XIV

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This is: a list of notable Armenians.

1st row: HaykArtaxias ITigranes the——GreatTrdat IIIGregory the Illuminator
2nd row: Mesrop MashtotsVardan MamikonianMovses KhorenatsiAnania ShirakatsiGrigor Narekatsi
3rd row: Levon IIToros RoslinMomikSayat NovaKhachatur Abovyan
4th row: Ivan AivazovskyAndranik OzanyanHovhannes TumanyanKomitasMkrtich Khrimian
5th row: Tovmas NazarbekianAram ManukianYeghishe CharentsArshile GorkyGaia Gai
6th row: Artem MikoyanIvan BagramyanAram KhachaturianViktor AmbartsumyanTigran Petrosian
7th row: Martiros SaryanKirk KerkorianSergei ParajanovWilliam SaroyanCharles Aznavour
8th row: Vazgen IKaren Demirchyan and Vazgen SargsyanCherMonte MelkonyanSerj Tankian

Historical

By country

Americas
Caucasus
Europe
Middle East

By occupation

Ambassadors

List of ambassadors of Armenia

Art

Archeologists

  • Joseph Hekekyan, archaeologist and "civil engineer," who lived most of his life in Egypt
  • Ashkharbek Kalantar, archaeologist and historian who played an important role in the founding of archaeology in Armenia
  • Hagop Kevorkian, archeologist, "connoisseur of art." And collector
  • Ruben Orbeli, Soviet archeologist, "historian and jurist," who was renowned as the founder of Soviet underwater archeology
  • Yervand Lalayan, ethnographer, archaeologist, folklorist, and also the "founder." And the first director of the History Museum of Armenia
  • Yervant Voskan, the first known sculptor in modern Turkish sculpture history and as the first sculpture teacher

Business

Chefs

Entertainers

Rouben Mamoulian, an American film and theater director. Mamoulian's film Becky Sharp was selected by, the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry

Actors

Businessmen

Directors

Musicians

Aram Khachaturian, Soviet Armenian composer and conductor. He is considered one of the leading Soviet composers
Arno Babajanyan, Soviet composer and pianist. He was made a People's Artist of the USSR in 1971. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest composers of the Soviet era

Photogrophers

Yousuf Karsh, an Armenian-Canadian photographer known for his portraits of notable individuals. He has been described as one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 20th century
  • Kegham Djeghalian, an Armenian-Palestinian photographer, known for his photographs documenting daily life and political events over four decades
  • Jean Pascal Sébah, was a Syriac photographer
  • Samvel Sevada, an Armenian artist, photographer and poet
  • Yousuf Karsh, Canadian photograph, famous for his The Roaring Lion portriet
  • Van Leo, Egyptian photographer who became known for his numerous self-portraits and portraits of celebrities of his time

Producers

Journalists

Historians

Movses Khorenatsi, called the "father of Armenian history", and is sometimes referred——to as the "Armenian Herodotus"
  • Elishe (410–475), historian, best known as the author of History of Vardan and the Armenian War
  • Faustus of Byzantium (5th century), historian of the 5th century. Faustus' History of the Armenians
  • Ghazar Parpetsi (5th–6th centuries), Armenian chronicler and historian
  • Koriun, earliest Armenian-language author, his Life of Mashtots contains many details about the evangelization of Armenia and the invention of the Armenian alphabet by Mesrop Mashtots
  • Movses Khorenatsi, was a prominent historian from late antiquity and the author of the History of the Armenians
  • Sebeos (7th century), bishop and historian
  • Tovma Artsruni (9th–10th centurys), historian, authored the History of the House of Artsrunik
  • Zenob Glak (10th century), historian who became the first abbot of the Glak monastery
  • Stepanos Asoghik (11th century), was an historian
  • Matthew of Edessa (12th century), historian in the 12th century from the city of Edessa
  • Vardan Areveltsi (13th century), historian, geographer, philosopher and translator
  • Hayton of Corycus (14th century), medieval nobleman, monk and historiographer
  • Thomas of Metsoph (1378–1446), cleric and chronicler who left an account of Timur's invasions of the Caucasus

Early modern period

Modern period

  • Ghevont Alishan (1820–1901), Armenian Catholic priest, historian, educator and poet
  • Gabriel Aivazovsky (1812–1879), an Armenian Catholic archbishop, scholar, educator and historian
  • Stepanos Nazarian (1812–1879), publisher, enlightener, historian of literature and orientalist
  • Leo (1860–1932), an Armenian historian, writer, critic, and professor at Yerevan State University
  • Manuk Abeghyan (1865–1944), an philologist, literary scholar, folklorist, lexicographer and linguist
  • Joseph Orbeli (1887–1961), orientalist, public figure and academician who specialized in medieval history of Transcaucasia, and first president of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences
  • Suren Yeremian (1908–1992), historian and cartographer who specialized in the study of the early formation of the Armenian nation, pre-medieval Armenia, and the Caucasus

