Hagop Vahram Çerçiyan

Hagop Vahram Çerçiyan was a professor of mathematics, geography, and calligraphy at the Robert College of Istanbul, known for designing the signature of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first president of Turkey.

Life

Of Armenian descent, Hagop Vahram Çerçiyan was an educator.[1] He travelled to the United States to study the Palmer Method, which by that time had gained widespread popularity.[2] He was known for teaching this method during his career as a professor.[1][2] He returned to Istanbul and became a professor of mathematics, geography, and calligraphy at the Robert College in Istanbul. Over his 55-year career at the Robert College, Çerçiyan taught over 25,000 students, among them the future Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit, Foreign Ministers Selim Sarper and Rıfat Turgut Menemencioğlu, ambassadors Talat Halman and Nurver Nures and Cabinet Minister Kasım Gülek.[1][2][3]

Atatürk's signature

The signature designed by Hagop Çerçiyan which Mustafa Kemal Atatürk ultimately selected.

During the initial years of the Turkish Republic and under the reforms of Atatürk, a Latin-based alphabet was introduced to replace the Perso-Turkic script then in use. As part of the reforms, Turkish citizens were also required to take up a last name under the Surname Law in 1934. Prior to this, Turkey's Christian and Jewish citizens were already using surnames, but Muslims did not use surnames. Muslims were generally referred by their social or professional titles such as "Pasha", "Hoca", "Bey", "Hanım", "Efendi", or their names were complemented with that of their father.[1][2] Mustafa Kemal himself was required to take up a surname, and the Turkish Parliament gave him the surname Atatürk, meaning father of the Turks.[1][2] Many members of parliament, including some of Çerçiyan's former students, suggested that Atatürk needed a new signature for his name. On a November morning in 1934, members of parliament presented the proposal to Çerçiyan, who accepted the task.[1][2] That night, five model signatures were prepared and the following morning, police officers arrived to collect them.[1][2] Atatürk personally selected the one of "K. Atatürk" from these five model signatures.[4]

Legacy

According to Hagop Çerçiyan's son Dikran Çerçiyan, after the death of Atatürk in 1938, his father's contribution to Atatürk's signature risked being forgotten: "Some tried to introduce others as the creator of the signature. There were efforts to forget my father. But the truth always come[s] to the surface".[1]

gollark: Personally I really dislike Go as a language, because it *pretends* to be simple but has weird special cases everywhere to make stuff work and an awful type system, and is generally hostile to abstracting things.
gollark: Python's standard library is *very large* too. `pip` is annoying but has many packages available and there are a lot of builtin ones.
gollark: For generating sensible output, there are better text generation things, but Markov chains have the advantage of being really simple.
gollark: The main reason I like caddy is just that it does HTTPS conveniently, and I reshuffle subdomains and such a lot so that's quite helpful.
gollark: Apache uses some weird XMLy thing and also htaccess.

See also

References

  1. ZİFLİOĞLU, VERCİHAN (2010-10-29). "Atatürk's signature came from hand of Armenian-Turkish master". Hurriyet. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  2. ZİFLİOĞLU, VERCİHAN (10/11/2010). "Atatürk'ün imzasının öyküsü". Radikal (in Turkish). Retrieved 8 January 2013. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. Demir, Ramazan (2009). Ermeni isyanı ve Harput Ermenileri : Ararat-Gakgoş diyaloğu (in Turkish). Ankara: Palme Yayıncılık. ISBN 9786055829223.
  4. Ulu, Cafer (2009). Türkiye cumhuriyeti'nde Ermeniler (in Turkish). Ankara: Atatürk Kültür, Dil ve Tarih Yüksek Kurumu, Atatürk Araştırma Merkezi. p. 122. ISBN 9789751621436. Çerçiyan'dan bizzat duyduğunu ve Ankara`dan istenen 5 adet imza ömeğindcn birini Atatürk`ün scçtiğini söylcmiştir. Translated from Turkish: After creating 5 samples of signatures, Ataturk picked out one of them.
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