ARMENIAN LANGUAGE AND
EDUCATION
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From
St. Mesrob to St. Nerses Shnorhali to St.
Gregory of Nareg, they were all creative
writers or scholars. In fact, little is known
about the purely religious achievements that
merited their beatification.
Although Armenian institutions of higher education were primarily monasteries and religious centers, "earthly" subjects such as natural sciences, medicine, music or astronomy were not excluded from the curriculum. The legendary David the Invincible (6th-7th) and his works in philosophy and rhetoric were taught throughout the region. In the 7th century, Anania Shiragatsi wrote about nature and mathematics as well as planetary motion and the periodicity of lunar and solar eclipses. Accepting the roundness of the earth, Shiragatsi speculated that the sun illuminates both spheres of the earth and the moon, and the moon has no natural light but reflects the light of the sun.
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In
the 11th
century, Hovhannes Sargavak, a cleric,
pioneered poetry with secular themes and wrote
an exceptionally interesting book on
mathematics, entitled
Polygonal Numbers.
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Throughout
the centuries, one of the most consistent
characteristics of the Armenian tradition in
the field of learning has been the vigilance of
the scholars, who were primarily clerics, to
keep pace with the advances and the changes
taking place in the world, borrowing
unabashedly from sources in other languages. In
return, they made their contribution to the
enhancement and development in the fields of
literature, philosophy, medicine and astronomy.
The fragmented documentation that survives
today, in spite of the continued destruction
and pillage by the Persians, Byzantines,
Seljuks, Mongols and particularly the Turks, is
a testimony to their contribution.
The Genocide of 1915, perpetrated by the Turks, put an end to this tradition. Perhaps Gomidas Vartabed (1869-1939), whose immeasurable contributions in the field of Armenian folkloric and secular music is unparalleled, was the last in a long lineage of Vartabeds whose impact on the cultural patrimony of Armenians cannot be emphasized enough.
Language is the blood of the soul into which
thoughts run and out of which they grow.
Oliver
Wendell Holmes