02712cam0 2200349 450000500170000000900100001701000270002701000230005403500210007703500400009803500080013807300180014609000130016409900090017710000410018610100080022710200070023520000860024221000510032821500330037922500880041230000760050030000730057632000260064933012730067541001530194860700470210170200600214880100260220880100440223499500840227820170118173451.0166184071 a978-1-56859-136-0bbr. a1-568-59136-5bbr. a(OCoLC)762288960 aFRBNF411135670000002zFRBNF41113567 a871 a9781568591360 9871a871 tLIVR a20121212h20012001m y0frey50 ba aeng aUS1 aArmenian Baghesh, Bitlis and Taron, MushbTexte impriméfRichard G. Hovannisian aCaliforniacMazda publishersd2005bCosta Mesa a1 vol. (235 p.)cill.d23 cm1 aUCLA Armenian history and culture seriesiHistoric Armenian cities and provincesv2 aEn haut de la page de titre : Historic Armenian cities and provinces, 2 aŒuvre en anglais. Table des matières, des illustrations et index. aNotes bibliogr. Index aFrom early antiquity, the Armenian people developed a rich and distinctive culture on the great highland plateau in eastern Asia Minor. On that crossroad, they interacted on many levels with civilizations of the Orient and Occident. The continuity of Armenian life in this historic homeland was brought to an abrupt end as the result of war and genocide in the early decades of the twentieth century. The UCLA conference series, “Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces,” is organized by the Holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Armenian History with the purpose of exploring and illuminating the historical, political, cultural, religious, social, and economic legacy of a people rooted for millennia on the Armenian Plateau. The series is sponsored by the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Armenian History. Armenian Baghesh/Bitlis and Taron/Mush is the second of the conference proceedings to be published. This beautiful, rugged land in the southwestern sector of historic Greater Armenia is known to have been one of the earliest centers of Armenian settlement. It was here that evolved Armenian Baghesh and Taron, which became a part of the medieval principality of Turuberan and later the administrative districts of Bitlis and Mush. 0137770596tUCLA Armenian history and culture seriesbTexte impriméoHistoric Armenian cities and provincescCosta MesanMazda Publishersd2000-v2 3027375587921aArméniexHistoire2rameau 130284036309744aHovannisianbRichard G.f1932-....4340 3bAbesc20150119gAFNOR bFR-751131015c20070920gAFNOR2intermrc 91155bMCADcMCADeSalle de lecturefHISHOV52005kHIS HOV ՀՈՎ 5.2005o0rLIVR