List Of Armenian SSR State Prize Winners
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List Of Armenian SSR State Prize Winners
1965 *Hrachya Kochar (for "Nahapet" novel), *Aram Khachaturian, *Sergei Aslamazyan, Avet Gabrielian, Rafayel Davidian, Henry Talalyan (Komitas quartet), *Martiros Sarian *Gohar Gasparyan 1967 *Paruyr Sevak ("Anlreli Zangakatun" poem), *Arno Babajanian ("Six pictures for piano" composition), *Harutyun Kalents (for the portraits of A. Gitovich, A. Alikhanian etc.) *Yervand Kochar (Sasuntsi David monument) *Olga Gulazian *Edgar Hovhannisyan, Vilen Galstyan ("Haverjakan kurk" ballet), *Frunze Dovlatyan, Albert Yavuryan ("Barev, yes em" film) *Stepan Kevorkov, Erazm Melik-Karamyan, Ivan Dildaryan, Artashes Jalalyan (films about Kamo (Bolshevik), Kamo) 1971 *Gegham Sarian *Vakhtang Ananyan *Grigor Yeghiazaryan *Hovhannes Chekijian *Vardan Ajemian *Ara Sargsyan *Gurgen Borian, Khoren Abrahamyan, Frunze Dovlatian, Arkady Hayrapetian, Sergey Gevorkyan, Karen Masian, Rafayel Babayan ("Saroyan yeghbayrner" film) *Alexander Tamanian, Sergey Merkurov, Gevork Tamanian, Samvel Safaryan, Varazdat ...
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Hrachya Kochar
Hrachya Kochar (; 19 January 1910 – 2 May 1965), born Hrachya Kochari Gabrielyan, was an Armenian writer and publicist. He won the first state prize of the Armenian SSR for his novella ''Nahapet'', which was adapted into a Nahapet, film of the same name in 1977. Biography Hrachya Gabrielyan was born in 1910 in the Ottoman Empire, in the village of Kumlubucak (now located in the Taşlıçay district of the Ağrı Province of Turkey), historically located in the province of Bagrevand in Western Armenia. He lost both of his parents the Armenian genocide: his mother died during their flight to Eastern Armenia, while his father, Kochar, also known as Kocho, who fought in Andranik, Andranik's army, died in 1918. Hrachya Kochar chose his pseudonym in honor of his father. Along with other people from his village, Hrachya managed to escape the massacres and reach Eastern Armenia. He worked as a shepherd and as a pitman in the mines of Alaverdi, Armenia, Alaverdi. He then moved to Yer ...
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Vakhtang Ananyan
Vakhtang Stepani Ananyan ( hy, Վախթանգ Ստեփանի Անանյան, translit=Vakht’ang Step’ani Ananyan; 26 July 1905 – 4 March 1980) was an Armenian writer and journalist. He wrote many works about hunting and Armenia's natural world. Biography Ananyan was born in the village of Poghoskilisa, near Dilijan Dilijan ( hy, Դիլիջան) is a spa town and urban municipal community in the Tavush Province of Armenia. The town is one of the most important resorts in Armenia, situated within the Dilijan National Park. The forested town is home to numer ... (now within the city limits). He studied at Dilijan's parish school. In 1926, he moved to Yerevan, where he worked for the newspapers (Ploughman, 1930–31) and (Socialist agriculture, 1931–1935). His first work was published in the journal in 1927. In 1935, he was the editor of the newspaper . He fought in World War II and continued his journalistic and literary activities after the war. His first novel ...
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Silva Kaputikyan
Silva Kaputikyan ( hy, ) (20 January 1919 – 25 August 2006) was an Armenian poet and political activist. One of the best-known Armenian writers of the twentieth century, she is recognized as "the leading poetess of Armenia" and "the grand lady of twentieth century Armenian poetry". Although a member of the Communist Party, she was a noted advocate of Armenian national causes. Her first collection of poems were published in the mid-1940s. By the 1950s she had established herself as a significant literary figure in Soviet Armenia. Besides Armenian she also wrote in Russian and many of her works were translated to other languages. In the later Soviet period she frequently addressed political and other issues. Biography Background and early life Born Sirvard Kaputikyan on 20 January 1919 to parents from the historically Armenian-populated city of Van (in the historic Western Armenia, present-day Turkey), she was raised in Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia. Her father, Barun ...
