Simon Simonian

For the American surgeon, see Simon J. Simonian.

Simon Simonian (March 11 (24), 1914, Ayntab - March 11, 1986, Beirut) was an Armenian intellectual, writer, bibliographer, historian, editor, public activist and teacher, founder of the literary and social Armenian periodical Spurk (Սփիւռք in Armenian).

Biography

Simonian, the elder son of Ove from Sasun and Manush from Ayntab, was a survivor of the Armenian Genocide.[1][2] In 1921 his family emigrated to Aleppo. From 1930 to 1935 Simonian studied at Antelias seminary.[3] He headed the main archive of the Holy See of Cilicia, Lebanon. He was the author of many Armenian textbooks on history and language and the director of "Sevan" publishing house, where he printed about 600 books. In 1954 he visited Soviet Armenia, where he met poet Silva Kaputikyan.

Since 1936 he was the president of the Sasun Compatriotic Union.

Books

Classbooks

References

  1. (Re)constructing Armenia in Lebanon and Syria: ethno-cultural diversity and the state in the aftermath of a refugee crisis, by Nicola Migliorino, 2008, p. 66
  2. Survivors: An Oral History Of The Armenian Genocide, by Donald E. Miller, Lorna Touryan Miller, University of California Press, 1999, p. 167
  3. S. Simonyan, Anjamandros, Yerevan. 1998. ISBN 99930-64-01-4. p. 535