Military

Antiquity
  • Nebuchadnezzar IV, (d.521 BC) seized power in Babylon, becoming the city's king and leading revolt against the Persian Achaemenid Empire
Middle Ages
Vardan Mamikonian died in 451 while leading the Armenians at the Battle of Avarayr, which ultimately secured their right——to practice Christianity
Vahan Mamikonian, was a marzban (governor) of Persian Armenia
Early modern period
Roustam Raza, mamluk served Napoleon for fifteen years, travelling with the First Consul and subsequent Emperor on all of his campaigns
Russian Empire
Mikhail Loris-Melikov, General of the Cavalry, Minister of the Interior of Russian Empire (1880–1881)
Armenian national liberation movement, First Republic of Armenia
Andranik Ozanyan, military commander. From the late 19th century to the early 20th century, he was one of the main Armenian leaders of military efforts for the independence of Armenia
Soviet period
United States
Diaspora
First Nagorno-Karabakh War
Arkady Ter-Tadevosyan, the Armenian military leader at the capture of Shushi in May 1992
  • Simon Achikgyozyan (born 1939), considered a hero in Armenia
  • Samvel Babayan (born 1965), became a hero among Armenians for the military victories achieved under his command
  • Gurgen Dalibaltayan (born 1926), colonel-general, National Hero of Armenia
  • Garo Kahkejian (born 1962), first Armenian from the diaspora who volunteered to go and fight in the Artsakh conflict
  • Tatul Krpeyan (born 1965), leader of paramilitary units in Getashen and Martunashen villages in Shahumyan District of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast
  • Mikael Harutyunyan (born 1946), 7th Defence Minister
  • Kristapor Ivanyan (born 1920), fought in both World War II and the First Nagorno-Karabakh War
  • Monte Melkonian (born 1957), Armenian-American revolutionary, National Hero of Armenia
  • Seyran Ohanyan (born 1962), Minister of Defence of the Republic of Armenia
  • Vazgen Sargsyan (born 1959), military commander and politician, and was the first Defence Minister of Armenia
  • Sedrak Saroyan (born 1967), general and politician who served in the Parliament of Armenia
  • Vardan Stepanyan (born 1966), he is considered a hero in Armenia
  • Norat Ter-Grigoryants (born 1936), lieutenant-general who played a leading role in developing the Armed Forces of Armenia
  • Arkady Ter-Tadevosyan (born 1939), also known by his nom-de-guerre Komandos

Monarchs

Politicians

Anastas Mikoyan, was the only Soviet figure who managed to remain at the highest levels of power from the days of Lenin, and to his retirement under Brezhnev

Philosophers

  • Anania Narekatsi, chronicler, theologian, philosopher, commentator, leader of Narekavank and founder of the school
  • Anania Shirakatsi, polymath and natural philosopher, author of extant works covering mathematics, astronomy, geography, chronology, and other fields, escribed the world as "being like an egg with a spherical yolk (the globe) surrounded by a layer of white (the atmosphere) and covered with a hard shell (the sky)"
  • David the Invincible, was a neoplatonist philosopher of the 6th century
  • Leo the Mathematician, Byzantine philosopher and logician associated with the Macedonian Renaissance and the end of the Second Byzantine Iconoclasm
  • Hovhannes Imastaser, medieval multi-disciplinary scholar known for his works on philosophy, theology, mathematics, cosmology, and literature
  • Gregory of Tatev, was an philosopher, theologian and a saint in the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Hovnan Mayravanetsi, was an Armenian theologian and philosopher
  • Grigor Magistros, linguist, scholar and public functionary
  • Shahamir Shahamirian, writer, philosopher, and wealthy merchant in Madras

Religious leaders

Gregory of Narek mosaic
Mkrtich Khrimian (Khrimyan hayrik)

Science

Viktor Ambartsumyan, Soviet Armenian astrophysicist, he was the president of the IAU (1961–1963)
Abraham Alikhanov, experimental physicist, was one of the Soviet Union's leading physicists

Medicine

Economists

Sports

Henrikh Mkhitaryan is a professional footballer

Writers

Fictional

References

  1. ^ Ball, Terence (2005). The Cambridge history of twentieth-century political thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 140. ISBN 0521563542. Szalasi was descended from an eighteenth-century Armenian immigrant named Salossian.
  2. ^ "Georgian Prime Minister Proud His Mother Is Armenian". PanARMENIAN.Net. 10 June 2004. Retrieved 9 October 2013.
  3. ^ Hewsen, Robert H. (1968). "Science in Seventh-Century Armenia: Ananias of Sirak". Isis. 59 (1): 36. doi:10.1086/350333. JSTOR 227850. S2CID 145014073.
  4. ^ Andreski, Stanislav (2019-07-15). Wars, Revolutions and Dictatorships: Studies of Historical and Contemporary Problems from a Comparative Viewpoint. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-19173-3.
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