdom by
    providing access to knowledge through its magnificent collections,
    publications, programs and exhibitions. Many of the Library's rich
    resources can be accessed through its website at http://www.loc.gov

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