Research Your Armenian Roots—What You Need to Know
This is a seven part series documenting the available records for research into one’s Armenian family roots.
This is a seven part series documenting the available records for research into one’s Armenian family roots.
Syria as well as the background on the history of Armenian genealogy
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Lebanon and Israel
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Greece and Jordan
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Southeast Asia (Bangladesh, Burma, India, Indonesia, Singapore) and Serbia
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Turkey
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Egypt and Armenia
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Austria, Poland, Cyprus, Hungary, and the current gaps in what is available
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Researching Your Armenian Roots During a Pandemic - article discussing the Armenian genealogy tutorials that can be found in the video section under the Armenian Genealogy menu.
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The Armenians of Hazari: Recreating the Demographic History - this article is unique as it is the first to use official Ottoman census records, Armenian source documents and United States records to recreate the family trees of one Armenian village.
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The Search for Family during the Chaos of Genocide - article about the advertisements placed in Armenian newspapers during the Armenian genocide by family members searching for lost relatives.
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Baptism records from Sp. Krikor Lusavorich church of Gesaria [Kayseri] - the records from 1914 through April 1915 were published leading up to the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
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Family of Priests: The Der Manuelians of Sakrat Palu Across Two Centuries - article detailing the use of the 1840 [1256 hijra] Ottoman census for Palu to document one family's history.
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The Village of Pazmashen: A Study of Y-DNA Testing - article describing the results of a Y-DNA study of males directly descended from the village of Pazmashen in the region of Kharpert.
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A New Source for Armenian Roots - article about the Ottoman population registers and their usage in Armenian genealogy
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Hunting Armenian Refugee Ancestors in 1920s France - Article from the French Genealogy Blog by Anne Morddel about researching Armenian records in France.
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Articles in the Armenian Weekly by Mark Arslan, curator of the Armenian Immigration Project webite
Armenian Immigration to North America through the 1930s: A Compilation of Primary Sources
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So Where In Armenia Was Your Family From?
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The Immigration Agents Changed My Family Name – Not!
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