Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Book: Bournoutian's "1823 Russian Survey Of The Karabagh Provinc

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New Book: Bournoutian's "1823 Russian Survey Of The Karabagh Provinc

    NEW BOOK: BOURNOUTIAN'S "1823 RUSSIAN SURVEY OF THE KARABAGH PROVINCE"

    http://www.mazdapublisher.com/BookDetails.aspx?BookID=300
    Sep 22, 2011

    Costa Mesa, California -- Mazda Press announces the publication of
    Dr. George Bournoutian's new book: The 1823 Russian Survey of the
    Karabagh Province: A Primary Source on the Demography and Economy of
    Karabagh in the Early 19th Century.

    At the end of 1822, following the flight of Mahdi-qoli Khan of Karabagh
    to Iran, Russia annexed the province and sent two officials to conduct
    a survey of the population of Karabagh and the taxes collected by
    the last khan. The survey, composed of 35 registers in Russian,
    was completed in the spring of 1823 and send to Tiflis, the Russian
    headquarters for the Caucasus. In 1866 the government printing office
    in Tiflis published a very small quantity of the survey for official
    use. The document became rare and, for all intents and purposes,
    unobtainable.

    Following the demands of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabagh
    for self-determination, Azeri historians, led by the late Ziya
    Buniatov, started a campaign to deny the Armenian historic presence
    in the region. First, they prepared new editions of books by local
    Persian-speaking Muslim chroniclers (written in the 18-19th centuries
    and published in Baku in Russian and Azeri translations between 1921
    and 1970), and blatantly deleted most references to the Armenians.

    Second, they sent the new editions free of charge to many university
    libraries in Europe, Russia and the US. Third, they announced that the
    Armenians of Mountainous Karabagh had arrived there only after 1828,
    when Russia, following the Treaty of Turkmenchay had encouraged the
    settlement of thousands of Armenians from Iran into the region. This
    became and remains the official Azeri view (see the Azerbaijan Embassy
    in DC website).

    Although, Bournoutian in his three previous books, as well as
    two articles has totally refuted the Azeri claims, the absence of
    concrete population figures for Karabagh presented a problem. One
    either had to rely on Armenian sources (written between the 16th
    and 19th centuries and unacceptable to the Azeris as biased) or the
    abovementioned out-of-print Russian and Azeri unadulterated versions. 
    Although both sources mention an Armenian presence in the region,
    they either present unsubstantiated and exaggerated figures or have
    no demographic information whatsoever.

    The 1823 Russian Survey of Karabagh, conducted by neutral officials,
    lists the number of families and their ethnicity in some 300 villages
    and 300 nomad pastures. It also lists the various taxes paid to the
    khan's treasury by each group. It proves conclusively that, in 1822,
    six years prior to 1828, the Armenians formed the overwhelming
    majority (some 97%) in the five districts, which later formed
    Nagorno- Karabagh. Furthermore, the Armenian villages were larger,
    more productive and the Armenians paid more taxes per capita than the
    Muslims. The high economic productivity of the Armenian villages is
    a further indication of their long presence in the region.

    Bournoutian's annotated translation (first in any language) from
    the Russian original edition (located at the former Lenin Library
    in Moscow) of this 380-page survey, has a great deal of other
    information on the demography and economy of Karabagh, which will
    be of primary interest to scholars of Transcaucasia. It includes a
    lengthy introduction and commentary, an appendix and maps and should,
    once and for all, end the discussion regarding the Armenian historic
    presence in or claims to Nagorno- Karabagh.

    The book (xiv + 467pp., $45.00), available in mid-October can be
    ordered from Mazda Press, Amazon, Barnes and Nobles, or Armenian
    bookstores.

Working...
X