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Armenian studies

Armenian studies or Armenology (Armenian: հայագիտություն, pronounced [hɑjɑɡituˈtʰjun]) is a field of humanities covering Armenian history, language and culture. The emergence of modern Armenian studies is associated with the foundation of the Catholic Mechitarist order in the early 18th century. Until the early 20th century, Armenian studies were largely conducted by individual scholars in the Armenian communities of the Russian Empire (Moscow, Saint Petersburg, New Nakhichevan, Tiflis), Europe (Venice, Vienna, Paris, London, Berlin, Leipzig), Constantinople and Vagharshapat in Armenia. After the establishment of Soviet rule, Armenian studies, and sciences in general, were institutionalized in Armenia and put under direct control of the Academy of Sciences.[1] Today, numerous research centers in many parts of the world specialize in Armenian studies.

(1661–1739), historian and orientalist

Maturin Veyssière La Croze

(1788–1824), English poet

Lord Byron

(1802–1880), French orientalist

Marie-Félicité Brosset

(1848–1908), German philologist

Johann Heinrich Hübschmann

(1829–1869), French historian

Victor Langlois

(1852–1927), German writer, journalist and translator

Arthur Leist

(1676–1749), the founder of Mechitarist Congregation

Mkhitar Sebastatsi

(1738–1823), Mechitarist monk and historian

Mikayel Chamchian

(1820–1901), Mechitarist historian

Ghevont Alishan

The Armenian Virtual College - AGBU

Armenology Research National Center - ARNC

Armenian Institute - AI

History of Armenia

International relations#Area Studies

(in Armenian) Harutyunyan, Shmavon Ṛ. Պատմագիտության զարգացումը Սովետական Հայաստանում, 1920–1963 [The development of the study of history in Soviet Armenia, 1920-1963]. Yerevan: Hayastan Publishing, 1967.

Mamigonian, Marc A. "From Idea to Reality: The Development of Armenian Studies in the U.S. from the 1890s to 1969," Journal of Armenian Studies 10/1-2 (2012–2013), pp. 153–84.

"Special Issue: Rethinking Armenian Studies: Past Present and Future," Journal of Armenian Studies 7/2 (Fall 2003).

A. Simavoryan, T. Ghanalanyan, V. Hovyan, CENTERS FOR ARMENIAN STUDIES ABROAD: ASSESSMENT OF POTENTIAL, Yerevan,2014 (in Armenian),

online

Jan Henrik Holst, Armenische Studien (2009)

[11]

Hac̣ik Rafi Gazer, Studien zum kirchlichen Schulwesen der Armenier im Kaukasus (2012)

[12]

Armenuhi Drost-Abgarjan, Hermann Goltz, Armenologie in Deutschland: Beiträge zum Ersten Deutschen Armenologen-Tag (2005)

[13]

Fundamental Scientific Library of the NAS

A digital library on Armenian literature, language and history

The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research

UCLA: Armenian Studies

Armenian Studies Program, California State University, Fresno

Armenian Studies: Harvard University

Armenian Studies: Hebrew University

Armenian Studies: University of Michigan

Armenian Studies: University of São Paulo

Armenology Research National Center

https://web.archive.org/web/20070629100518/http://aiea.fltr.ucl.ac.be/centres/pays.htm

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