Representatives of Boeing refer to possible activities in Armenia in a meeting with Pashinyan

Representatives of Boeing refer to possible activities in Armenia in a meeting with Pashinyan

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 19:11,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received Vice President of Boeing International Corporation Richard Muehlenbeck, Corporate Marketing Director Alem Wali and Chief Financial Officer Mher Papyan. The meeting focused on the possibilities of cooperation in the field of air communications, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia.

Welcoming Richard Muehlenbeck’s delegation to Armenia, the Prime Minister noted that the Armenian government is interested in developing mutually beneficial cooperation with the world-famous Boeing Corporation. Nikol Pashinyan attached importance to the development of the aviation sector in our country, stressing that the sector is in the focus of his government’s attention.

The representatives of Boeing’s managing staff referred to the proposed activities and directions of cooperation in our country, including the opportunities available in Armenia’s aviation market.

In conclusion, Prime Minister Pashinyan suggested following up the discussion with the officials responsible for the aviation sector in Armenia in order to identify the opportunities for cooperation.

Music: Serj Tankian Teams Up with Creative Armenia to Release 7 Notes Challenge

Broadway World
Sept 13 2019
 
 
Serj Tankian Teams Up with Creative Armenia to Release 7 Notes Challenge
 
by TV News Desk
BroadwayWorld.com Sep. 13, 2019  

 
Grammy-Award winning and multi-platinum recording artist, songwriter, composer, poet and visual artist Serj Tankian has teamed up with non-profit cultural organization Creative Armenia to release 7 Notes Challenge, a compilation album highlighting some of the most notable submissions from a songwriting challenge posed to artists worldwide. The 17 song album from various artists is available now on all major streaming and download platforms across the globe.
 
 
The unique experiment was originally announced back in October of 2017 with a basic premise and a $5,000 prize.
 
"The challenge is simple. You've got these seven notes that you have to start with, " explained Tankian. "Your first seven notes of your composition have to be these seven notes. You can make a jazz song, a rock song, a symphony…whatever type of music that you want, but it can't be longer than 3 minutes. The rest is up to you."
 
When the submission deadline was reached, Creative Armenia, who hosted the competition via the website serjtankianchallenge.com received over 2000 unique submissions in a plethora of genres from all corners of the world. Tankian and a panel of other notable judges (SOAD bandmate & bassist Shavo Odadjian, Sebu Simonian of Capital Cities, acclaimed jazz pianist Tigran Hamasyan, Dean of Herb Alpert School of Music at UCLA Judith Smith and honored composer Vahagn Hayrapetyan) were then tasked to listen through the overwhelming number of submissions to select a winner.
 
That they did, and in fact, they ended up crowning two winning submissions, whom split the $5,000 prize equally.
 
So many great compositions remained. In an effort to showcase some of the worthy songs, the idea of the 7 Notes Challenge compilation album was born, to bring awareness to a variety of artists taking a simple premise plus a few notes and turning them into a cornucopia of musical _expression_.
 
Tankian further explains, "All of the inspiration is out there for us to take. If you're an artist, you paint it…if you're a musician, you compose it. The skill comes from the presentation. That's what we learn over the years, how to best present this. This music, this muse, so that it's palpable, it's original, it's appreciated and emotive."
 
Mexico's Alpha Lighting System, with their prog-rocking instrumental jam "life.exe" and Armenian Mariam Petrosian with her soulful croon on "Here I Come" were voted by the judging panel as the respective winners of the $5,000 prize of the original challenge and are also present on the compilation album.
 
"I can say that 7 Notes Challenge wasn't really a challenge to me but rather a very exciting and enjoyable process that sparked my muse back to me, for which I am very grateful to Serj Tankian and Creative Armenia," explains Petrosian. " I am very proud of Here I Come, as it feels like I've collaborated with Serj Tankian himself. Thank you Serj, for those beautiful, mysterious and truly cosmic 7 notes".
 
These two very distinct tracks stylistically bookend the wide spectrum of wonderfully diverse, experimental and lush songs from the rest of the contributing talented musicians that make up the 7 Notes Challenge compilation.
 
