Atabekians
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The Atabekians are an
Russo-Persian War (1804–13).[4]
The Atabekians are descendants of
R1b1b2a
haplogroup.
Princes of the House of Atabekian
- Atabek I (mentioned in 1411, the fifth son of Prince Jalal III the Great Hasan-Jalalian)
- Aytin (mentioned in 1495)
- Sargis I
unknown lords
- Atabek II Jraberdci (1678)
- Hovhannes-Vani I and Ghuli
(the branch of Prince Vani I moved to Russia, Ghuli became the Houselord)
- Sargis II
- Harutyun (Tuni) (end of the 18th century)
- Hovhannes (Meliq Vani) II of Jraberd (1766 — 7 March 1854)
- Hovsep-bek (1815—1861)
(The family tree splits between Armenian provinces of Jraberd and Tavush)
Famous Atabekians
- Hovhannes Atabekian , Lord of Jraberd (1766–1854)
- Mkrtich Atabekyan, public speaker (1843–1918)
- Andrey Atabekov , military general (1854–1918)
- Alexander Atabekian, physician and anarchist publisher (1868–1940)
- Hovsep Atabekian , member of the Russian Duma (1870–1916)
- Levon Atabekian , physician, activist and poet (1875–1918)
- Garegin Atabekyan, doctor (1870s–1930s)
- Tigran Atabekian , geographer (1888–1959)
- Margarit Atabekian , literary critic and translator (1917–1996)
- Mikael Atabekyan, minister of education of Armenia (1918–1920)
- Hovsep Atabekov , academic (1934–2021)
- Sergei Atabekian , literary critic (1937–2000)
- Anzhela Atabekyan, musician and art historian (b. 1938)
- Vahagn Atabekian , poet (b. 1949)
- Armen Atabekian , surgeon (b. 1951)
- Nerses Atabekian , poet and translator (b. 1960)
- Vardan Atabekian , member of the Armenian parliament (b. 1981)
The present-day state of the House of Atabekians
Currently, the Princely House of Atabekians is one of the well-organized and active clans of
as the Head (tohmapet) of the House of Atabekians.On 27 July 2012, the Atabekians were among the four aristocratic houses that initiated the restoration of the alliance of the traditional princely dynasties of the
See also
- House of Hasan-Jalalyan
Literature
- Potto, Vassili. The First Volunteers of Karabakh. Tiflis, 1902
- Raffi. "The Meliqdoms of Khamsa", Yerevan, 1991
- Maghalyan, Artak. "Meliqdoms and Meliqly Houses of Artsakh". Yerevan, 2007
- The Court Hearings of the Atabekians, "Archives of Armenia", 2008, # 1, pp. 3-27.
- "The Roots of the Tree", "Aniv", 08.09.2008 # 5 (14)
- Karapetyan, Armen. Critical Remarks regarding A.Maghalyan's "Meliqdoms and the Meliqly Houses of Artsakh". Historical-Philological Journal of the Armenian National Academy Of Science. 2009, # 1(243), p.246
- Archbishop Sergius Hasan-Jalaliants. A History of the Land of Artsakh. (Edited with an Introduction by Robert H. Hewsen). Costa Mesa 2013.
References
- ^ Раффи. "Меликства Хамсы", XLI
- ^ Karapetyan, Armen. Critical Remarks regarding A.Maghalyan's "Meliqdoms and the Meliqly Houses of Artsakh". Historical-Philological Journal of the Armenian National Academy Of Science. 2009, # 1(243), p.246 [1]
- ^ Archbishop Sergius Hasan-Jalaliants. A History of the Land of Artsakh. (Edited with an Introduction by Robert H. Hewsen). Costa Mesa 2013. p. xxi
- ^ Ген. Василий Потто. Первые добровольцы Карабаха в эпоху водворения русского владычества (мелик Вани и Акоп-юзбаши Атабековы)[2]
- ^ Магалян, Артак. Арцахские меликства и меликские дома в XVII—XIX вв., Ереван, Издательство «Гитутюн» НАН РА, 2007, 326 ст.
- ^ "Armenian Meliq Union".