Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Armenians in Poland from the 14th century to the first years of the 21st century
View through CrossRef
The first groups of Armenians arrived in Red Ruthenia, Podolia, and Kyiv Ruthenia as early as in the 11th century as part of the first wave of exiles before the Seljuk invasion. At the same time the first Armenian settlements in these Polish lands were established. However, a significant development tendency of the Armenian settlement can only be mentioned concerning the reign of Casimir the Great, who also contributed to the raise of the Armenian church in Lviv to the rank of a cathedral. The greatest development of the Armenian settlement in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth took place in the 16th and 17th centuries. At the end of the 17th century, Armenian settlements stretched along the entire south-eastern border of the Republic of Poland. The Armenian colonies in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth played an important role in the organization of eastern trade. A trade route connecting the East with the West ran through the territory of the Republic of Poland. Apart from economic activity, Armenians played a significant role in the field of diplomacy. All Armenian colonies in the territory of the Republic of Poland enjoyed autonomy. The outbreak of the war in 1939 meant that Poles and Armenians shared the tragic fate. World War II dispersed the Polish Armenians. Some of them – mainly Armenians from the city of Kuty and its surroundings – were murdered in 1943–1944 by the Ukrainians, with the approval of the Germans. Others were taken to Soviet camps or sent to Central Asia. Few Armenians remained in Lviv. Polish Armenians who survived lived in postwar Poland. After the political transformation that took place in Poland and other countries of Central and Eastern Europe, new emigrants from Armenia come to Poland. According to the 2002 national population and housing census, 262 citizens of the Republic of Poland declared themselves as Armenians.
Title: Armenians in Poland from the 14th century to the first years of the 21st century
Description:
The first groups of Armenians arrived in Red Ruthenia, Podolia, and Kyiv Ruthenia as early as in the 11th century as part of the first wave of exiles before the Seljuk invasion.
At the same time the first Armenian settlements in these Polish lands were established.
However, a significant development tendency of the Armenian settlement can only be mentioned concerning the reign of Casimir the Great, who also contributed to the raise of the Armenian church in Lviv to the rank of a cathedral.
The greatest development of the Armenian settlement in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth took place in the 16th and 17th centuries.
At the end of the 17th century, Armenian settlements stretched along the entire south-eastern border of the Republic of Poland.
The Armenian colonies in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth played an important role in the organization of eastern trade.
A trade route connecting the East with the West ran through the territory of the Republic of Poland.
Apart from economic activity, Armenians played a significant role in the field of diplomacy.
All Armenian colonies in the territory of the Republic of Poland enjoyed autonomy.
The outbreak of the war in 1939 meant that Poles and Armenians shared the tragic fate.
World War II dispersed the Polish Armenians.
Some of them – mainly Armenians from the city of Kuty and its surroundings – were murdered in 1943–1944 by the Ukrainians, with the approval of the Germans.
Others were taken to Soviet camps or sent to Central Asia.
Few Armenians remained in Lviv.
Polish Armenians who survived lived in postwar Poland.
After the political transformation that took place in Poland and other countries of Central and Eastern Europe, new emigrants from Armenia come to Poland.
According to the 2002 national population and housing census, 262 citizens of the Republic of Poland declared themselves as Armenians.
Related Results
Ethnogenesis of Caucasian Muslim Tats, Tats-speaking Armenians (Armenian-Tats) and Mountain Jews in light of a number of features of their languages
Ethnogenesis of Caucasian Muslim Tats, Tats-speaking Armenians (Armenian-Tats) and Mountain Jews in light of a number of features of their languages
A number of features of the language of Caucasian Muslim Tats allowed A.L. Grjunberg to connect their ethnogenesis with the migration of the Persians to the Eastern Caucasus in the...
The Example of Hagop Ekızıan’s Mıgratıon From The Ottoman Empıre to Amerıca
The Example of Hagop Ekızıan’s Mıgratıon From The Ottoman Empıre to Amerıca
Armenians entered under the rule of Seljuks and then the Ottoman Empire
after the Turks gained dominance in Anatolia. Armenians lived in an environment
of tolerance and justice und...
The unfounded mass burials of the so-called Armenian Genocide
The unfounded mass burials of the so-called Armenian Genocide
According to some sources, The
Armenian Genocide Appeals (the so-called Armenian Genocide or the Unfounded
Armenian Claims) indicate that the Armenian deportation, which was carrie...
History of Genocides
History of Genocides
The textbook presents the mass killings and other atrocities that have occurred worldwide and have been defined as genocide by international tribunals, other international bodies, ...
ԵՐևԱՆԻ 1724 ԹՎԱԿԱՆԻ ԻՆՔՆԱՊԱՇՏՊԱՆՈՒԹՅՈՒՆԸ
ԵՐևԱՆԻ 1724 ԹՎԱԿԱՆԻ ԻՆՔՆԱՊԱՇՏՊԱՆՈՒԹՅՈՒՆԸ
The heroic self-defense of the Armenians of Yerevan in 1724 is one of the most memorable events in the history of Armenia. The study shows that the researchers are right, who propo...
Forbidden Attraction: Ottoman Armenians and the Turkish Language in the Age of Nationalism
Forbidden Attraction: Ottoman Armenians and the Turkish Language in the Age of Nationalism
ABSTRACT: This article begins the work of excavating the varied attitudes toward Turkish that existed among Ottoman Armenians in the nineteenth century. It seeks to correct a funda...
Cultural Remodelling of Refugee Armenians after the Genocide
Cultural Remodelling of Refugee Armenians after the Genocide
The present article concerns one of the most painful pages in Annenian history – the Genocide of Armenians in 1915 and its traumatic and tragic outcome – forced migrations and cult...
Hasidism in Poland
Hasidism in Poland
Hasidism is a mystical pietistic movement that originated in the 18th-century Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and by the mid-nineteenth century became the most influential religious...