Below is the full tracklist of the 7 Notes Challenge compilation album and the associated performing artists:
 
1. life.exe – by Alpha Lighting System
2. Farewell – by Alejandro Gwynn Peña
3. Sweet and Spicy – by Andrés Montero
4. Counting Seconds – by Cygnus Flare
5. Prelude in Cm – by Artashes Baghdasaryan
6. Only Time – by Briar Prastiti
7. Snötäckt – by Cecilia Moore
8. KLOK – by Christophe Reitz
9. Soledad – by Memo
10. Water and Moon – by Synthgirl I-rena & Driezhas
11. Aramazd's Lament – by Jean Belanger
12. Here I Come – by Mariam Petrosian
13. Realigned – by Matt Davies
14. I'm Alive – by PapaFaxe
15. Road to the Sun – by Syune Ghazaryan
16. Siete Notas, Siete Colores – by Tigran Ayvazyan
17. Suicide of Death, Beginning of Life – by Aidin Davoudi
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Garbage crisis in Yerevan resolved, mayor says

ARKA, Armenia
Sept 10 2019

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. Yerevan Mayor Hayk Marutyan has announced today that the garbage disposal crisis in the capital city has been resolved. “I’m not saying that the garbage has already been disposed from all the streets. An organization  has been created that will quickly tackle this problem,” he said.

The mayor recalled that Sanitek waste removal company, contracted earlier by the municipality, began its operations in Yerevan  14 months after the signing of the contract, while the municipality began operations after receiving the first five garbage trucks, and attracting additional equipment and employees.

“I will not allow Yerevan to once again encounter such a problem,” he said. According to him, in the coming months, a sharp improvement will already be visible, but for a final solution it is necessary to approach the solution of problems comprehensively.

“In particular, we started sorting garbage. Agreements have already been reached with entrepreneurs in Davidashen district so that they hand over cardboard to us, which we will separately send for recycling,” the mayor said.

For several months, residents of Yerevan have been complaining over the failure of Sanitek’s Armenian division to collect garbage throughout the city.

Earlier, Yerevan Mayor Hayk Marutyan publicly expressed displeasure at the work of the Sanitek company, stressing that Yerevan residents will no longer tolerate its ineffective work.

In the spring of this year, Sanitek was twice fined for failing to fulfill its contractual obligations in the amount of 13 million drams (more than $26,800) and 26 million drams ($54,100).

Sanitek Armenia, which is a branch of the Lebanese-headquartered Sanitek International Group, has a 12-year contract with Yerevan as a monopolistic waste management operator. It began its work in Yerevan in December 2014. The company has threatened to apply for international arbitration to resolve its dispute with the Yerevan municipality. -0-

A1+: Trade turnover increases by 8.9 percent


RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan writes on his Facebook page the following:

“According to the data of the first half of 2019 in comparison with the same period of the previous year in the Republic of Armenia.
– The manufacturing industry grew by 8.7 percent.
– Housing and catering sector grew by 33.8 percent.
– Passenger transportation by air increased by 28.2 percent.
– Trade turnover increased by 8.9 percent."


Գործադիրը 3 ընկերությունների արտոնություն տրամադրեց. կիրականացվի 11.3 մլրդ դրամի ներդրում

  • 22.08.2019
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  • Հայաստան
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 125

ՀՀ կառավարության այսօրվա նիստում 3 ընկերությունների արտոնություններ տալու որոշում կայացվեց: Մասնավորապես, գործադիրը բավարարեց «ԱՖԱ» ՍՊԸ-ի կողմից ներկայացված հայտը գերակա ոլորտում իրականացվող ներդրումային ծրագրի շրջանակներում ներմուծված (ներմուծվող) տեխնոլոգիական սարքավորումները, դրանց բաղկացուցիչ ու համալրող մասերը, հումքը եւ (կամ) նյութերը ներմուծման մաքսատուրքից ազատելու արտոնությունից օգտվելու համար եւ սահմանված կարգով կիրառել համապատասխան արտոնությունը:


Էկոնոմիկայի նախարար Տիգրան Խաչատրյանը նշեց, որ ընկերությունը նախատեսում է արգելակման կոճղակների արտադրություն կազմակերպել Երեւանում: Ներկայումս արտադրությունը կազմակերպվում է ԱՄԷ-ում եւ ընկերությունը իր արտադրությունը Հայաստան տեղափոխելու գործընթացում է գտնվում:


Այս ծրագրի արժեքը 300 մլն դրամ է. կբացվի 55 նոր աշխատատեղ՝ միջինը 150 հազար դրամ աշխատավարձով: Արտադրանքի ընդհանուր ծավալը կկազմի 770 մլն դրամ: Արտոնություն ստանալու համար ներկայացված ապրանքների արժեքը կազմում է 71,9 մլն դրամ:


