Rafael Ishkhanyan
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Rafael Ishkhanyan or Ishkhanian (Armenian: Ռաֆայել Իշխանյան, 1922–1996) is a well-known Armenian philologist and historian. He was a professor of the Yerevan State University.
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[edit] Biography
He was born in a family of employees. In 1939 he entered the department the Armenian language and literature of Yerevan State University. Participant in the World War II. After demobilization he continued studies and graduated from Yerevan university in 1949.
Works in essence are dedicated to the earliest history of Armenian people, to the comparative linguistic analysis of ancient languages, to printing. One of the authors of Armenian Soviet encyclopedia.
He was a Deputy to the Supreme Soviet Armenia (1990-1996).
[edit] Publications
Dr. Rafael Ishkanian claims that Armenians "were the aborigines of the Armenian plateau who have been living there continuously since the fourth millennium B.C.E at the latest".[1] Similar claims were promoted in nationalist novels such as those of Sero Khanzatian published in the 1970s. [2]
[edit] Books
- Errord Uzhi Batsarman Orenke: Hodvatsner, Azat khosk, ISBN 5807902505 (5-8079-0250-5)
- Girke Khorhrdayin Hayastanum: Matenagitakan Tsank, Hayastani azgayin grapalat, ISBN 9993050032 (99930-50-03-2)
- Mer Inknutyan Glkhavor Nshane: (Grakanagitakan Hetazotutyunner), Nairi, ISBN 5550004291 (5-550-00429-1)
- Patkerazard Patmutyun Hayots, Book 1, 1989, Arevik, ISBN 5807700570 (5-8077-0057-0)
- Rafael Ishkhanian, Hayeri tzagume yev hnaguin patmutiune (The Origins and Most Ancient. History of the Armenians) (Beirut: Altapress 1984))
- Questions of origin and earliest history of Armenian people, Yerevan 1988
- On the Origin and Earliest History of the Armenian People
- Ksiazka Ormianska W Latach 1512 - 1920, Ossolineum
[edit] References
- ^ Stephan H. Astourian, "In Search of Their Forefathers: National Identity and the Historiography and Politics of Armenian and Azerbaijani Ethnogeneses," in Nationalism and History: The Politics of Nation building in Post-Soviet Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. p. 47.
- ^ Fowkes, Disintegration of the Soviet Union, p. 116.