
Armenian
Studies
Report on Activities 2000
Introduction
Degrees and Courses
Main Special Events and New Developments
Visit to the Armenian Studies Program of H.B. Mesrob
II, Patriarch of Istanbul and all Turkey
Visit to the University by H.E. Robert Kocharian,
President of the Republic of Armenia
His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians
receives Armenian Studies Program
Armenian Assembly of America Delegation Visits
Patriarch Torkom II of Jerusalem Lectures to Full
House at HU
Symposium on Armenian Pilgrimage to the Holy Land
Publication of Jerusalem Conference Proceedings
Hebrew University Expedition to Armenia: Major Discoveries
Hebrew University Agreement with Yerevan State University
New Fellowships
MA Program in Armenian and Religious Studies
Publication Series
New
Books Published by Armenian Studies Faculty
Publication
of Student Research Papers
Visiting
Research Student from Erevan
Appointments and Honors
Armenian Students Organization
Courses taught at the Armenian Studies Program
Courses
offered in the academic year 1999-2000 included:
Courses
being offered in the academic year 2000-2001 include:
Courses
to be Offered in 2001-2002 (incomplete and tentative list)
Field Trip
Graduate Students and Research Visitors
Library
Student Activities, Outreach and Community-Orientated
Program
Armenian Studies Web Page and Press Releases
Research
Armenians
in the Holy Land and the Georgians in the Holy Land
Biblical
Traditions in Armenian Culture and Related Topics
Armenian
Literature and Thought:
Publications
and Works in Press
Books
Articles
Friends of
the Armenian Studies Program
An active program in Armenian Studies has existed
at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem since 1967 and in 1998-1999 we
celebrated 30 Years of Armenian Studies at the Hebrew University. Thus,
the University has recognized the significant role of the Armenians
in Israel's complex society and in the Holy Land over more than three
decades.
In recent years the department of Armenian Studies entered a
period of unprecedented and dynamic growth. Ever closer relationships
with the Republic of Armenia and its academic institutions have been
created. A recent agreement between the Armenian Patriarchate and the
University encourages newly ordained clergy to continue their education
at the Hebrew University. Israeli students are exhibiting a new interest
in Armenian Studies. The number of students increases each year. The
Hebrew University has striven to respond to this growing demand with
the help and support of friends of Armenian Studies from all over the
world The program has been enriched and now a broad range of courses
is offered, reflecting the wealth and variety of Armenian history, language
and culture.
During the past year there have been a number of very significant
developments marking the growing maturity of the Armenian Studies Program.
These are reported below.
Armenian Studies forms part of the Department of Indian, Iranian
and Armenian Studies in
the University's Institute of Asian and African Studies. Georgian Studies
are also taught in conjunction with the Armenian program. The programs
of the Hebrew University and its Rothberg School for overseas students
are fully accredited.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem offers degree courses in Armenian
Studies at the Bachelor's, Master's and the Doctoral levels. Undergraduate
and graduate students also come for one year periods of study as part
of their degree programs at other institutions. Post-doctoral students
often spend a research year in the Department.
The faculty members directly involved in Armenian and Georgian
Studies instruction this year are:
1
Michael E. Stone, Ph.D. (Harvard),
D.Litt. (Melbourne), Armenian Studies (Professor)
2
Roberta Ervine, Ph.D. (Columbia)
Armenian Studies (Lecturer)
3
Konstantine Lerner, Dr.Sc.
(Tbilisi) Georgian Studies (Associate Professor)
4
Nira Stone, Ph.D. (Hebrew
University) Armenian Art (Adjunct Lecturer)
Many other faculty members offer courses relevant
to Armenian Studies in associated fields, such as History, Middle East
Studies, Central Asian Studies, Turkish Studies, Iranian Studies, Classical
Studies, Comparative Religion and Christian Studies.
