Katarine Zalyan-Manukyan

Katarine Zalyan-Manukyan (died 1965) was an Armenian politician. In 1919 she was elected to parliament, becoming one of the first three female MPs in the country.

Katarine Zalyan-Manukyan
Member of Parliament
In office
1919–1920
Personal details
Died1965
Moscow, Soviet Union

Biography

Zalyan-Manukyan was a nurse and worked at orphanages.[1] She married Aram Manukyan in 1917 had a daughter named Seda the following year.[2] Manukyan was one of the founders of the First Republic of Armenia and became its first Minister of Internal Affairs in 1918. In the same year Katarine coordinated nursing volunteers at the Battle of Abaran and Sardarabad.[2] Her husband died in January 1919 after contracting typhus.

A member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,[2] Zalyan-Manukyan was a candidate in the June 1919 parliamentary elections, and was one of three women elected alongside Perchuhi Partizpanyan-Barseghyan and Varvara Sahakyan.[1] As a member of parliament, she served on the health committee.[3]

After the Bolshevik takeover in 1920, she relocated to Krasnodar in Russia. She returned to Armenia in 1927, before moving to Moscow.[2] She died in 1965.[1]

gollark: Yeeees, it seems like the particularly totalitarian stuff just gets shoved through without COVID-19 being hugely related.
gollark: But that seems inaccurate because politicians also probably look good/bad if they do well/badly against COVID-19 regardless.
gollark: If you were somewhat more cynical than me I guess you could think something like: updated vaccines aren't part of mainstream political discourse yet, they are unlikely to be unless there is deployment/development of them, and so politicians (who are optimizing for looking good according to said political discourse) don't care and don't do anything about the situation.
gollark: I said three things. Maybe I should retroactively use semicolons.
gollark: So I guess either the entire system is missing obvious low-hanging fruit, the possible benefits of updated vaccines are known but not enough to make people actually budge, or the decision-making people think that updated vaccines wouldn't be significantly better.

References

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