Suren Tigrani Yeremian (Armenian: Սուրեն Տիգրանի Երեմյան; Russian: Сурен Тигранович Еремян; April 10 [O.S. March 28] 1908 – 17 December 1992) was a Soviet and Armenian historian and cartographer who specialized in the study of the early formation of the Armenian nation, pre-medieval Armenia, and the Caucasus. He devoted nearly thirty years of his scholarly efforts in reconstructing the Ashkharhatsuyts, a seventh-century atlas commonly attributed to Anania Shirakatsi.[1]

Suren Yeremian
Born(1908-04-10)April 10, 1908
DiedDecember 17, 1992(1992-12-17) (aged 84)
Alma materYerevan State University
Known forArmenia According to the Ashkharatsuyts (Yerevan, 1963)
AwardsOrder of the October Revolution
Order of the Red Banner of Labour
Scientific career
FieldsArmenian studies, history of Armenia
InstitutionsArmenian Academy of Sciences (from 1963),
Institute of History of National Academy of Sciences of Armenia

Biography

edit

Early life and education

edit

Yeremian was born into a family of laborers in Tiflis, in 1908 and attended a local Russian school.[2][3] Yeremian was an avid reader of history books and his interest in Armenian history grew especially when he read Nicholas Adontz's Armenia in the Period of Justinian.[3] He moved to Armenia and in 1928, he was accepted to Yerevan State University.

He studied history and economics and graduated from there in 1931.[4] From 1935 until 1941, Yeremian worked at the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union's department of Oriental studies in Leningrad. While there, Yeremian also taught Armenian history at Leningrad State University's Department of History and Philology. He defended his dissertation, titled "The Feudal Organization of Kartli during the Marzpanate Period."[2]

In 1941, he moved back to Yerevan and continued his studies at the Institute of Material Culture and History, which was still under the auspices of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.[4] He earned the title of professor in 1953, having defended his second dissertation (from Moscow State University), titled "The Social Structure of Ancient Armenia."[2] He held the position of director of the department of history from 1953 to 1958 and in 1963 he was inducted as a member of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences.

Academic research

edit

It was during this time that Yeremian shifted his focus to composing historical atlases: one of his most notable contributions was on the study of a seventh-century Ashkharatsuyts, where he spent a great deal of his energies in not only translating and researching the background behind the atlas but also on the supposed author of the work, Anania Shirakatsi.[4] In 1963, his Armenia According to the Ashkharatsuyts was published, although Yeremian would in subsequent years go on to revise some of the views, most notably coming to the conclusion that Anania Shirakatsi was its true author, that he had concluded in the work. He also contributed in writing several articles in the USSR Historical Atlas. Yeremian was also one of the key advocates who pushed for the publication of the History of the Armenian People (Yerevan, 1971–1984, 8 volumes), authoring numerous articles on the origins of the Armenian people, the kingdom of Urartu, and on the social, economic, cultural and political structure of the Kingdom of Armenia.[2] He would also go on to write numerous articles in the Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia.

He struggled with a serious illness for many years, and died in 1992.[2]

Selected works

edit
  • (in Armenian) Hayastane ust "Ashkharhatsuytsi". Yerevan, 1963.

Notes

edit
  1. ^ See the "Preface" and "Introduction" in Robert Hewsen's The Geography of Ananias of Širak: Asxarhacoyc, the Long and the Short Recensions. Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert, 1992, ISBN 3-88226-485-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e (in Armenian) Presidency of the Armenian Academy of the Sciences, Institute of History. "S. T. Yeremian," Patma-Banasirakan Handes 135-136 (1992), pp. 255-256.
  3. ^ a b (in French) Mahé, Jean-Pierre. "In Memoriam: Souren Eremyan, 1908-1993," Revue des Études Arméniennes, 14 (1993), pp. 339-40.
  4. ^ a b c (in Armenian) Muradyan, Paruyr. "Yeremian, Suren Tigrani," Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia. vol. 3, pp. 546-547.