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VivaCell-MTS' Supported With Installation Of Multilanguage Informati

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  • VivaCell-MTS' Supported With Installation Of Multilanguage Informati

    VIVACELL-MTS' SUPPORTED WITH INSTALLATION OF MULTILANGUAGE INFORMATION PANELS IN SEVAN MONASTERY

    ArmInfo
    2009-08-11 12:37:00

    ArmInfo. VivaCell-MTS, a subsidiary of Mobile TeleSystems OJSC ("MTS" -
    NYSE: MBT) and the Armenian Monuments Awareness Project (AMAP) today
    announce the installation of multilanguage information panels near
    Sevanavank, which marks the seventh site for which AMAP has produced
    information panels this year and a total of 12 since the project was
    launched last year.

    AMAP receives major sponsorship from VivaCell-MTS and is also
    supported by the Honorary Consul of Italy and by the United States
    Agency for International Development (USAID) through its Competitive
    Armenia Private Sector (CAPS) program. This project is an important
    component of VivaCell-MTS' efforts to help celebrate and raise
    awareness of Armenian historic and natural monuments, to enhance
    the visitor experience at the sites while promoting Armenia as a
    tourism destination.

    History points to Lusavorich's entry into the Sevan region,
    establishing two churches at the site; St. Harutiun and St. Karapet
    (John the Baptist).

    According to an inscription on the south wall of St. Arakelots (Holy
    Apostle) Church at the site, the 9th century expansion is attributed
    to Princess Mariam, the daughter of the founder of the Bagratuni
    dynasty, Ashot I Bagratuni. Medieval inhabitants include the 10th
    century historian and Catholicos Hovhannes Draskhanakertsi, and
    Ashot II (Ashot Yerkat or Ashot of Iron) who led his armies against
    foreign rulers. The king and his regiment camped on the island in
    924/925, winning a decisive victory against the enemy, ensuring the
    re-establishment of Armenian independence and securing Bagratuni
    rule. Afterwards, Sevanavank became an important pilgrimage site.

    Abandoned during the Soviet period (St. Astvatsatsin was demolished
    in 1931 and its stone used to build a holiday house in Sevan) and
    badly damaged in the 1936 earthquake, the monastery was not revived
    until the 1990s and is undergoing reconstruction. It remains one of
    Armenia's most popular destinations.
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