Մեկ այլ որոշմամբ արտոնություն տրամադրվեց Գյումրիում գործող «Լենտեքս» ընկերությանը: Այն զբաղվում է գուլպաների, տրիկոտաժի արտադրության եւ թելերի վերամշակման գործունեությամբ: Կազմակերպությունը գործում է 2001 թվականից, ներկայումս ունի 382 աշխատակից: «Այս ներդրումային բաղադրիչի շնորհիվ կստեղծվի եւս 50-60 նոր աշխատատեղ: Աշխատանքի ծավալը նախատեսվում է, որ կկազմի 4,5 մլրդ դրամ, որից 3 մլրդ-ը կարտահանվի ԵՄ երկրներ: Այս հայտի շրջանակներում մաքսատուրքից ազատման արժեքը կազմում է մոտ 3 մլրդ դրամ»,- ասաց Խաչատրյանը:


Կառավարությունն արտոնություն տվեց նաեւ «ՊՐՈՖ ԱԼ» ընկերությանը: Այն զբաղվում է այլումինե դռներ, պատուհանների, մետաղական կոնստրուկցիաների արտադրությամբ: Ընկերությունը գործում է 2002 թվականից:


«Այս ծրագրի շրջանակներում նախատեսվում է իրականացնել մոտ 1 մլրդ դրամի կապիտալ ներդրումներ եւ եւս 2,8 մլրդ դրամ հումքի ձեռք բերման համար: Ներկայումս կազմակերպությունում աշխատում է 281 աշխատակից, նախատեսվում է եւս 50 աշխատատեղի ստեղծում՝ 280 հազար դրամ միջին աշխատավարձով: Արտադրանքի ընդհանուր ծավալը կկազմի 20 մլրդ դրամ, որից 8 մլրդ դրամը կարտահանվի ԵՏՄ եւ երրորդ երկրներ: Արտոնություն ստանալու համար ներկայացված արժեքը կազմում է 8,2 մլրդ դրամ»,- ընդգծեց Տիգրան Խաչատրյանը՝ հավելելով, որ երեք ընկերությունների հանրագումարով ներդրումները կազմում են 11,3 մլրդ դրամ:

Is it correct to resolve the Amulsar problem through a referendum? – Comments by politicians

Azatutyun, Radio Liberty/Radio Free Europe
Aug 21 2019
Is it correct to resolve the Amulsar problem through a referendum? – Comments by politicians
Gayane Saribekyan
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from the Russian edition of Azatutyun]

A deputy of the ruling My Step faction [in the Armenian National Assembly], Hovik Aghazaryan, is against resolving the problem of the Amulsar gold mine, [which has given rise to widespread environmental concerns], through a referendum.

According to the MP, the votes of the residents of Jermuk, [where the gold mine is located] and communities adjacent to the mountain, are not going to reflect the real situation as regards the need, as their position is predictable. "It is clear that the residents of Jermuk will say that they do not want this," Aghazaryan said.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation – Dashnaktsutyun [ARFD] proposed to resolve the problem of operating the Amulsar gold mine through a referendum. A representative of the ARFD, Artsvik Minasyan, held the post of environmental protection minister in 2016.

The opposition ARFD urged the government not to regard the published [positive] conclusion by the international ELARD company as a final basis for the operation of the gold mine and to make through a referendum a decision acceptable to the public and the state.

The representative of the government [Aghazaryan] responded that the operation of a mine is not a question that is to be resolved through the votes of citizens, as it is a complicated question. People gave a vote of confidence to [Prime Minister] Nikol Pashinyan to govern the country and it is the government that should make a decision on the basis of the interests of the country.

"This is simply a question for the whole state and a question of the consistency of the state. It is true that we came to power through a revolution and thanks to the power of people, but anyway, there is a state and its obligations, contacts with the world, international obligations, and the observance of agreements. In this sense, the question has become common for the whole state," Aghazaryan said and added: "Everyone understands that the mining industry inflicts damage on the environment. All of us understand this. It is a question of the size of the damage and the potential to counter the damage".

The secretary of the executive body of the Citizen's Decision party that is not represented in parliament, Suren Sahakyan, supports the idea of resolving such issues through referendums, as such decisions are democratic. However, as regards Amulsar, he regards the need in a referendum as doubtful, because, as he said, there is a professional conclusion on the operation of the mine that is negative, so it is not necessary to open it.

"Even without a referendum, we can see that the professional conclusion on the operation of Amulsar is negative. This was done for another purpose, but we can see that it is fraught with a lot of dangers. I question the need in a referendum, but the practice of resolving such issues through referendums can only be welcomed and this is one of the foundations for the creation of our party," Sahakyan said in conversation with radio Liberty.

