The Holy Transfiguration Cathedral: The largest Armenian church building outside of Armenia.
Location: Moscow, Russia
Year Built: 2013
Architect: Artak Ghulyan

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@armarc
The Holy Transfiguration Cathedral: The largest Armenian church building outside of Armenia.
Location: Moscow, Russia
Year Built: 2013
Architect: Artak Ghulyan
Sasuntsi David.
Photo: Aleksey Chalabyan
Hey Jan Ghapama - Harout Pamboukjian
The Last ‘Bell’ Before Summer Holidays: Students at Toumanian School #176. Yerevan, Soviet Armenia. C. 1980’s
Credit: Project SAVE Armenian Photograph Archives
The Great Charles Aznavour 🌟 Photographer: Reg Lancaster/Express/Hulton Archive via Getty Images
Mer Bak 1: Hay Es Du - Aram Asatryan
Vank Cathedral
Location: Esfahan, Iran.
Cher on a headless statue of Lenin. 1993, Armenia.
Mount Nemrut: Built by King Antiochus I in 62 BC.
It is thought to be a sanctuary and a royal tomb, and was also possibly built to unify his multiethnic (Armenian, Greek, Persian) kingdom and secure his dynasty's authority.
The great Michel Legrand with Miles Davis.
Copper Armenian Printing Templates (17th century)
Composer & Conductor: Aram Khachaturian.
Abgar V: The First Christian King
(Photo: Icon of Abgar holding the mandylion, the image of Christ (encaustic, 10th century, Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai).)
Hushartsan: The first monument to commemorate “The 11th of April” (using the old Julian calendar, which is the 24th by the modern Gregorian calendar) set up in 1919 at a site now partly located within today's Gezi Park, near Taksim Square in Istanbul, Ottoman Empire. In 1922, during the Turkish National Movement, the monument was dismantled and subsequently lost under unknown circumstances.
From The Creators: “In 2015, we created this cell animation short to commemorate the Armenian Genocide Centenary. To the date, the Turkish government still denies the genocide took place, dodging their responsibility. 100 years will have passed this April 24th, and Armenians will keep on fighting for justice. This is a small tribute to the 1.500.000 victims.”
Directed by Pablo Gostanian Creative Direction: Pablo Gostanian Executive Producer: Agustin Valcarenghi Animation Direction: Pablo Gostanian, Melisa Farina, Sebastian Garcia, Juan Pablo Sciaccaluga Cel Animation Direction: Melisa Farina, Sebastian Garcia Art Direction: Pablo Gostanian, Juan Molinet Associate Arte Direction: Facundo Quiroga Illustrators & Designers: Juan Molinet, Facundo Quiroga, Pablo Gostanian, Mariano Cutropia, Luke Etcheverry, Fernando Martinez Ruppel, Santiago Medina Neves Character Design: Juan Molinet Cel Animators: Melisa Farina, Sebastian Garcia, Facundo Quiroga, Augusto Gabrys, Santiago Medina Neves, Juan Nadalino, Nahuel Sagárnaga, Lucia Castez, Martin Gil, Valentina Candia, Alex Gostanian, Diego Frachia, Gabriela Bosco 2D Animation: Juan Pablo Sciaccaluga, Josefina Preumayr, Alex Gostanian, Pablo Gostanian, Enmanuel Pelaez, Diego Flores Diapolo 3D Animation: Augusto Gabrys, Diego Flores Diapolo, Sebastian Garcia, Juan Pablo Sciaccaluga Composition: Juan Pablo Sciaccaluga, Sebastian Garcia Post Production: Pablo Gostanian, Josefina Preumayr Story Board: Melisa Farina, Sebastian Garcia, Facundo Quiroga, Pablo Gostanian Story & Concept: Pablo Gostanian Producer: Geraldine Chaia Arazi
Music: Brian Eno – 2 Forms of Anger SFX: Diego Flores Diapolo, Rancho
Tsitsernakaberd | Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex. | #ArmArc Photograph by Patrick ALLARD/REA/Redux
Massacres in the Eastern Turkey: Thousands of Armenians burnt alive by Turks in a Catholic Church in Adama.
Illustrator: Achille Beltrame (1871-1945), from La Domenica del Corriere, 16th-23rd May 1909.
(Photo by DeAgostini/Getty Images)