Nigoghos Sarafian

Nigoghos Sarafian (Armenian: Նիկողոս Սարաֆեան, 1902 in Varna, Principality of Bulgaria - 1972 in Paris, France), was an Armenian writer, poet, editor, and journalist.[1]

Class of 1923 Getronagan (Nigoghos Sarafian is in the middle and to the right of the principal)
Nigoghos Sarafian
Born1902
Died1972 (aged 6970)
Occupationwriter, poet, editor, and journalist

Biography

Nigoghos Sarafian was born on a boat that was leaving Constantinople on the way to Varna.[1] He received his education in Armenian and French schools in Romania and Bulgaria. During the troublesome period of World War I, Sarafian along with his family fled back to Varna where they would remain until the Armistice of Mudros and move to Istanbul. He attended the prestigious Getronagan Armenian High School. After the promulgation of the Turkish Republic in 1923 he moved to Paris. He wrote prolifically in French and Armenian.[1]

Bibliography

• The Bois de Vincennes (1934)

• The Princess (novel), Paris, 1934, 108 pages.

• Citadel (1940–1946), Paris, 1946, 198 pages:

• Mediterranean, Beirut, 1971, 39 pages:

• The Pain of Light (memorandum), Paris-Antelias, 2000, 191 pages.

gollark: It is about 3 kilobees that people argue for "god", the complex agenty human-like being from their religion, by arguing for "god", the could-be-basically-anything-ever necessary first cause and such.
gollark: Anyway. semihyperseriously, it might help if you elaborate whatsoever.
gollark: I'm not a category theorist.
gollark: They had homework.
gollark: My friend is implementing some accursed set-theory/type-theory theorem prover in Haskell for a project of some kind and I fear it.

References

  1. Hacikyan, Agop; Gabriel Basmajian; Edward S. Franchuk (2005). Nourhan Ouzounian (ed.). The Heritage of Armenian Literature Volume III: From the Eighteenth Century to Modern Times. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. pp. 1031–1032. ISBN 0-8143-2815-6. Retrieved 19 October 2011.


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