The dynamic development reported on last year has
accelerated and numerous new initiatives have characterized the Armenian
Studies Program during the period covered by this report. The highlights
are given here providing an overview of these new developments. Further
details of these events and developments may be viewed on the Armenian
Studies Program Web Site at http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia
On January 17, 2000 an excited group of Armenian
Studies students and faculty as well as members of the Armenian Students
Organization welcomed our alumnus, His Beatitude Mesrob II to the Armenian
Studies Program. His Beatitude wished to meet with them informally,
recalling his own days as a student at the Hebrew University. As a young
priest, Patriarch Mesrob studied in the Hebrew University's Armenian
Studies Program under Professor Michael Stone. He was accompanied by
Bishop Aram Ateshian. It was a a fascinating and moving meeting and
a frank and lively discussion of many aspects of Armenian life and studies
took place.
Mr. Robert Kocharian visited the Hebrew University
at his own request on January 19, 2000. Accompanied by ministers, including
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, he was welcomed to a special gathering
by the Rector, Professor Menahem Ben-Sason. Both the President and the
Rector spoke of the role played by the Armenian Studies Program in building
bridges between the two countries and peoples. Professor Michael Stone
spoke on behalf of the Program.
His Holiness, during his Christmas pilgrimage visit
to the Holy Land, received the students and faculty of the Armenian
Studies Program. His Holiness spoke in praise of the work of the Armenian
Studies program, offering the help and support of the Catholicosate
for the forwarding of Armenian Studies. The faculty and students were
moved by His Holiness' words, and a very active conversation ensued,
which was only cut off by the pressures of other appointments.
A delegation of six American Armenian leaders paid
a visit to the Hebrew University's Armenian Studies Program on February
23, 2000. The delegation was composed of Mr. Ross Vartian, Executive
Director of the Armenian Assembly of America; Mrs. Annie Totah, Armenian
Assembly of America Board Member;
Mr. Robert Kaloostian, Board Member and Counsel to the Board
of Trustees of the Armenian Assembly of America;
Mr. Hrair Hovnanian, a founding benefactor of the Armenian Assembly
of America, Mr. Van Krikorian , Chairman of the Armenian Assembly of
America's Board of Directors; and Ms. Carolyn Mugar, President of the
Armenian Assembly of America.
The delegation was received by Hebrew University
President Menahem Magidor and met with the staff and students of the
Armenian Studies program. The discussion was lively and wide-ranging,
with issues of the study of the Armenian Genocide taking a prominent
place. Stress was also put on the vital importance of a profound knowledge
of the spiritual, artistic, literary and intellectual creativity of
the Armenian people.
Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch of
Jerusalem lectured to a full hall at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
on February 29, 2000. The Patriarch lectured on "The Genius of
Komitas Vartabed through his Songs." The lecture brought a striking
appreciation of Komitas' musical genius to the audience mainly drawn
from the Armenian Studies Program and the Department of Musicology.
Following the lecture, Patriarch Torkom was guest
of honor at a dinner hosted by the Armenian Studies Program. Guests
included President of the Hebrew University Professor Menahem Magidor,
Dean of the Faculty of Humanities Professor Yair Zakovitch, H.E. Mr.
Tsolag Momjian, Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia; Professors
Amnon Shiloach and Roger Kamien of the Musicology Department; and Professor
Michael Stone and Dr. Nira Stone of Armenian Studies. The Patriarch
presented the Armenian Studies program with a number of books on Armenian
music including some of his own arrangements of Komitas' music.
On April 13-14 the Armenian Studies Program of the
Hebrew University conducted a Symposium on "Armenian Pilgrimage
to the Holy Land." The Symposium was the final event of the year-long
celebration of 30 Years of Armenian Studies at the Hebrew University
that started in April 1999. The Guest of Honor was H.B. Patriarch Mesrob
II of Istanbul. The Symposium was organized jointly with the Ben-Tzvi
Institute.
During the two days, an audience of between 40 and
60 persons heard lectures on a variety of aspects of the Armenian presence
in the Holy Land.
At the opening session of the Conference Patriarch
Mesrob read a Gontak, a Patriarchal Letter of Blessing for Professor
Michael Stone and the Armenian Studies program. In his letter, Patriarch
Mesrob congratulated Professor Stone and the Hebrew University for the
high standard of and devotion given to the Armenian Studies program.
