Hayhurum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of a series on
Greeks
By region or country
Greece · Cyprus  · Albania
Italy · Turkey
Greek diaspora
Subgroups
Northern Greeks:
Macedonians · Thessalians · Epirotes
Southern Greeks:
Peloponnesians · Roumeliotes
Eastern Greeks:
Western Micrasiates
(Bithynia, Aeolis, Ionia, Doris)
Pontic · Cappadocians/Karamanlides
Constantinopolitans
Islanders:
Cretans · Eptanesians · Cycladites Dodecanesians · Samiotes · Ikariotes Chiotes · Limniotes · Lesvians
Cypriots
Other sub-groups:
Antiochians · Aromanians
Arvanites/Souliotes · Egyptiot
Grecanici · Maniots · Romaniotes
Sarakatsani · Slavophones
Tsakonians · Urums
Greek culture
Art · Cinema · Cuisine
Dance · Dress · Education
Flag · Language · Literature
Music · Philosophy · Politics
Religion · Sport · Television
Religion
Greek Orthodox Church
Greek Roman Catholicism
Greek Byzantine Catholicism
Greek Evangelicalism
Judaism · Islam · Neopaganism
Languages and dialects
Greek
Calabrian Greek
Cappadocian Greek
Cretan Greek · Griko
Cypriot Greek
Himariote Greek · Maniot Greek
Pontic Greek · Tsakonian
Yevanic
History of Greece

Hayhurum is the name given to Armenian-speaking Christians who are members of the Greek Orthodox Church. Their exact ethnicity was a source of debate. Some (not all) of these Armenian speakers, purportedly living in the vicinity of the town of Eğin till the 16th century, were of Orthodox faith (instead of Gregorian as is the case for most Armenians). There were also a number of people of Greek Orthodox profession among Hamshenis who are considered to be converted to Greek Orthodoxy during the days of the Empire of Trebizond.

Greek Orthodox in faith and Armenian in language, they were called Hayhurums (Hay meaning Armenian, hu meaning and in Armenian and Rûm meaning Greek in the Mardin Armenian dialect). Greek sources claimed that they were former Greek colonists who had settled in Eğin, adopting the Armenian culture and heritage which dominated the region, while Armenian sources objected this claim. The latter is considered apt by most western scholars who have studies the group.

It is believed that the vast majority of Hayhurum peoples were Armenians by ethnicity[citation needed] and had converted to Greek Orthodoxy during the Byzantine era. Hellenization was not an uncommon practice among Cappadocian and Anatolian Armenian populations who vied for favorable treatment during the 12th century when ethnically Greek royal families consolidated the throne of Byzantium, after centuries of Hellenized-Armenian rule. Many of the greatest Byzantine scholars, generals, clerics and emperors were in fact of Armenian heritage, and had adopted the Greek Orthodox faith out of necessity, (as in the case of emperors who had to be of the Greek Orthodox Faith) or out of cosmopolitanism.

Hayhurum had a significant presence in Adapazarı where there had been an Armenian community since 1608. They have been included in the 1923 agreement for Exchange of Greek and Turkish Populations between Turkey and Greece, and settled in various parts of Greece. Precious objects of culture and else belonging to this small community is being displayed today in Athens Benaki Museum.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.