03046nam0 2200313 450000500170000000900100001701000270002709000130005409900090006710000410007610100080011710200070012510500180013210600060015020000910015621000510024721500320029822500890033030000770041930000730049632000260056933017220059541001540231760700470247170200600251880100260257880100440260499500840264820181024104507.0231082398 a978-1-56859-158-2bbr. 9872a872 tLIVR a20181023d2012 m y0frey50 ba aeng aUS aab z 001yy ar1 aArmenian Smyrna/IzmirbTexte impriméeThe Aegean CommunitiesfRichard G. Hovannisian aCaliforniacMazda publishersd2012bCosta Mesa a1 vol. (301p.)cill.d23 cm1 aUCLA Armenian history and culture seriesiHistoric Armenian cities and provincesv11 aEn haut de la page de titre : Historic Armenian cities and provinces, 11 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 Armenian highland plateau extending from Asia Minor to the Caucasus. On that crossroad, they interacted on many levels with civilizations of the Orient and Occident. Also from early times, Armenian colonies and communities were established beyond the highland, along the seacoasts of the Black, Mediterranean, and Aegean seas and onward to other continents. One such community was that of Smyrna along the Ionian coastline, which figures so heavily in Hellenic civilization and biblical history. The natural harbor of Smyrna attracted merchants from around the world, and from the Middle Ages onward Armenian settlers arrived from throughout Asia Minor and from their troubled homelands stretching eastward to the plain of Ararat, Karabagh, and northern Iran. Although numbering barely 25,000 persons when the surrounding towns and villages are taken into account, the Smyrna community stood out in its prosperity and adoption of Western modes and styles. Its merchants flourished in the Italian city states and as far west as Manchester, England, and participated in the eastern trade as far as Persia and the Indian Ocean. Smyrna, more familiar as Izmir in Turkish and modern usage, played a key role not only in Armenian commercial history but also in the national process of intellectual, cultural, and social enlightenment. Schools and churches, dramatic and musical groups, and athletic and sporting associations thrived there in the nineteenth century and into the twentieth century until the swift demise of the entire community in the chaos and Great Fire of 1922. All these aspects are presented in this volume. 0137770596tUCLA Armenian history and culture seriesbTexte impriméoHistoric Armenian cities and provincescCosta MesanMazda Publishersd2000-v11 3027375587921aArméniexHistoire2rameau 130284036309744aHovannisianbRichard G.f1932-....4340 3bAbesc20181023gAFNOR bFR-751131015c20070920gAFNOR2intermrc 91156bMCADcMCADeSalle de lecturefHISHOV52012kHIS HOV ՀՈՎ 5.2012o0rLIVR