He said that the Amulsar conflict should have another solution – the operation of the mine must be forbidden. "Two sides of the conflict are taking shape: The government and the public. In the meantime, this conflict does not have these two sides: There is the former corrupt system plus the Lydian company that obtained the mine through swindling and illegal methods. Three laws were amended to enable Lydian to operate the mine. This is one side. The public and the government they have elected are the other side. In other words, this conflict was to be resolved through criminal cases filed against the former government. Our approach is as follows: The sides to this conflict are Lydian and the former government on the one hand and the public and the government on the other. Therefore, the government should simply have prohibited the operation of the mine," the representative of the Citizen's Decision party said.

MP Sergei Bagratyan of the Prosperous Armenia faction reminded that summing up the first 100 days of his rule back a year ago, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan declared the Republic Square, [where large rallies in support of Pashinyan were held during the 2018 velvet revolution], as a platform for making most important decisions of the government in the political and economic life in Armenia. Pashinyan said that people should authorise the government to take or not take specific steps or prohibit the government from taking specific actions.

Bagratyan, who was governor of Vayots Dzor Region until 2012, also supports the idea of holding a referendum. "The government has inherited this problem. However, it bears responsibility for this problem. It received documents prepared by the previous government. It would probably be correct in this case, if the government left this issue to the discretion of people. We say that we are building a democratic country and it is people, who should decide their future. This should not be regarded as a contradiction between people and the government. On the contrary, it is necessary to coordinate these opinions. If everything is all right in the documents, as the previous government used to say, it is not necessary to look at the documents. It is necessary to look at the mood of the people."

The representative of the government, Hovik Aghazaryan maintains that the Amulsar problem is extremely professional, multilayered, and complicated. Therefore, people should entrust the government with it.

Sports: One judoka to represent Armenia in World Championship

MediaMax, Armenia
Aug 22 2019
 
 
One judoka to represent Armenia in World Championship
 
 
Photo: Mediamax
 
 
Tokyo is hosting the World Judo Championship on August 25-31.
 
Armenia is represented by one athlete, Ferdinand Karapetyan. The judoka competes in 73kg weight class. In 2018, Karapetyan won the European Championship. He will enter into the competition in Tokyo on August 27.
 
The World Championship features 860 athletes from 149 countries.

CoinWeek Ancient Coins: Coins of Medieval Armenia

Coin Week
Aug 20 2019

THE CILICIAN KINGDOM OF ARMENIA (1199 – 1375) produced a vibrant culture strongly influenced by interaction with neighboring Crusader states[1]. Wealth derived from trade between East and West led to an extensive royal coinage that includes some of the most handsome and popular medieval coins collected today.

Cilicia[2] is a mountain-ringed region of southern Anatolia (now largely the Turkish province of Adana). Ruled in succession by Hittites, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, and Byzantines, it became home to increasing numbers of Armenians fleeing Muslim domination in their Caucasian homeland during the 11th century. Armenian warlords carved out semi-independent baronies based around hilltop fortresses. Two rival noble families emerged: the “Roupenids” and the “Hetoumids”. Some of these barons (c. 1080 – 1198) struck rare copper small change for local use.

On January 6, 1199, a Roupenid prince named Levon (or Leo – Cilician personalities are variously known by their Armenian names and the Latin or “Frankish” equivalent, and there are many variant spellings) was crowned as king at Tarsus, with the approval of the German emperor Henry VI and the blessing of both the Pope and the head of the Armenian Church.

Cilician Armenia. Royal. Levon I. 1198-1219. AR Tram (21mm, 2.84 g, 3h). Coronation issue. The Virgin, nimbate and orans, standing facing, receiving Levon kneeling left, head facing; above, ray emanating from curve (sphere of heaven) toward his head; pellet between / Crowned lion advancing right, head facing; patriarchal cross above. Cf. AC 257 (for type); CCA 80: CNG 85, lot 88. VF, toned.

More recent scholarship attributes these coins to Levon III, who ruled from 1289 through 1307 (Vardanyan, 130). This is a common problem in medieval numismatics, where multiple rulers bear the same name, and sequence numbers were not used in inscriptions.

Levon reigned for over 20 years and his royal coinage is complex. He moved the capital and the main mint to the hilltop fortress of Sis (near modern Kozan, Turkey). The so-called “coronation” issue[3], a tram weighing just under three grams[4], bears an unusually ambitious image (medieval die cutters rarely had the skill to tell a story pictorially). Levon kneels before the Virgin Mary, her hands raised in prayer, while a ray of light shines down from above. The reverse is a pun on his name; “Leo” means lion. A crowned lion holds a double-barred “patriarchal” cross. A more common reverse shows a pair of lions, back to back. There were rare double trams, and occasional half trams (about 1.5 grams)[5]. There was even a “half double tram” struck to a slightly different weight standard for uncertain reasons.

