ARMENIANS: The Armenian Rebellion at Van
In: The Middle East journal, Band 61, Heft 2, S. 348-349
ISSN: 0026-3141
In: The Middle East journal, Band 61, Heft 2, S. 348-349
ISSN: 0026-3141
In: UCLA Armenian history and culture series
In: Historic Armenian cities and provinces 7
Armenian Cilicia -- Armenia maritima : the historical geography of Cilicia -- Armenian political revival in Cilicia -- The founding and coalescence of the Rubenian principality, 1073-1129 -- The brilliant diplomacy of Cilician Armenia -- Papacy, Catholicosate, and the kingdom of Cilician Armenia -- To Byzantium with love : the overtures of Saint Nerses the Gracious -- The role of military architecture in medieval Cilicia : the triumph of a non-urban strategy -- Catholicos Grigor VII Anavarzetsi and Stepanos Orbelian, Metropolitan of Siunik, in dialogue -- Manuscripts and libraries : scriptorial activity in Cilicia -- The medical heritage of Cilician Armenia -- Cilicia and its Catholicosate from the fall of the Armenian kingdom to 1915 -- Planning and architectural reminiscences from historical Aintab -- The Cilician massacres, April 1909 -- Cilicia : the view from the Constantinople women's organizations -- The tears and laughter of Cilician Armenia : literary representations of destruction and revival, 1909-1918 -- The repatriation of Armenian refugees from the Arab Middle East, 1918-1920 -- Cilicia under the French administration : Armenian aspirations, Turkish resistance, and French strategems -- The postwar contest for Cilicia and the "Marash affair" -- The Cilician Armenians and French policy, 1919-1921 -- The institutionalization of the Catholicosate of the great house of Cilicia in Antelias -- Imagining Adana : David Kherdian and Peter Najarian
In: Minority Rights Group international report 32
In: Military technology: Miltech, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 34-35
ISSN: 0722-3226
World Affairs Online
In: International migration review: IMR, Band 28, Heft 2, S. 386
ISSN: 1747-7379, 0197-9183
In: Viewpoints on modern world history
Part I. Historical background -- Excerpt from genocide: a comprehensive introduction / Adam Jones -- A brief history of the Armenian Genocide / Sara Cohan -- From bloodless revolution to bloody counterrevolution: the Adriana Massacres of 1909 / Bedross Der Matossian -- Did the Armenian Genocide inspire Hitler? Turkey, past and future / Hannibal Travis -- Assyrian Genocide / The Combat Genocide Association -- The incredible story of how Kim Kardashian's ancestors escaped the Armenian Genocide / Michael Snyder -- Part II. Period context -- The Armenian Genocide / United to End Genocide -- What is genocide? The Armenian case / Michael Gunter -- Book review: the Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: a disputed genocide: the Armenian Rebellion at Van / Robert Brenton Betts -- The Armenian question / Universidad Iberoamericana -- Warfare, genocide, and ethnic conflict: a Darwinian approach / Gregory G. Dimijian -- Excerpt from "the Ottoman Empire" / Saylor Academy -- Remembering Knar Yemenidjian / M.J. Stone -- Part III. Lasting effects -- Generational impact of mass trauma / Anie Kalayjian and Marian Weisberg -- The Armenian Genocide: 100 years of denial (and why it's in Turkey's interest to end it) / David Tolbert -- Who's afraid of Atom Egoyan / Harg Vartanian -- Reflections on how genocidal killings are brought to an end / Alex de Waal and Bridget Conley-Zikic -- Turkey shocks Africa / Julia Harte
In: Nationalism & ethnic politics, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 405-429
ISSN: 1557-2986
The aim of this research note is to describe how Turkey's Armenians, who are the largest non-Muslim minority group in the country, define their identity, and to understand which factors contribute to the perpetuation of a dominant Armenian identity. This discussion is based on a field survey of Turkey's Armenian community, conducted in Istanbul between November 2004 and May 2005. Evaluation of these surveys based on both quantitative and qualitative methods brings us to the conclusion that it is possible to argue about the degree of dominance of Armenian identity over Turkish national identity amongst Turkey's Armenians, more than 95 per cent of whom live in Istanbul, and that the strong community ties play a significant role in maintaining Armenian culture and, therefore, strengthening Armenian identity. Adapted from the source document.
In: Iran and the Caucasus: research papers from the Caucasian Centre for Iranian Studies = Iran i kavkaz : trudy Kavkazskogo e͏̈tìsentra iranistiki, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 367-385
ISSN: 1573-384X
AbstractUsually, the Armenian-Turkish relations are taken into consideration as they developed in the most recent and most tragic phase of their history—in the aftermath of 1915, the emblematic year of the Armenian Genocide under the last Ottoman rule. In all this phase those relations were branded by the awful shock of the Genocide. Notwithstanding these tremendous developments of the recent history, one cannot, however, ignore that Turks and Armenians had a long common history for nearly one millennium. It is not the aim of this study to draft a historical outline of the Armenian-Turkish relations. Such a task would require a collection of data and analyses going far beyond the limits of this paper. The author tries to give a more careful insight into the Armenian-Turkish relations, pointing at some of the major obstacles hindering a balanced and critically dialectical approach of them, free from passionate, biased, and stereotyped views and attitudes; the latter, in most cases, being the consequence of the bleeding trauma of the Armenians, and of the self-justificatory strategy of the Turks, which is also the result of a deep trauma even if due to different reasons than that of the Armenians.
In: Nationalism and ethnic politics, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 405-430
ISSN: 1353-7113
In: Nationalism & ethnic politics, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 405-429
ISSN: 1557-2986