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Samvel Safaryan
Samvel ( hy, Սամվել) is a name. It may refer to: *Samvel Babayan (born 1965), leader of the Dashink political party in Artsakh *Samvel Darbinyan, Armenian football coach *Samvel Gasparov (born 1938), Soviet/Russian film director and short story writer *Samvel Karapetian, Armenian historian, researcher, and architecture expert *Samvel Melkonyan (born 1984), Armenian football midfielder *Samvel Petrosyan, Armenian football manager * Samvel Shoukourian (born 1950), computer scientist, academician of NAS RA *Samvel Tumanyan (born 1949), Armenian politician *Samvel Yervinyan (born 1966), musician and composer See also *Samuel (name) Samuel ( Hebrew: שְׁמוּאֵל ''Šəmūʾēl'', Tiberian: ''Šămūʾēl'') is a male given name and a surname of Hebrew origin. From its appearance it seems to have the meaning of "God has set" or "God has placed", appearing to derive from ... {{given name Armenian masculine given names [Baidu]  




Gevork Tamanian
Gevorg ( hy, Գևորգ), also spelled Gevork and pronounced and transliterated as Kevork in Western Armenian, is the Armenian version of the name George. Bearers include: ;Gevorg *Gevorg Bashinjaghian (1857–1925), painter *Gevorg Emin (1918–1998), writer * Gevorg Karapetyan (footballer, born 1963), Lebanese-Armenian footballer *Gevorg Karapetyan (born 1990), Armenian footballer * Gevorg Ghazaryan (born 1988), football player ;Gevork *Gevork Kotiantz (1909–1996), painter *Gevork Vartanian (1924–2012), Soviet intelligence agent ;Kevork *Kevork Ajemian (Adjemian) (1932–1998), Armenian writer, journalist, novelist, theorist and public activist, one of the founders of ASALA *Kevork Aslan, Armenian historian *Kevork Chavush (1865–1907), Armenian fedayi in the Ottoman Empire *Kevork Hovnanian (1923–2009), Iraqi-born Armenian-American businessman and home builder, who founder of ''Hovnanian Enterprises'' in 1959 *Kevork Malikyan (born 1943), English character actor of ...
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Sergey Merkurov
Sergey Dmitrievich Merkurov (russian: Серге́й Дми́триевич Мерку́ров, – 8 June 1952) was a prominent Soviet sculptor-monumentalist of Greek-Armenian descent. He was a People's Artist of the USSR, an academic at the Soviet Academy of Arts, and director of the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts from 1944 to 1949. Merkurov was considered the greatest Soviet master of post-mortem masks.Vladica, Viorica (27 June 2003Art of the Departed: Gyumri museum houses rare, if creepy, death masks armenianow.com He was the sculptor of the three biggest monuments of Joseph Stalin in the USSR. He was the cousin of George Gurdjieff, a mystic and spiritual teacher. Biography Sergey Merkurov was born in Alexandrapol (modern Gyumri, Armenia). He left the Kiev Polytechnic Institute after a political scandal and moved to Switzerland, where he became a student of the Swiss sculptor Adolf Meyer. He attended art college in Germany (1902–1905) and then entered the Auguste Rodin stu ...
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Alexander Tamanian
Alexander Tamanian (, March 4, 1878 – February 20, 1936) was a Russian-born Armenian neoclassical architect, well known for his work in the city of Yerevan. Life and work Tamanian was born in the city of Yekaterinodar in 1878 in the family of a banker. He graduated from the St Petersburg Academy of Arts in 1904. His works portrayed sensitive and artistic neoclassical trends popular in those years. Some of his early works included the mansion of V. P. Kochubei in Tsarskoye Selo, 1911–1912; the house of Prince S. A. Scherbatov in Novinski Boulevard in Moscow, 1911–1913; the village railway employees housing and the tuberculosis sanatorium at the Prozorovskaya station (now Kratovo) near Moscow, 1913–1923; central workshops of Kazan railway in Lyubertsy, 1916). He became an Academician of Architecture in 1914, in 1917 he was elected as the Vice-President of the Academy of Arts. In 1923 he moved to Yerevan, heading the new construction effort in the republic. He was the ...
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Sergey Gevorkyan
Sergey may refer to: * Sergey (name), a Russian given name (including a list of people with the name) * Sergey, Switzerland, a municipality in Switzerland * ''Sergey'' (wasp), a genus in subfamily Doryctinae The Doryctinae or doryctine wasps are a large subfamily of braconid parasitic wasps (Braconidae). Numerous genera and species formerly unknown to science are being described every year. This subfamily is presumably part of a clade containing o ...