LEVON I, 1198-1219. Double tram. The king seated holding cross and scepter. Rv. Crowned lion l. holding cross behind him; no marks in field. 5.31 g. Bed. 13.

For the obverse, Levon’s engravers copied the design of emperor Henry VI’s contemporary imperial coinage: crowned ruler enthroned holding a scepter in the form of a lily, and an orb topped by a cross. These lightweight silver coins (known today as “bracteates”) were struck on such thin blanks that the design appears on both sides[6].

A disappointment of Levon’s reign was his failure to conquer the strategic city of Antioch from Prince Bohemond IV (reigned 1201 – 1216). Some rare Crusader-style deniers in debased silver alloy (“billon”) inscribed in Latin rather than Armenian were struck in anticipation of this conquest. The obverse bears a crowned head, and the reverse bears a cross. The inscription reads “Leo, by the Grace of God / King of the Armenians.” The only example to appear at auction recently brought over $4,000 USD in a 2010 US sale[7].

Cilician Armenia. Royal. Levon I. 1198-1219. AV Half Tahekan (19.5mm, 2.46 g, 11h). Levon enthroned facing, holding cross in right hand and branch in left / Patriarchal cross flanked by two lions, heads reverted. Nercessian, Gold III.a (this coin); AC 255 (this coin illustrated); Bedoukian 6 var. (rev. legend); Friedberg –. EF, toned. Extremely rare – the only example known.

There are very rare gold tahekans[8], probably based on the weight standard of the contemporary Islamic dinar. A unique half tahekan[9] brought $40,000 in a 2016 US auction. Bedoukian argues that “these were not struck for circulation, but rather as gifts that were distributed on special occasions” (50). Some collectors doubt the authenticity of the Cilician gold coins that have appeared on the market.

The small change consisted of copper tanks weighing about seven grams[10]. The obverse bore a crowned lion, and the reverse a patriarchal cross between two stars. Abundant copper coinage in the medieval era is usually evidence of a vigorous urban economy, where people need to make small daily purchases, such as a loaf of bread.

After reigning 34 years, Levon died in 1219 aged about 69, leaving a three-year-old daughter, Zabel (“Isabella”) as heiress. One regent was assassinated, and another arranged a political marriage between the child Queen and Philip, son of Bohemond IV of Antioch. Philip proved so offensive to Armenians that he was imprisoned and poisoned (1226). Zabel was then forced to marry the regent’s son, Hetoum (or Haython), uniting the kingdom’s two noble families.

Trams of Hetoum and Zabel, well-struck, in good silver, survive in abundance[11]. On the obverse, the couple stands together holding a long cross between them. Typically for male-dominated medieval society, no coins of this long reign name the queen in the inscription. The crowned lion appears on the reverse.

Cilician Armenia. Hetoum I and Zabel. 1226-1270. AR Tram (20mm, 3.00 g, 12h). Zabel and Hetoum standing facing one another, each crowned with head facing and holding long cross between / Crowned lion advancing right, head facing, holding long cross. AC 336.

A major threat to the kingdom was the neighboring Seljuq Turkish Sultanate of Rum. To secure a peace treaty in 1228, the Armenians agreed to accept Sultan Kaykhusraw as their nominal overlord, and issued a handsome series of “bilingual” trams[12], showing Hetoum on horseback on the obverse, and an Arabic inscription on the reverse proclaiming “The Supreme Sultan, Helper of the World and the Faith, Kaykhusraw ibn Kayqubad”. Hetoum’s copper coinage consisted of a large tank weighing nearly eight grams[13], and its half, the kardez.

SELJUQ OF RUM: Kaykhusraw II, 1236-1245, AR bilingual tram (2.84g), Sis, AH639, A-1221, VF-EF, ex M.H. Mirza Collection. Issued by the Armenian ruler Hetoum I as vassal of Kaykhusraw II, minted only at Sis in Cilicia. ‘Hethum King of the Armenians’ in Armenian. Rev. ‘The Supreme Sultan, Helper of the World and the Faith, Kaykhusraw ibn Kayqubad’ in three lines in Arabic

With the kingdom facing threats from Muslim Turks to the north and the Fatimid Caliphate (and the Crusader states) to the south, in 1247 Hetoum made an alliance with the Mongols. Mongol Khans generally tolerated all religions, as long as subjects paid tribute[14]. Hetoum’s brother, Smpad (or Smbat), made the long trek to Karakorum in Mongolia to pay homage to Güyük Khan (reigned 1246-1248, grandson of Genghis Khan). In 1254 Hetoum traveled to meet Möngke Khan (reigned 1251-1259), who had conquered much of Iraq and Syria. Armenian armored cavalry fought alongside the Mongols in many campaigns. After Cilicia was invaded and ravaged by Egyptian Mamluks, Hetoum abdicated in 1270, retiring to a monastery, and his son Levon II took the throne.

