Sources · book · neutral-academic
The Armenians: From Kings and Priests to Merchants and Commissars
Razmik Panossian, 2006 · Columbia University Press
Cited by events (25)
- Soviet takeover of Armenia 1920
- Declaration of three South Caucasian republics 1918
- Treaty of Sèvres signed 1920
- Stalinist purges in Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan 1937
- Deportation of Azerbaijanis from Soviet Armenia, 1948–53 1948
- Yerevan demonstrations on the 50th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide 1965
- NKAO Soviet votes for transfer to Armenian SSR 1988
- Kirovabad / Ganja pogrom 1988
- Spitak earthquake 1988
- Yerevan parliament shooting 1999
- 1 March 2008 events, Yerevan 2008
- Sumgait pogrom 1988
- Baku pogrom 1990
- Caucasian Bureau decisions on Karabakh, 4–5 July 1921 1921
- Shah Abbas I's relocation of Armenians to Isfahan 1604
- Polozhenie of 1836, Russian charter for the Armenian Church 1836
- Russian closure of Armenian parochial schools 1885
- Russian confiscation of Armenian Apostolic Church properties 1903
- February uprising in Soviet Armenia 1921
- Death of Aghasi Khanjian 1936
- Soviet repatriation of diaspora Armenians (Nergaght) 1946
- Gugark anti-Azeri violence 1988
- Formation of the Karabakh Committee 1988
- Azerbaijani rail and gas blockade of Armenia 1989
- Signing of the Zurich Protocols 2009
Cited by legal rulings (2)
- European Parliament resolution recognising the Armenian Genocide
- Loi n° 2001-70 du 29 janvier 2001, France recognises the Armenian Genocide
Supports formal claims (1)
Atlas claim-graph entries this source backs directly. The inline-citations list below shows every paragraph where the source is cited in body prose.
Cited in disputes (2)
- The pre-modern population of Karabakh state-armenia Armenian state position: an unbroken Armenian land
- "Western Azerbaijan": legitimate historical claim or irredentism? state-armenia Armenian state position: existential threat