Kuwait Times

The Land of Noah: Armenia’s history, culture, tradition

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YEREVAN: Armenia yesterday holds snap parliament­ary polls that were sparked by reformist Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan last month. Here are points on the culture and history of the tiny landlocked mountainou­s nation located in the South Caucasus.

Biblical Land

Armenia, which in the fourth century became the first country in the world to officially embrace Christiani­ty, is an ancient biblical land where the Book of Genesis says Noah’s Ark came to rest on Mount Ararat after the Great Deluge. Now inside Turkey, Mount Ararat is regarded by Armenians as a national symbol and features on the country’s coat of arms and banknotes. The Bible was translated into Armenian in the fifth century by Saint Mesrop Mashtots, the creator of the distinctiv­e Armenian alphabet.

Great Crime

When World War I broke out in 1914, Armenia - which for most of its history has been occupied by foreign powers - was divided between the Ottoman and Russian Empires. During the war, Ottomans massacred and deported more than 1.5 million Armenians in what has become the

most tragic event in the history of the Armenian people, which they call Meds Yeghern, or the Great Crime. Up to this day, Armenia and Turkey are locked in a bitter diplomatic battle over whether the massacres should be described as “genocide”.

UNESCO treasures

Armenia’s preeminent cultural institutio­n, the Matenadara­n museum, is a repository of the country’s national treasure — the vast collection of ancient manuscript­s that cover almost every sphere of Armenia’s ancient and medieval science and culture. In recognitio­n of its universal significan­ce, the collection - one of the world’s richest - was inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 1997. The collection includes more than 17,000 manuscript­s, books and 30,000 other documents, that embrace a wide range of subjects such as theology, philosophy, history, medicine, literature, art history, and cosmograph­y in Armenian and many other languages.

Duduk

A symbol of Armenian national identity, the duduk oboe is a double-reed wind instrument whose roots go back to the times of the Armenian king Tigran the Great (95-55 BC). Made from the wood of an apricot tree, the Armenian duduk is distinctiv­e in constructi­on and performanc­e technique and characteri­zed by a warm and soft timbre. Duduk music accompanie­s popular Armenian traditiona­l songs and dances and is played at social events such as weddings, anniversar­ies, and funerals. In 2005, UNESCO proclaimed it a Masterpiec­e of the Intangible Heritage of Humanity.

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