Cilician Armenia. Royal. Levon II, 1270-1289. Tram (Silver, 21 mm, 2.64 g, 8 h). King right on horseback; holding scepter; three stars around. Rev. Crowned lion advancing right, head facing; patriarchal cross behind. AC 376. Very fine.

Levon II became king at the age of about 34 and ruled for 19 years. His wife Keran (or Guerane) bore 14 children, including five sons who would, in turn, become Armenian kings. A daughter, Rita, married the Byzantine emperor Michael IX Palaeologos. In 1271 Marco Polo passed through the Cilician port of Ayas on his epic journey to China. Levon II’s trams followed the design of his father’s coins: the king on horseback, with a crowned lion on the reverse[15]. Trams of Levon II are scarce; it appears the alloy was gradually debased over the course of the reign, “wide variations in the silver content made transactions difficult, and that most of his silvers were eventually melted to make the more uniform coins of his successors” (Bedoukian, 54).

Cilician Armenia. Royal. Hetoum II, 1289-1293, 1295-1296, and 1301-1305. Denier (Billon, 14 mm, 0.37 g, 3 h). Crowned facing bust. Rev. Cross pattée. AC 394. Rare. Flan slightly irregular as usual, otherwise, very fine.

Eldest surviving son of Levon II, Hetoum II, aged about 23, reluctantly took the throne upon his father’s death in 1289, although he much preferred the life of a monk. He abdicated twice, once in 1293 and again in 1296, in favor of younger brothers. His coinage consists of poorly struck billon deniers[16], similar to contemporary Crusader issues, and copper kardez, “possibly the most carelessly executed coins of the Roupenian dynasty. The lettering is seldom legible and quite often the die has been struck off center” (Bedoukian, 89). In 1307 Hetoum, his nephew King Levon III (aged 18) and about 40 Armenian nobles were treacherously murdered at a banquet by Bilarghu, a Mongol general who had converted to Islam. When Mongol Khan Oljaitu (reigned 1304 – 1316) learned of this treachery, he had Bilarghu and his troops executed.

Cilician Armenia. Smpad. 1296-1298. AR Tram (22mm, 3.05 g, 1h). Coronation issue. Smpad seated facing on throne decorated with lions, holding cross and lis, with feet resting upon footstool; annulet to left and right / Two lions rampant back-to-back, each with heads reverted; between, cross pattée set on reversed cruciform spear. AC 407 var. (obv. legend); CCA 1653a; Bedoukian, Silver 3-6 var. (cross type). Near EF

Smpad (or Smbat) seized the throne in 1296 while his brothers Hetoum II and Thoros were visiting their sister, Empress Rita, in Constantinople. He murdered Thoros and had Hetoum partially blinded. Rare silver trams of Smpad’s brief reign are similar in style to those of Levon I; many were probably melted down to erase the memory of the rebel king. Smpad was overthrown with the aid of another brother, Gosdantin, when Hetoum regained his sight.

Gosdantin, the fourth brother, was outraged by Smpad’s behavior, and gathered an army to confront him. A pitched battle was fought near Sis, the royal capital, in which Gosdantin was victorious. Smpad was thrown into prison and with Hetoum’s permission, Gosdantin became king of Armenia in 1298 (Saryan, 202).”

Gosdantin celebrated his victory on magnificent double trams. On the obverse the king on horseback holds a sword; on the reverse, he stands with a sword in one hand and a cross in the other. The unfamiliar image of the king holding a sword was a remarkable innovation, recalling the coinage of Byzantine emperor Isaac Comnenus (reigned 1057 – 1059). Only a few examples are known; one realized almost $26,000 in a 2018 auction[17].

In 1299, Hetoum II returned to the throne. When Gosdantin plotted to restore Smpad, he was jailed for the rest of his life.

Oshin was the last of Levon II’s sons to rule Armenia. He became king when his nephew Levon III was murdered in 1307. His rare, high-quality silver trams (sometimes described as a “coronation issue”) were the last examples of this denomination[18]. They show the king enthroned, with the hand of God reaching out from the left to bless him. Early in his 13-year reign, these trams were replaced by the takvorin in a grayish low-grade silver alloy[19]. Oshin’s small copper poghs (about 1.5 grams) are scarce.