He noted the ancient and sustained relationship between the Armenian
people and the Holy Land and the appropriateness of the existence of
a University-level Armenian Studies program alongside the great institutions
of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
As these lines are being written, the lectures given
at the Thirty Years of Armenian Studies Conferences in 1999 and 2000
are being edited as a single volume. This book will appear in the newly-founded
Hebrew University Armenian Studies publication series and will form
the most detailed work in English on the Armenians in Jerusalem and
the Holy Land.
In October an expedition of the Hebrew University
Armenian Studies Program surveyed an ancient Jewish cemetery in Armenia.
Director Professor Michael Stone was joined by archeologist David Amit
and by Armenian Studies graduate student and professional photographer
Yoav Loeff. In Yerevan they also met Sergio LaPorta, Harvard Armenian
Studies doctoral student, Visiting Armenian Studies student in Jerusalem
(1999-2000).
The cemetery is in the region of Vayots Dzor, south
and west of Erevan. Over 40 tombstones were found there containing 16
inscriptions in Hebrew and Aramaic. The find is unprecedented and there
is no information in known historical sources about a Jewish minority
in Armenia in the Middle Ages. The inscriptions are dated to the late
thirteenth and early fourteenth century. The Hebrew University group
worked closely with the Primate of the Diocese of Siwniq, Bishop Abraham
Mkrtchyan, who strongly supports the study of the unusual and very important
find and provided much assistance to the scholars and archeologists.
This discovery provides major new data for both Armenian
and Jewish history and the existence of this Jewish community, now indubitable,
will change important aspects of our understanding of the period. At
that time Vayots Dzor and, indeed, the whole Siwniq region, was an important
center of Armenian intellectual life, and home of several of Armenia's
famous "University Monasteries", such as Gladzor and Tat'ew.
The discovery has received considerable publicity
because of its sensational character. The HU Armenian Studies team will
return to Eghegis in May 2001 to continue research into the Jewish settlements
in the Siwnik region.
An agreement was drawn up between the
Armenian Studies Program of the Hebrew University, the Institute
of Archeology of the National Armenian Academy of Sciences headed
by Prof. Aram Kalantarian, and the Diocese of Siwniq of the Armenian
Apostolic Church. This agreement provides for the continued study of
this and similar sites, for joint publication of the results of the
research, and for general scholarly cooperation.
The work was supported primarily by the Ben Tzvi
Institute and support was also received from the Israel Antiquities
Authority and The Foundation for Biblical Archeology. Bishop Abraham
Mkrtchyan of Siwniq provided lodgings, logistical support and other
assistance.
During Professor Michael Stone's visit to Armenia
in October an Agreement of Cooperation was signed between the Hebrew
University and Yerevan State University. Professor Stone carried the
agreement, signed by YSU Rector Radek Mardirossian back to Jerusalem.
On January 11, 2001 the Agreement of Cooperation was signed in Jerusalem
by HU Rector Menahem Ben Sason. Professor Stone will take it back to
Armenia with him in May.
As part of this agreement, the Armenian Studies Program
has arranged for the presentation to YSU on an important series of Armenological
books. In return, gifts of Armenian books, particularly in the field
of modern literature, have arrived in Jerusalem from Yerevan State University.
Cooperation in the exchange of students and faculty, joint research
and mutual assistance is foreseen. This is a milestone agreement for
the two institutions which have already cooperated in the past.
Two very significant fellowship
gifts were received this year.
The Krikor Momjian Fellowships
were donated by Jerusalem's Momjian Family, Tsolag and Allegra Momjian,
and their children, Hagop, Albert and Monique in honour of their father
and grandfather Krikor Momjian. These fellowships are for graduates
of St. Tarkmanchatz High School to study at Hebrew University. All recipients
will be required to take six year-hours of Armenian Studies as part
of their university training.
The Jack Rudin Fellowships were donated by Mr. Jack
Rudin of New York to benefit priests graduating from the St. Jaranakvorats
Seminary of the Armenian Patriarchate pursuing Armenian Studies at the
Hebrew University. They are designed to strengthen the intellectual
training of these young servants of the Armenian Church, and to do so
in a highly qualified and broad academic environment.
