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U.Mich Ann Arbor ASP Int'l Conf. on Armenian-Ukrainian Relations

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  • U.Mich Ann Arbor ASP Int'l Conf. on Armenian-Ukrainian Relations

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    Ms. Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    Tel: (734) 763-0622
    Email: [email protected]

    International Conference on Armenian-Ukrainian Relations
    Held in L'viv, Ukraine
    Co-sponsored by the Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan

    The international conference on Armenian-Ukrainian
    relations, sponsored jointly by the Armenian Studies Program at the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; the Peter Jacyk Centre for
    Ukrainian Historical Research of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian
    Studies at the University of Alberta, Canada; the Ukrainian Catholic
    University in L'viv; and the Institute of Ukrainian Archeography of
    the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, L'viv Branch, was held in L'viv,
    Ukraine, from 28 to 31 May, 2008. The conference was made possible
    with academic planning and contribution as well as financial support
    by the sponsoring organizations.
    Twenty papers were read by scholars from Armenia, Canada,
    Germany, Hungary, Poland and Ukraine on various aspects of
    Armenian-Ukrainian relations over the past five hundred years. The
    papers covered such aspects
    as the administrative structure and privileges of Armenian communities
    in Ukraine, social realities, cultural influences, church and
    religion, identity and literature, and art and architecture. Many of
    the papers were based on archival materials or took a fresh look at
    the field, at once reflecting an on-going lively interest, and one of
    the major goals of the conference: to shed new light on the
    Armenian-Ukrainian relations.
    Originally conceived by Kevork B. Bardakjian of the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and Frank Sysyn of the Peter Jacyk
    Centre for Ukrainian Historical Research, both of whom chaired
    sessions and acted as discussants, the conference was an important
    step towards realizing one of the fundamental and long-standing
    elements of the mission of the Armenian Studies Program at Michigan to
    act as a catalyst for promoting and fostering Armenian Studies in
    various parts of the world. It is hoped that the precedent set in
    L'viv will evolve into a pattern of periodically held conferences.
    The papers will be posted on the websites of both the Armenian
    Studies Program and the other sponsoring organizations at the same time as
    plans are developed to publish the proceedings as a volume in English.
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