Sanasarian College

Sanasarian College
Type College
Established 1881
Students 120
Undergraduates pre-university students; regular, technical, apprenticeship
Postgraduates not available
Location Erzurum, Erzurum Vilayet,  Ottoman Empire

The Sanassarian College (Armenian: Սանասարեան վարժարան) or Sanasarian College[1] was an Armenian language higher education institution in the city of Erzurum (called Karin by Armenians), Ottoman Empire founded in 1881[2] by an Armenian merchant, Mkrtich Sanasarian.[3]

Description

Mkrtich Sanasarian, founder of the Sanasarian College

It was a school of high grade which consisted of teachers who were mostly educated in Germany, the college had a nine-year course, with a high grade education that was taught.[4] The school lasted until the Armenian Genocide, when most of the teachers were killed and the building was ruined. Sanasarian college was a foremost institution for Armenian culture and education in the eastern provinces during the decades going into the World War I.[5]

Graduates of the Sanasarian school

An English explorer, writer, and a natural historian Isabella Bird's (1831-1904) described the college as:

After the Armenian Genocide, and when the property was abandoned, the Sanasarian College was chosen as the location for the Erzurum Congress.[7][8]

The Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul appealed to the court in Ankara for the return of Sanasarian College.[9] The properties owned by the Sanasarian college include nine plots of land in Erzurum, a garden house and vast farmland in the village of Aghveren, two plots in the village of Gez, and a large commercial property known as Sanasarian Han in the Sirkeci district of Istanbul.[9] The court proceedings are still pending.[9]

Notable graduates

See also

References

  1. A History of Armenia - Page 372 by Vahan M. Kurkjian
  2. A few facts about Turkey under the reign of Abdul Hamid II. By An American observer, p.54
  3. The Heritage of Armenian Literature: From the eighteenth century to modern times By Agop Jack Hacikyan, Gabriel Basmajian, Edward S. Franchuk, p.337
  4. The Missionary herald at home and abroad: Volume 86 - Page 362 - American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions
  5. The Republic of Armenia: The first year, 1918-1919 By Richard G. Hovannisian -p.436
  6. Bird, Isabella L. Journeys in Persia and Kurdistan :including a summer in the upper Karun region and a visit to the Nestorian Rayahs. New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons ; London : J. Murray, 1891., p.385
  7. Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, pp. 435-436.
  8. Suny, Ronald (2015). "They Can Live in the Desert but Nowhere Else": A History of the Armenian Genocide. Princeton University Press. p. 338. ISBN 1400865581.
  9. 1 2 3 "Patrikhane Sanasaryan davasını Anadolu sathına yaydı" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
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