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  • The Creation Of Armenia

    THE CREATION OF ARMENIA

    By Jirair Tutunjian, Toronto, 11 May 2014

    When considering Armenia's recent and somewhat reluctant alliance
    with Russia it's important to remember that today's Armenia is mostly
    a Russian creation.

    Following more than a century of desperate lobbying by Armenia,
    tsarist Russia's army finally moved deeper into the Caucasus, in the
    early 19th century, and liberated most of the region from Turkic
    and Persian rule. What we now call modern Armenia was occupied by
    Russia and was named "Armenian Province". Thus for the first time,
    since 1375, Armenia appeared on maps as a political entity. Soon
    after ultranationalist and narrow-minded Tsar Nicholas I changed the
    region's name to "Yerevan Province", but it was now recognized that
    the region was Armenian, although the majority of population was
    non-Armenian due to foreign occupation.

    These and many other facts about the roots of modern Armenia were
    limned by Dr. George Bournoutian in his talk titled "Russo-Iranian
    Relations and the Formation of the Modern Armenian State" at AGBU's
    Alex Manoogian Cultural Centre in Toronto on May 9. Dr. Bournoutian
    is on a book tour about his recent "From Tabriz to St. Petersbourg".

    Attendees at the standing-room-only event were also regaled by exciting
    mini-sketches of Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, the slaying
    of Sayat Nova, Shah Fath Ali who had 145 children, a eunuch shah, and
    Generals Tsitsianov and Paskievich. Attendees also took away stories
    about the several Russo-Persian and Russo-Turkish Wars, about the
    bravery of Armenian volunteers, the Karapagh meliks, the colorful
    Armenian, Russian, and Persian characters who were involved in the
    transformation of Southern Caucasus, and the several repatriations
    of Armenians from Persia, Ottoman Turkey and Russia.

    One of the most dramatic stories Dr. Bournoutian told was that of the
    pro-Armenian Russian Ambassador Alexander Griboyedov who was sent
    by Tsar Nicholas I, in 1829, to Persia to ratify the recent treaty
    between Russia and Persia. A larger-than-life character, Griboyedov
    was a famous playwright, poet, composer, and friend and rival of
    Alexander Pushkin.

    One of Griboyedov's duties was to assure the return of Christian
    prisoners taken by the Persians during their recent war with Russia.

    An unexpected conflict flared up when an Armenian eunuch escaped
    from the harem of Fath Ali Shah and two Armenian girls escaped from
    the harem of the shah's son-in-law. All three sought refuge in the
    Russian embassy. The shah demanded that the Armenians be returned. When
    Griboyedov refused, Persian mobs, incited by the mullahs, attacked the
    Russian embassy. Griboyedov and his Cossacks put up a brave fight but
    were killed along with the 45-member staff. Griboyedov was 34. The
    Armenian eunuch was also killed. The fate of the two girls remains
    unknown. The young ambassador's body was taken to Tbilisi where
    it's buried.

    Fearing a massive Russian retaliation, the shah sent a 40-man
    mission to Moscow, carrying fabulous gifts, including vast carpets,
    manuscripts, and a large diamond. With peace established between the
    two empires, the Yerevan Province, now largely inhabited by Armenians,
    became a backwater. It remained so for the next 80 years, said Dr.

    Bournoutian, and became important only in Soviet times. He pointed out
    that while there were many obvious negative aspects to Soviet rule,
    one should not forget that present-day Yerevan is a legacy of the
    Soviet Era, and that scientific and artistic life bloomed in that
    period as opposed to the post-independence era.

    http://www.keghart.com/Tutunjian-Bournoutian-Armenia


    From: Baghdasarian
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