Armenians in Ukraine
Armenians in Ukraine (Armenian: Հայերն Ուկրաինայում, romanized: Hayern Ukrainayum; Ukrainian: Вірмени в Україні, romanized: Virmeni v Ukrayini) are ethnic Armenians who live in Ukraine. They number 99,894 according to the 2001 Ukrainian census.[3] However, the country is also host to a number of Armenian guest workers which has yet to be ascertained. The Armenian population in Ukraine has nearly doubled since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1989, largely due to instability in the Caucasus. Ukraine was home to the fifth largest Armenian community in the world before the invasion by Russia displaced millions of people.[4][5]
the first Armenian Catholic bishop of Lviv
Mikołaj Torosowicz
Roman Catholic priest
Grzegorz Piramowicz
Polish-Armenian Jesuit and missionary
Karol Antoniewicz
Lviv architect
Julian Oktawian Zachariewicz-Lwigród
Galician pharmacist, engineer, businessman, inventor, and philanthropist
Ignacy Łukasiewicz
Polish politician and social activist
Dawid Abrahamowicz
Polish writer
Adolf Abrahamowicz
Polish journalist and writer
Kajetan Abgarowicz
(Crimean Armenian), painter
Ivan Aivazovsky
the last Armenian Catholic Archbishop of Lviv
Józef Teodorowicz
(partly Armenian), ballerina
Tamara Tchinarova
filmmaker
Sergei Parajanov
graphic artist and designer
Vagrich Bakhchanyan
film director
Roman Balayan
painter
Arsen Savadov
oligarch
Vadym Novynskyi
(Armenian father, Ossetian mother), Ukrainian Minister of Interior (longest serving minister)
Arsen Avakov
Greco Roman wrestler
David Manukyan
(partly Armenian), politician and the current Ambassador of Ukraine to the United States, former Minister of Finance
Oksana Markarova
football player
Armen Akopyan
(Crimean Tatar father, Armenian mother), Ukrainian singer (winner of the Eurovision Song Contest)
Jamala
boxer
Artem Dalakian
Greco-Roman wrestler
Armen Vardanyan
football player
Valeriy Voskonyan
football player
Artur Avahimyan
A 19th century postcard of St. Nicholas Armenian Church in Kamenets-Podolsk (destroyed during the 1930s)
Armenian cultural heritage in Ukraine:
Armenian diaspora
Armenians in Crimea
Armenian Cathedral, Lviv
Ukrainians in Armenia
Armenia–Ukraine relations
Armenians in Moldova
Armenians in Poland
Armenians in Russia
Armenians in Romania
(in Ukrainian)