Arevelk
Arevelk (in Armenian Արեւելք meaning Orient) was a widely circulated and read Armenian newspaper published and circulated throughout the Ottoman Empire.[1][2][3]
The September 22, 1889 front page of Arevelk | |
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Founded | 1884 |
Language | Armenian |
Ceased publication | 1915 |
The newspaper was started by a collaboration of many Armenian writers including Arpiar Arpiarian.[1] It was a literary and political newspaper with democratic tendencies. It subsequently attracted numerous writers who would eventually form the core of the Armenian realism movement. The paper became a prestigious opinion maker and was published uninterruptedly until the Armenian genocide of 1915.[1]
Prominent contributors
- Hrant Asadour
- Zabel Sibil Asadour
- Arshag Chobanian
- Piuzant Kechian
- Msho Kegham
- Vahan Malezian
- Hrand Nazariantz
- Levon Pashalian
- Tlgadintsi
- Karapet Utudjian
- Yerukhan
- Krikor Zohrab
gollark: Well, you can only have one fastcgi_pass line.
gollark: You have two fastcgi_pass directives and shouldn't.
gollark: `"fastcgi_pass" directive is duplicate` and it even tells yo uthe file and line.
gollark: OH LOOK, it tells you the problem.
gollark: Did you consider using `systemctl status nginx.service` or `journalctl -xe`?
References
- J. Hacikyan, Agop (2005). The Heritage of Armenian Literature From The Eighteenth Century To Modern Times. Detroit: Wayne State Univ Pr. p. 453. ISBN 9780814332214. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
- Panossian, Razmik (2006). The Armenians: from kings and priests to merchants and commissars ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). New York: Columbia Univ. Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780231139267. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
- Rowe, Victoria (2003). A history of Armenian women's writing, 1880-1922. London: Cambridge Scholars. p. 9. ISBN 9781904303237.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.