The two fellowships were inaugurated
at a luncheon given on December 14 by Hebrew University President Menahem
Magidor in honour of the donors. The luncheon was attended, among others,
by His Beatitude Patriarch Torkom II of Jerusalem, the Principal and
Vice-Principal of St. Tarkmanchatz High School and Professor Maureena
Fritz representing Mr. Jack Rudin.
These are important building blocks in the development
of our program, and will help achieve its goals of training students
to the highest level of excellence in the study of the intellectual,
historical and artistic heritage of the Armenian people.
The establishment of this program has commenced its
way through the process of academic approval. Until now, students wishing
to do a Master's degree in Armenian Studies had to work either as tutorial
students or in the Religious Studies Department, specializing in Armenian
Studies. The establishment of this program is an important step for
the future of the Armenian Studies Program. It is hoped that the process
of approval will be finished this year.
As of November, 1999, the Armenian Studies Program
has its own publication series. We have taken over the former University
of Pennsylvania Armenian Texts and Studies Series, which was edited
by Professor M.E. Stone. He will continue as Editor of the Hebrew University
Armenian Studies which will be published by the distinguished Belgian
house of Peeters Publishers in Leuven. The Editorial Board includes
Professors Nina Garsoïan (emerita, Columbia University), Robert
Kraft (University of Pennsylvania), Robert Thomson (Oxford University)
and M.E. Stone.
The following volumes have
been approved for publication and are in various stages of production:
Christina Maranci, Medieval
Armenian Architecture Constructions of Race and Nature (currently
in proof)
Michael E. Stone, Concordance
to the Armenian Apocryphal Adam Books, 2 (currently in press)
Robert Thomson, The Shorter
Socrates Scholasticus, Translation and Notes (provisional title;
approved for publication).
Nira Stone, Roberta Ervine
and Michael Stone (eds.),The Armenians in Jerusalem and the Holy
Land (provisional title; now being edited).
PSEUDO-ZENO: ANONYMOUS PHILOSOPHICAL TREATIES
by M.E. Stone and M.E. Shirinian
Translated with the collaboration
of J. Mansfeld and D.T. Runia
ISBN 90-04-11524-2
The ANONYMOUS PHILOSOPHICAL TREATISE, preserved only
in Armenian, is here presented to the western world for the first time.
It is a philosophical treatise of the Late Antique period, written in
about the sixth century C.E. The author was a Christian, but he utilized
pagan philosophical sources. This this is one of the latest writing
of ancient philosophy, and as such is of very considerable interest
and importance.
LITERATURE ON ADAM AND EVE:
COLLECTED ESSAYS
edited by Gary Anderson, Michael
Stone and Johannes Tromp
ISBN 90-04-11600-1
This book contains two substantial
contributions by Michael Stone of Armenological interest:
The Legend of the Cheirograph
of Adam, pp. 149-166
Selections from ON THE CREATION OF THE WORLD by Yovhannes
T'lkuranc'i: Translation and Commentary, pp. 167-214.
THE ARMENIAN FRAGMENTS OF EPIPHANIUS' ON WEIGHTS AND MEASURES
edited, with translation and
introduction by Michael E. Stone and Roberta R. Ervine
This work, being published
by Peeters of Belgium in the distinguished series Corpus Scriptorum
Christianorum Orientalium, gathers together the previously unrecognized
fragments of this important ancient work. It provides texts in Classical
Armenian, an English translation, and extensive introduction.
The full bibliographies of
the Armenian Studies Faculty including their articles, are found on
the Jerusalem Armenian Studies Web Site: http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia
Three articles emerging from research done
in the Seminar on Armenian Inscriptions given two years ago have appeared
in print. They were written by Prof. M.E. Stone, with visiting scholar
Dr. Th.M. van Lint (Leiden) and Julia Nazarjan, a student in the Armenian
Studies Program.
