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About Statistics Completeness Sources
Sources · book · armenian-leaning

Armenia: The Survival of a Nation

Christopher J. Walker, 1980 · Croom Helm

Awaiting review Compiled with the support of AI tooling. This page still needs academic revision against the primary sources. Specific claims, page-number locators, edition descriptions, and quoted passages may require correction. Why this disclosure · File a correction

Cited by events (17)

  • Assassination of Djemal Pasha (Tiflis) 1922
  • Treaty of San Stefano (Article 16) 1878
  • Treaty of Berlin (Article 61) 1878
  • Hamidian massacres of Ottoman Armenians 1894
  • Armenian self-defence at Van 1915
  • Armenian armed resistance at Musa Dagh 1915
  • Polozhenie of 1836, Russian charter for the Armenian Church 1836
  • Russian closure of Armenian parochial schools 1885
  • Sasun massacre 1894
  • Trabzon massacre 1895
  • Urfa cathedral massacre 1895
  • Russian confiscation of Armenian Apostolic Church properties 1903
  • Battle of Karakilisa 1918
  • Treaty of Alexandropol 1920
  • Wilson arbitral award on Armenia 1920
  • Assassination of Said Halim Pasha (Rome) 1921
  • Assassination of Behaeddin Shakir and Cemal Azmi (Berlin) 1922

Cited by legal rulings (3)

  • Treaty of Berlin (Article 61)
  • Treaty of Lausanne
  • Treaty of San Stefano (Article 16)

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.

  1. The Hamidian massacres of 1894–96 killed an estimated 100,000 to 300,000 Ottoman Armenians. well-evidenced

Link

  • search.worldcat.org/search live
  • Wayback snapshot · 2026-05-09 archived

Cited on figure pages

  • Sultan Abdul Hamid II
  • Christapor Mikaelian
  • Stepan Zorian (Rostom)

Cited on party pages

  • Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun)

Cited on policy pages

  • Hamidian massacres of Armenians (1894–96)
Atlas of the South Caucasus, 1813 to 2026. A working draft. Errors and omissions are mine. by David Wicker · sister project: palestine.wicker.life
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