During his short reign of only two years, Guy had little time to issue coins in large numbers … his silver coins are quite rare (Bedoukian, 95).”

Guy de Lusignan reluctantly accepted the crown when his cousin Levon IV was murdered by Armenian barons. Guy then took the name Gosdantin II. A capable military leader, he refused to pay tribute to the Mamluks, but he aroused so much resentment by promoting French-speaking courtiers that he was assassinated (April 17, 1344). A rare copper pogh of King Guy brought $2,100 in a 2010 auction[20].

Cilician Armenia. Royal. Levon V. 1374-1393. BI Denier (14mm, 0.42 g, 9h). Crowned bust facing / Cross pattée, with pellet in each angle. AC 503 var. (rev. legend); CCA -. VF, toned, minor porosity. Rare.

The tragic last king of Cilician Armenia was born about 1342 on Cyprus to the aristocratic House of Lusignan, which ruled that island and was related by marriage to the Armenian ruling dynasty. He was elected to the throne after his cousin Gosdantin IV was murdered in 1373. The kingdom was in desperate straits, repeatedly invaded by Turks and Mamluks, most trade in the hands of Venetian and Genoese merchants, and society wracked by civil strife between Roman Catholic and Armenian Apostolic factions. Mamluks captured Sis in 1374, and King Levon V surrendered the last castle on 16 April 1375. Taken to Cairo as a prisoner, he was eventually ransomed by King Juan I of Castile (reigned 1379 – 1390) and lived out the rest of his life in exile in France, dying in 1393. Levon’s rare coinage consists of wretched little billon deniers (about half a gram[21]), bravely inscribed “Levon, King of All the Armenians”, and a few copper poghs.

* * *

[1] See www.coinweek.com/world-coins/medieval-numismatics-coins-of-the-crusaders

[2] The common English pronunciation is sil-ISH-ya. The Greek pronunciation, kil-ik-KEE-ya is also correct.

[3] CNG Auction 97, 17 September 2014, Lot 905. Realized $1,000 USD; estimate $200.

[4] The word “tram” or “dram”, related to the Greek drachma and Arabic dirham, is still used for the modern currency of Armenia ($1 USD = 474 AMD).

[5] CNG Auction 46, 24 June 1998, Lot 722. Realized $200 USD.

[6] Nomos Auction 14, 17 May 2017, Lot 501. Realized $174 USD.

[7] CNG Auction 85, 15 September 2010, Lot 100. Realized $4,100 USD; estimate $1,250.

[8] Spink Auction 13012, 26 March 2013, Lot 180. Realized UK£1600 ($2,425 USD); estimate UK£2,000-3,000

[9] CNG Triton XIX sale, 5 January 2016, Lot 2219. Realized $40,000 USD; estimate $50,000

[10] CNG Electronic Auction 407, 11 October 2017, Lot 652. Realized $120 USD.

[11] CNG Auction 85, 15 September 2010, Lot 102. Realized $310 USD.

[12] Stephen Album Auction 34, 23 May 2019, Lot 561. Realized $400 USD; estimate $200 – 240.

[13] Nomos AG, obolos 6, 20 November 2016, Lot 1091. Realized $89 USD.

[14] See www.coinweek.com/ancient-coins/coinweek-ancient-coin-series-coinage-mongols

[15] Leu Numismatik Web Auction 2, 3 December 2017, Lot 963. Realized $97 USD.

[16] Leu Numismatik, Web Auction 2, 3 December 2017, Lot 965. Realized $112 USD.

[17] Leu Numismatik Auction 3, 27 October 2017, Lot 362. Realized $25,964 USD; estimate $7,500.

[18] Leu Numismatik, Web Auction 6, 9 December 2018, Lot 1520. Realized $605 USD.

[19] CNG Triton XIII, 5 January 2010, Lot 1727. Realized $500 USD; estimate $150.

[20] CNG Auction 85, 15 September 2010, Lot 126. Realized $2,100 USD; estimate $1,000.

[21] CNG Auction 85, 15 September 2010, Lot 128. Realized $320 USD; estimate $300.