Four articles prepared by the students
participating in Prof. M.E. Stone's Seminar on Armenian Manuscripts
in the academic year 1998-1999 will be published in the distinguished
orientalist journal Le Muséon. They form a group of mature
scholarly articles presenting previously unpublished texts from Armenian
manuscripts and are currently in press.
Translations of three poems by the medieval Armenian
poet Frik, based on work in Professor Stone's seminar in Medieval Armenian
last year, have been prepared by him and Fr. Pakrad Bourjekian, probationary
MA student in Armenian Studies. They have been accepted for publication
in Ararat (published by the AGBU).
This unique integration of teaching with research
and publication opens exciting vistas for our students, giving them
hands-on experience and, at the same time, making a lasting contribution
to the study of Armenian culture. It is particularly creative and quite
unparalleled in any other Armenian Studies Program. These articles are
accepted by the editors of the relevant journals in competition with
articles by senior scholars from all over the world which demonstrates
the high standard of our students and their academic achievements.
For the second year running, an Armenian Studies
candidate was awarded the prestigious Lady Davis Fellowship. Mikayel
Arakelian, doctoral candidate at the Institute of Art History of the
National Armenian Academy of Sciences arrived in November to work in
Jerusalem with the Armenian Studies Program faculty. Mikayel is studying
an Armenian painter of the seventeenth century, Mesrop Khizantsi, who
worked both in Armenia and in New Julfa in Iran. Last year's Lady Davis
Fellow was Sergio LaPorta of Harvard University, who is currently finalizing
his dissertation for submission.
Prof. M.E. Stone resigned his position as President
of the Association Internationale des Etudes Arméniennes. He
had held this position since the AIEA's foundation in 1981. He was elected
as Honourary Life President of the AIEA.
Armenian Studies student Deacon Haig Kazazian was
ordained a celibate priest of the Armenian Church in August. He received
the ecclesiastical name of Father Norayr and continues his studies in
the Armenian Studies Program.
The Armenian Studies Program has given its support
to the establishment of the Armenian Students Organization, chaired
by Bedross Der Matossian. We also gave them space on our home-page until
they get their own.
Modern West Armenian for Beginners
Dr. R. Ervine
The Art of Armenia and the
Christian Orient Dr. N. Stone
The Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire: the Early Period Dr. R. Ervine
Armenian Hagiography (Lives
of Saints) Dr. R. Ervine
The History of Sebeos
and Against the Heresies of Eznik Prof. M.E. Stone
Texts in Medieval Armenian
Prof. M.E. Stone
University Monasteries of
Armenia in the Middle Ages Mr. S. LaPorta and Prof. M.E. Stone
Advanced Seminar in Armenian
Studies Prof. M.E. Stone
Elementary Georgian Prof.
K. Lerner
Lives of Georgian Saints from
the 5-10th Century Prof. K. Lerner
History of the Jewish Community
of Georgia Prof. K. Lerner
Elementary Ancient Armenian
Prof. M.E. Stone
The Armenians in the Modern
Period (18-20th Centuries) Dr. R. Ervine
Select Problems in Armenian
Art Dr. N. Stone
Medieval Armenian Poetry
Prof. M.E. Stone
Advanced Modern Armenian
Dr. R. Ervine
Modern Armenian: Reading and
Composition Dr. R. Ervine
Armenian Institutions and
Visitors in the Holy Land up to the Crusades Prof. M.E. Stone
Pilgrimage in the Armenian
Tradition Dr. R. Ervine
Literature of Questions and
Answers in the Armenian Tradition Dr. R. Ervine
Advanced Georgian Prof.
K. Lerner
Introduction to the History
of Georgia Prof. K. Lerner
Jewish Folklore as a Source
for Georgian Historiography Professor K. Lerner
Armenian Inscriptions from
Israel and Armenia Prof. M.E. Stone
Adam and Eve in the Armenian
Tradition Prof. M.E. Stone
Christianity in Armenia: Origins
and Development Dr. S. LaPorta
Armenology: Recent Directions
of Research Dr. S. LaPorta
"The Book of Questions"
of Gregory of T'atew Dr. S. LaPorta
Eastern Monasticism Dr.
