Armenians in North Macedonia

Armenians in North Macedonia are the ethnic Armenians in North Macedonia. The number of Armenians is about 300 people.[1]

Armenians
Total population
300[1]
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Armenian, Macedonian, Russian
Religion
Armenian Apostolic
Part of a series on
Armenians
Armenian culture
Architecture · Art
Cuisine · Dance · Dress
Literature · Music · History
By country or region
Armenia · Artsakh
See also Nagorno-Karabakh
Armenian diaspora
Russia · France · India
United States · Iran · Georgia
Azerbaijan · Argentina · Brazil
Lebanon · Syria · Ukraine
Poland · Canada · Australia
Turkey · Greece · Cyprus
Egypt · Singapore · Bangladesh
Subgroups
Hamshenis · Cherkesogai · Armeno-Tats · Lom people · Hayhurum
Religion
Armenian Apostolic · Armenian Catholic
Evangelical · Brotherhood ·
Languages and dialects
Armenian: Eastern · Western
Persecution
Genocide · Hamidian massacres
Adana massacre · Anti-Armenianism
Hidden Armenians

People

  • Garabet Tavitjan, musician, member of Leb i Sol[2]
  • Diran Tavitjan, musician[2]
  • Garo Tavitjan, Jr., musician[2]
  • Kosta Balabanov, scientist and honorary consul of Japan in Macedonia[3]
  • Artur Surmejan, Macedonian tenor,[4]
  • Hazaros Surmejan, ballet dancer and choreographer[4]
  • Tigran Kandikjan, football player
  • Vladimir Kandikjan, university professor
  • Tatjana Kandikjan, university professor
  • Vortik Stefan Knalijan, Master of Geographic Sciences and merchant. Owner of trading company since 1990 in manufacturing, agriculture, trade and services

See also

References

  1. (in Armenian) Մակեդոնիայի հայ համայնքը հոկտեմբերից կունենա հայկական շաբաթօրյա դպրոց Archived May 31, 2011, at the Wayback Machine in Armenians Today
  2. "Tavitjan Brothers-Macedonian Ethno Jazz". Meetup. 5 November 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
  3. "КОСТА БАЛАБАНОВ, НАУЧНИК И ПОЧЕСЕН КОНЗУЛ НА ЈАПОНИЈА ВО МАКЕДОНИЈА Тешкотиите се пребродуваат со оптимизам" (in Macedonian). Matica na iselenicite. December 31, 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
  4. Risteski, Blaže (2010). Encyclopaedia Macedonica (in Macedonian). 2 (I ed.). Skopje: MANU. p. 1460. ISBN 978-608-203-023-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.