When: | Back to Calendar June 23, 2011 @ 8:30 PM | Where: | Merdinian Auditorium: |
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Categories: | Community Events |
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ARPA INSTITUTE
“
In Search of Armenian Cilicia”by
Prof. Richard Hovannisian,
AEF Professor of Modern Armenian History, UCLA
Thurs
day, June 23, 2011 @ 7:30PMMerdinian Auditorium: 13330 Riverside Dr. Sherman Oaks, CA 91403
Directions: On the 101 FY Exit on Woodman, Go North and Turn Right on Riverside Dr.
Abstract:
After traveling through much of historic Western Armenia four years ago, ProfessorHovannisian journeyed to Caesarea and Cilicia two years later, this time as historian-guide of a
tour organized by NAASR
. Beginning with the rock-hewn Orthodox cave churches ofCappadocia, the group traveled to Caesarea/Gesaria, Talas, Evereg-Fenese, Chomakhlu, and over
the Taurus Mountains to Hadjin, Sis, Adana, Tarsus, Mersin, Selefke, Dortyol, Antioch, Musa
Dagh, Killis, Aintab, Zeitun, and Marash. Scenes from these former vibrant centers of Armenian
life will be shown and discussed by Professor Hovannisian
.Cilicia:
During the time of the Crusaders, the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia was established andthrived for almost three centuries. The Seljuk Turkish invasions of Armenia were followed by an
exodus of Armenians migrating westward into the Byzantine Empire, and in 1080 Ruben, a
relative of the last king of Ani, founded in the heart of the Cilician Taurus a small principality
which gradually expanded into the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. This Christian state, surrounded
by Muslim states hostile to its existence, had a stormy history, giving valuable support to the
crusaders, and trading with the great commercial cities of Italy. Levon II, Leo the Great (r. 1187-
1219)), extended the kingdom beyond the Taurus Mountains and e