S. LaPorta
History of Armenian from the
Beginnings to the Fifteenth Century Dr. S. LaPorta
Armenian Art Dr. N. Stone
Field trip: In June, under the guidance
of Deacon Haig Kazazian a group from the Armenian Studies Program visited
the famous "Bird Mosaic" in the Musrara Quarter of Jerusalem.
Under the guidance of Lecturer in Armenian Art, Dr. Nira Stone, they
studied this most beautiful mosaic which bears an Armenian Inscription.
At present the following persons
are writing doctoral theses:
Noune Poghossian, On the
Liturgical Music of the Armenian Church of Jerusalem
Marlen Eordigian, On the
Relationship between the State of Israel and the Armenian Patriarchate
1948-1967.
Julia Nazarjian continues work towards her Master's
degree, and Yoav Loeff and Fr. Pakrad Bourjekian are probationary Master's
students in Armenian Studies. In addition, Fr. Emmanuel Aljanian is
working for an MA in Religious Studies through the Rothberg School with
a concentration in Armenian Studies.
In Spring 1999 Dr. Bert Vaux of the Department of
Linguistics, Harvard University, an expert on Armenian dialects, did
an initial probe into the dialects of the Armenians of the Holy Land.
We hope that this will lead to a recording of these dialects of Armenian,
one of which is threatened with extinction. Agreement has been reached
in principle for this to be a joint project of the Israel Academy of
Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia and the carrying
out of the project is foreseen for summer of 2001.
Further development of library
resources has gone on, though much remains to be done. Important books have been received under
the exchange agreement with the Library of Congress. A number of gifts
of books were received from individuals and scholars including Yerevan
State University, H.B. Patriarch Torkom II of Jerusalem, H.B. Patriarch
Mesrob II of Istanbul, Professor Dennis Papazian and the Armenian Studies
Center at the University of Michigan (Dearborn); Very Rev. Fr. Krikor
Maksoudian; and some others. A complete run of the Haygazian Armenological
Review was presented to the Library. The Armenian Studies Program
is providing a student to assist in the cataloguing of works in Armenian,
in order to get them onto the shelves more efficiently. The process
of acquistion of books continues, but it is limited by budgetary considerations.
The matter of library is particularly pressing since the Gulbenkian
Library of the Armenian Patriarchate is closed for renovation and will
remain closed for some time and every book that is added to the collection
benefits our students.
Public Lecture Series is sponsored by the Department
in English, Armenian and Hebrew.
In 2000 held the following
lectures:
January 18, 2000: H.E. Robert
Kocharian, President of the Republic of Armenia
February 29, 2000: H.B. Torkom Manoogian, Armenian
Patriarch of Jerusalem on "Komitas Vartabed's Genius through His
Songs".
In April and early May the
ASO organized activities relating to the Genocide.
The Internet Site, established by the Department
in order to present its own work, and also the riches of Armenian culture,
has been completely restructured. The Webmistress is Dr. A. Pinnick.
It is available at: http://atar.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia. The Internet
Site is a rich source of historical and cultural information. Special
pages are devoted to the ancient Armenian mosaics discovered in Jerusalem,
Armenian Art (under development) and other similar topics. Full information
about the Armenian Program and its activities is posted there and all
press releases and other information.
We continue to make the work of the Armenian Studies
Program known through a series of Press Releases in English and Armenian
which have had good coverage in the Armenian
Officially unconnected with
the Department is the organization of an Armenian Students Club,
currently underway.
The research carried out in
the Department rich and varied.
The great excitement this
year has been the excavation of the Jewish Cemetery in Eghegis
Armenia, which is presented above. This is turning in to a major
project. The work has been particularly supported by the Ben Tzvi Institute
for the Study of Oriental Jewish Communities and also by the Israel
Antiquities Authority, the Foundation for Biblical Archeology and, of
course, the Hebrew Univesity of Jerusalem.
The major funded project is
headed by Professor M.E. Stone and funded by the Israel Science Foundation.
It is on The Stories of Adam and Eve in Armenian Culture. It
is an attempt to trace the way these stories functioned in Armenian
culture throughout the ages.