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Arkady Hayrapetian
Arkady (russian: Арка́дий, Arkadiy) is a Slavic masculine given name, ultimately derived from the Greek name Αρκάδιος, meaning “from Arcadia”. The Latin equivalent is Arcadius. Notable people with the name include: People: * Arkady Andreasyan (born 1947), Armenian former football player and manager *Arkadios Dimitrakopoulos (1824-1908), Greek merchant * Arcady Aris (1901–1942), Chuvash writer * Arkady Averchenko (1881–1925), Russian playwright and satirist *Arkady Babchenko (born 1977), Russian journalist *Arcady Boytler (1895–1965), Russian Mexican filmmaker * Arkady Mikhailovich Chernetsky (born 1950), mayor of Yekaterinburg, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia as of 2007 * Arkady Chernyshev (1914–1992), Soviet ice hockey and soccer player * Arkady Fiedler (1894–1985), Polish writer, journalist and adventurer *Arkady Filippenko (1912–1983), Soviet Ukrainian composer *Arkady Gaidar (1904–1941), Soviet writer whose stories were very popular among Soviet ch ...
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Frunze Dovlatian
Frunze may refer to: Places *Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan; Frunze was the city's official name from 1926 to 1991 *Frunze, Osh, a village in Nookat District, Osh Region, Kyrgyzstan * Frunze, Chuy, a village in Sokuluk District, Chuy Region, Kyrgyzstan *Frunze, Russia, several rural localities in Russia * Frunze, Tajikistan, a town in Sughd Province, Tajikistan *Frunze, former name of Hacırüstəmli, a village in Imishli District, Azerbaijan *Frunze, former name of Tuganbay, a village in Almaty Province, Kazakhstan *Frunze, former name of Kadamjay, a town in Batken Region, Kyrgyzstan *Frunze, former name of Sabriston, a town in Sughd Region, Tajikistan People *Frunze Dovlatyan (1927–1997), Armenian film director and actor * Mikhail Frunze (1885–1925), Russian Bolshevik leader Other *Frunze Airport, former name of the Manas International Airport, Kyrgyzstan *M.V. Frunze Naval School, former name of the St. Petersburg Naval Institute, Saint Petersburg * Soviet ship ''Frunz ...
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Khoren Abrahamyan
Khoren Babkeni Abrahamyan ( hy, Խորեն Բաբկենի Աբրահամյան, April 1, 1930, Yerevan – December 10, 2004) was an Armenian actor and director, and People's Artist of the USSR. Abrahamyan was honored with the title People’s Artist of the USSR in 1980. Life and career He studied at the Yerevan Institute of Theater and Fine Arts and graduated in 1951. Since 1951 worked at Sundukyan State Academic Theatre of Yerevan as actor. In 1980, he was appointed its executive director. As a student, Abramyan played several small parts in movies, including Hamo Bek-Nazaryan’s kolkhoz musical ''The Girl from Ararat Valley'' (1949), as well as in Russian productions such as Aleksandr Rou’s children’s film ''The Secret of the Mountain Lake'' (1954), Mikhail Kalatozov’s drama about the cultivation of untilled soil in the steppes of Kazakhstan ''The First Echelon'' (1956), and Aleksandr Zarkhi’s industrial construction tale ''The Height'' (1957). More significant roles i ...
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Gurgen Borian
Gurgen or Gourgen (Armenian: Գուրգեն, Georgian: გურგენ) is an Armenian and Georgian masculine name of Middle Persian origin (''Gurgēn''), itself ultimately deriving from Old Iranian ''Vṛkaina-''. It may refer to: Georgian monarchs *Gurgen of Iberia *Gurgen I of Tao * Gurgen II of Tao Other people *Gurgen Margaryan * Gurgen Dalibaltayan * Gurgen Askaryan *Gurgen Mahari *Gurgen Boryan * Gourgen Yanikian * Gourgen Edilyan * Gourgen Paronyan Places *Gürgan Gürgan (also, Gürgən and Gyurgyan) is a village in Baku, Azerbaijan. It forms part of the municipality of Gürgən-Pirallahı. See also *List of lighthouses in Azerbaijan This is a list of lighthouses in Azerbaijan. Lighthouses Se ..., Azerbaijan {{disambiguation, given name Armenian masculine given names Georgian masculine given names Persian masculine given names ...
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