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Talks at Ararat-Eskijian Museum Highlight Armenian Archaeology

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  • Talks at Ararat-Eskijian Museum Highlight Armenian Archaeology

    Talks at Ararat-Eskijian Museum Highlight Armenian Archaeology
    By Armenian Weekly Staff
    January 24, 2010

    On Dec. 6, 2009, Dr. Pavel Avetisyan, the director of Armenia's
    Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, and Dr. Gregory Areshian of
    the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, presented illustrated
    lectures at the Ararat-Eskijian Museum in Mission Hills, Calif. The
    event was co-sponsored by the museum, the Friends of UCLA Armenian
    Language and Culture Studies, and the National Association for
    Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR).


    (L-R) NAASR Board member Bruce W. Roat, Ararat-Eskijian Museum
    director Maggie Mangassarian-Goschin, Dr. Pavel Avetisyan, Dr. Gregory
    Areshian, Effie Eskijian, and Museum chairman Martin Eskijian.
    Avetisyan spoke in Armenian, with English translation provided by
    Areshian, on the subject `International Academic Cooperation and Its
    Importance for Studies in Armenian History and Civilization.' He
    explained that a major transformation of Armenian studies has taken
    place during the last two decades since Armenia gained independence
    from the Soviet Union. Besides traditional areas such as the study of
    the Armenian past based on written historical records and Armenian
    literature, `younger' areas of inquiry more focused on the Armenian
    material cultural heritage, long-term processes in Armenian history,
    anthropological and sociological researches, and others started
    gaining momentum.

    `It is not surprising that the Institute of Archaeology and
    Anthropology of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of
    Armenia has become the world's fastest growing institution of Armenian
    studies,' Avetisyan said. The institute focuses on previously
    unexplored or poorly understood areas of Armenian life and
    civilization: from the appearance of the first humans on the Armenian
    Highland to the formation of values and the transformation of national
    identities in contemporary Armenian society at the threshold of the
    new millennium.

    What propels this growth, said Avetisyan, is the exponential expansion
    of international cooperation. Currently the institute is the senior
    partner in two dozen international collaborative projects, the largest
    11 of which are concerned with the study and documentation of the
    Ancient and Medieval Armenian material cultural heritage. In the last
    six to seven years, these projects have made amazing discoveries, some
    of which Avetisyan presented.

    In his view, the most significant implications of the international
    collaboration are: (1) that the most recent advances in social theory
    developed in the West are applied to the social researches in Armenia;
    (2) the Armenian cultural heritage is brought to the attention of
    scholarly audiences and the general public in the U.S. and Europe; (3)
    new discoveries not only make major corrections and fill gaps in our
    knowledge of Armenian history, but also contribute to a better
    understanding of significant stages in the development of human
    civilization; (4) a major improvement in the training of students in
    Armenia has been achieved; (5) Armenian society has been enriched by a
    large number of new sites, monuments, and findings of cultural and
    historical value, all of which are kept in different museums in
    Armenia; and (6) the scientific data obtained during those
    explorations are processed and studied in the best laboratories of
    Europe and North America.

    Areshian, in a talk in English entitled `The Discovery of a 6,000
    Year-Old Cave Civilization in Armenia,' presented information
    connected with discoveries made during 2007-09 in the Vayots-Dzor
    Province by the Arpa River Valley Joint Project of the Institute of
    Archaeology and Anthropology of the National Academy of Sciences of
    Armenia and the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of
    California, Los Angeles.

    The Arpa River Valley is a little-explored area, despite having the
    highest concentration of karstic caves in Armenia and such outstanding
    monuments of Armenian medieval architecture as the Noravank Monastery.
    The project identified more than three dozen inhabited caves in that
    region and other important sites dating from the Stone Age to the 17th
    century A.D. In the summer of 2010, the Project will start a
    systematic survey of the region.

    For Areshian, however, the most exciting and sensational discoveries
    were made at the cave known as Areni-1, where a small-scale excavation
    began in 2007. The explorations carried out thus far attest to a very
    large site with cultural remains in three interconnected cave
    galleries, each up to 40 meters long, and also under the rock shelter
    in front of the galleries and on the slope descending toward the
    river. In the uppermost layer, fragments of a Medieval Armenian
    manuscript were found. Beneath, a carbonated, hard, and natural crust
    covered more than 15-feet-thick cultural layers.

    The crust, together with extreme dryness and stable temperatures
    inside, created unique conditions that preserved artifacts and various
    organic remains not found in other earlier excavations. Non-burnt
    wooden artifacts, seeds, rope, cloth, straw, grass, reeds, and even
    dried fruits (grapes and prunes) were found in the top three layers
    dating back to the Copper Age (Chalcolithic), ca. 4,000 B.C. Various
    remains may indicate the presence of a full cycle of wine making in
    the cave.

    Areshian explained that a human brain found in a ritually deposited
    head is the most astounding discovery from that period. This is the
    oldest human brain ever found in the Old World. He stated that the
    newly discovered cave society will prompt a major revision of our
    knowledge concerning the early civilizations of the Middle East and
    southeastern Europe.

    For more information on the talks by Avetisyan and Areshian, contact
    the Ararat-Eskijian Museum by calling (818) 838-4862 or emailing
    [email protected]; the Friends of UCLA Armenian
    Studies by calling (310) 704-4353; or NAASR by calling (617) 489-1610
    or emailing [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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