Bedoukian, Paul Z. ‘The Coinage of Cilician Armenia’, American Numismatic Society NNM 147. New York (1962)

Bournoutian, George. A Concise History of the Armenian People. Costa Mesa, CA (2006)

Der Nercessian, Sirapie. “The Kingdom of Cilician Armenia”, A History of The Crusades. Philadelphia (1962)

Evans, Helen C. (editor). Armenia: Art, Religion and Trade in the Middle Ages. New York (2018)

Malloy, Alex, Irene Preston and Arthur Seltman. Coins of the Crusader States (2nd edition). Fairfield, CT (2004)

Macler, Frederic, “Armenia”, The Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. IV. Cambridge (1923)

Metcalf, D. M. “Notes on the classification of the trams of Cilician Armenia”, Numismatic Chronicle 141. (1981)

Nercessian, Y. T. Armenian Coins and Their Values. Armenian Numismatic Society, Los Angeles (1995)

Saryan, Leon. “Analyzing Armenian coin values”, The Celator 12. (October, 1998)

Saryan, Leon. “An Unpublished Silver Double Tram of Gosdantin I (1298-1299), King of Cilician Armenia”, American Journal of Numismatics 12. (2000)

Vardanyan, Ruben. “Corrections to deep-rooted errors in the attribution and classification of coins of the Cilician Armenian kingdom, part I”, Armenian Journal of Near Eastern Studies 12. (2018)
  

Fresno State to host panel on Western Armenian research

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 17 2019

PanARMENIAN.Net – Four scholars from the University of Southern California and University of California, Los Angeles will discuss their research on Western Armenian in a panel discussion entitled “Western Armenian in the 21st Century: Challenges and New Approaches.”

The panel will take place on September 6 in the University Business Center’s Alice Peters Auditorium at California State University, Fresno. Armenian Studies Program Director Professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian will moderate the discussion, Asbarez reports.

The presentation is part of the Armenian Studies Program Fall 2019 Lecture Series and is supported by the Leon S. Peters Foundation.

For the past few years, scholars have discussed how to best teach, and transmit, Western Armenian to future generations. In November of 2017, the Society for Armenian Studies and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation organized a conference on “Transmitting Western Armenian to the Next Generation,” with the participation of six scholars. The conference was organized based on this 2017 discussion, as well as from the 2010 report that UNESCO had placed Western Armenian on the list of the world’s endangered languages. The scholars at the conference presented the latest research in the field of language acquisition, which benefits from theoretical and practical approaches in the field of teaching minority languages in a diasporic situation.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/272126/Fresno_State_to_host_panel_on_Western_Armenian_research

In 2018, The Press at Fresno State published “Western Armenian in the 21st Century: Challenges and New Approaches” as part of the Armenian Series at the university. The book was edited by Bedross Der Matossian and Armenian Studies Program Coordinator Barlow Der Mugrdechian. Four of the contributors to the volume will present their conclusions on September 6.

Dr. Shushan Karapetian is Deputy Director of the Institute of Armenian Studies at USC. She received a PhD in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures from UCLA in 2014, where she has taught Armenian Studies courses for the past nine years. Her dissertation, “‘How Do I Teach My Kids My Broken Armenian?: A Study of Eastern Armenian Heritage Language Speakers in Los Angeles,” received the Society for Armenian Studies Distinguished Dissertation Award in 2015.

Jesse Siragan Arlen is a PhD Candidate of Armenian Studies in the Near Eastern Languages & Cultures department at UCLA. He has taught Western Armenian at a Sunday school since 2016, and his creative prose and poetry in Western Armenian has appeared in literary journals such as Inknagir and Pakine.

Elizabeth Mkhitarian graduated from UCLA with a B.A. in English and Armenian Studies in 2018. She is a published writer of prose and poetry in English and Armenian. Her first book of poetry in Armenian is forthcoming.

Dr. Hagop Gulludjian received his PhD with highest distinction from the Jesuit University of Buenos Aires. He has been teaching modern Western Armenian at UCLA for many years. His area of research is in post-structural rereading of medieval mystical poetry and in languages without a country: language vitality programs and their replicability.

Sports: Armenia, Slovakia U16 teams tie match

News.am, Armenia
Aug 17 2019

Armenia’s and Slovakia’s U16 football teams played a friendly match at the Technical Center/Football Academy of the Football Federation of Armenia and tied the match (1-1).

The teams will play another match on August 18.

Friendly match, U16

Armenia-Slovakia: 1-1

Edgar Piloyan, 7- Robert Starecek, 35

Armenia’s U16 team

  1. Gor Matinyan, 10. Karen Davtyan, 9. Artur Israelyan (14. Hayk Ghazaryan, 77), 11. Misak Hakobyan (18. Grigor Ghumashyan, 58) 19. Hovhannes Hartenyan, 6. Mher Kankanyan, 5. Erik Amirkhanyan, 21. Hayk Simonyan (2. Vanik Petrosyan, 47), 7. Edgar Piloyan (8. Armen Adamyan, 65) 20. Sergey Manukyan (23. Artur Voskerchyan, 37), 3. Albert Hovhannisyan.

Head coach: Aghvan Ayvazyan