Other main focuses of research of members of the Department
are the following:
M.E. Stone, Armenian Inscriptions
in the Holy Land. Professor Stone continues his publications on
this field. A new article has been written in this field.
R.R. Ervine and M.E. Stone,
The Inscriptions and Dedications of the Church of the Holy Archangels
in Jerusalem. One article has been written and a second one is underway.
R. Ervine, Armenian Pilgrimage
to Jerusalem in the 18th Century. Dr. Ervine has a number of other
researches underway relating to Armenians in Jerusalem and the Holy
Land and to the Armenian Patriarchate, including the publication of
the Diary of Patriarch Minas Amtec'i.
K. Lerner: Problems of
Semitic Tradition in Ancient Georgian Culture. Dr. Lerner's monographic
study on the early Georgian Judaeo-Christian community is currently
in press. He continues with further project on this theme.
M.E. Stone, Further Armenian
Apocryphal Texts from Manuscripts; Concordances of the Armenian Apocryphal
Adam Literature.
N. Stone, The Figure of
Satan in Armenian Art
N. Stone, Apocryphal Stories
reflected in Armenian Manuscript Illuminations
N. Stone, The Iconography
of Paradise in Byzantine and Armenian Art
M.E. Stone and N. Stone, The
Unpublished Armenian Manuscripts of the Chester Beatty Library.
M.E. Stone and R. Ervine,
The Armenian Fragments of Epiphanius de mensuris et ponderibus.
M.E. Stone and M.E. Shirinian,
Pseudo-Zeno, An Untitled Treatise, edition, translation, commentary
and CD Rom.
R. Ervine, Vanakan Vardapet's
Questions relating to the Pentateuch
K. Lerner, The Social Status
of the Jewish Community in Georgia
K. Lerner, An Hypothesis
of the Typology of Language Movements
Full bibliographies of members
of the Armenian Studies Program, including journal articles not listed
here, are to be found on the Web Site: http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia
K. Lerner, The Conversion
of Kartli; Translation, Comments, Introductions and Indexes, is
in press in the Hebrew version at Magnes Press. The English version
will go do press shortly.
M.E. Stone and R. Ervine,
The Armenian Fragments of Epiphanius' "de mensuris et ponderibus"
Peeters: Leuven, 2001.
N. Stone, The Kaffa Lives
of the Desert Fathers: A Study in Armenian Manuscript Illumination,
CSCO, 566: Leuven: Peeters, 1997.
M.E. Stone (Editor-in-Chief)
with D. Kouymjian and H. Lehmann, Album of Armenian Paleography,
Aarhus University Press (in Press)
M.E. Stone and M.E. Shirinian,
Pseudo-Zeno: Untitled Treatise, Introduction, Critical Edition,
Translation, Commentary and Concordances, Brill: Leiden, 2000.
M.E. Stone and G.A. Anderson,
Studies in the Literature of Adam and Eve Brill, Leiden, 2000.
M.E. Stone, Adam's Contract
with Satan, Indiana University Press: Bloomington, (proofs are awaited).
R.R. Ervine, "Women Outside
the World: the Armenian Nuns of Jerusalem," Second International Conference on Christian Heritage in the Holy
Land, Jerusalem, July 2-6, 1996. (forthcoming in proceedings).
R.R. Ervine, "The Syrian
Orthodox Community of Jerusalem," Eretz, July 1998 (forthcoming)
K. Lerner, "Georgia,
Christian History", The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity,
ed. by Ken Parry, (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1999) 210-214.
K. Lerner, "The Social
Status of the Jewish Community in Ancient Georgia", Central
Asia and Caucasus 2, (Lulea, Sweden 1999), 206-210 (in Russian).
K. Lerner, "Towards the
Problem of the Transition from Aspectual to Tense-Aspectual System of
the Georgian Verb", Studies in Caucasian Linguistics, (Universiteit
Leiden, The Netherlands 1999), 45-50.
K. Lerner, "The Meaning
of the some Social Term in the Ancient Georgian - mciri, msxemi, ucxo,geri,
Georgian-Jewish Relations 1. Bulletin of the Kutaisi University
6, Kutaisi (1999), 43-52 ( in Georgian ).
K. Lerner, Review of Thomson Robert W., trans., "Rewritting
Caucasian History: The Mediaeval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian
Chronicles," Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies
9, (1999), 215-217.
K. Lerner, "Category
of "Comparison" from the Point of View of an Hypothesis of
Language Motion," Voprosy Iazykoznania, (1998) in press.
K. Lerner with Victor Kuperman,
"Towards the Formation of the Unified Paradigm of Degrees of Comparison:
the Synthetic Escalating Grades," Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung,
(1998) in press.
K. Lerner, "The Transition
from Aspectual to Tense-Aspectual System of the Georgian Verb,"
Societas Caucasiologia Europea, 8th Caucasian Colloquium,
Leiden 1996, in press.
K. Lerner, "The Conversion
of Kartli (Georgia)," Anatolian and Caucasian Studies, Cleveland
State University in press
M.E. Stone, The Legend of
the Cheirograph of Adam. Literature
on Adam and Eve: Collected Essays.
Eds. Gary Anderson, Michael Stone and Johannes Tromp. SVTP, 15. Leiden: Brill, 2000, 149-166.
M.E. Stone, Selections from
On the Creation of the World by Yovhanns Tlkuranci: Translation
and Commentary. Literature
on Adam and Eve: Collected Essays.
Eds. Gary Anderson, Michael Stone and Johannes Tromp. SVTP, 15. Leiden: Brill, 2000,
167-214.
M.E. Stone, Some Further
Armenian Angelological Texts, Gagik Sarkissian Festschrift (in
press).
M.E. Stone, The Mount of
the Transfiguration and Armenian Pilgrimage to the Galilee. Shoghakat
(in press).
M.E. Stone, The Armenian
Inscriptions, Report on Excavations of the Third Wall, ed. D.
Amit, and S. Wolf. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.
M.E. Stone, The Bones of
Adam and Eve, Nickelsberg FS Trinity Press International, 2000.
M.E. Stone, Another Manuscript of the Armenian Version
of the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, Revue des Etudes Arméniennes
in press.
M.E. Stone, The Reception of Jewish and Biblical
Traditions among the Armenians, From Ararat to Jerusalem: Montpellier
Conference Volume
M.E. Stone, A Reassessment
of the Bird and Eustathius Mosaics, Armenians in Jerusalem and the
Holy Land ed. R.R.
Ervine, M.E. Stone and N. Stone (Hebrew University Armenian Series)
in press.
Nira Stone, "From Sin
to Sainthood: The Story of a Pilgrim to Jerusalem," Armenians
in Jerusalem and the Holy Land ed. R.R. Ervine, M.E. Stone and N. Stone (Hebrew University
Armenian Series) in press.
Nira Stone, "The
Transfiguration in Armenian Art," Shoghagat (Armenian Patriarchate
of Istanbul) in press.
Members of the Department lectured at various international
scholarly gatherings, in Israel, in Europe and in Armenia.
More Information
Information on the Armenian program is available on the Web: http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia.
Additional information can be obtained from Professor Michael E. Stone,
Department of Indian, Iranian and Armenian Studies, Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Israel (stone@vms.huji.ac.il
-- Fax: +972-2-588 3584).
Admission information is available from The Admissions Office, Rothberg
School for Overseas Students, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt.
Scopus, Jerusalem, Israel or from The American Friends of the Hebrew
University, 11 East 69th Street, New York, NY 10021, USA.
This association of supporters of our work continues
to grow. Contact is maintained through regular mailing of news about
the Armenian Studies Program and of matters of Armenian interest in
Jerusalem. Members visiting Jerusalem are welcomed. We encourage you
to become a member and support our work. The achievements recorded in
this report are only possible with the support of our Friends.
Faculty of Humanities,
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem
91905, Israel
Fax: (972) 2 5883658
Web Site: http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~armenia
email: 30Years@h2.hum.huji.ac.il

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