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 Armenia| Facts & Figures |
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| President:
Serzh Sarkisyan (2008) Prime
Minister: Tigran Sarkisyan (2008) Land
area: 11,506 sq mi (29,800 sq km); total area: 11,506 sq mi
(29,800 sq km) Population (2012 est.):
2,970,495 (growth rate: 0.11%); birth rate: 12.9/1000; infant
mortality rate: 18.21/1000; life expectancy: 73.49; density per sq mi:
258
Capital and largest city (2009 est.):
Yerevan, 1,100,000 (metro. area), 1,267,600
(city proper) Other large cities:
Vanadzor, 147,400; Gyumri (Leninakan), 125,300; Abovian, 59,300 Monetary unit: Dram More Facts & Figures |
GeographyArmenia is located in the southern Caucasus and
is the smallest of the former Soviet republics. It is bounded by Georgia
on the north, Azerbaijan on the east, Iran on the south, and Turkey on the
west. Contemporary Armenia is a fraction of the size of ancient Armenia. A
land of rugged mountains and extinct volcanoes, its highest point is Mount
Aragats, 13,435 ft (4,095 m).
GovernmentRepublic.
HistoryOne of the world's oldest civilizations, Armenia
once included Mount Ararat, which biblical tradition identifies as the
mountain that Noah's ark rested on after the flood. It was the first
country in the world to officially embrace Christianity as its religion
(c.
A.D.
300).
In the 6th century
B.C.
, Armenians settled in the kingdom of Urartu (the
Assyrian name for Ararat), which was in decline. Under Tigrane the Great
(fl. 95–55
B.C.
) the Armenian empire reached
its height and became one of the most powerful in Asia, stretching from
the Caspian to the Mediterranean seas. Throughout most of its long
history, however, Armenia has been invaded by a succession of empires.
Under constant threat of domination by foreign forces, Armenians became
both cosmopolitan as well as fierce protectors of their culture and
tradition.
Over the centuries Armenia was conquered by
Greeks, Romans, Persians, Byzantines, Mongols, Arabs, Ottoman Turks, and
Russians. From the 16th century through World War I, major portions of
Armenia were controlled by their most brutal invader, the Ottoman Turks,
under whom the Armenians experienced discrimination, religious
persecution, heavy taxation, and armed attacks. In response to Armenian
nationalist stirrings, the Turks massacred thousands of Armenians in 1894
and 1896. The most horrific massacre took place in April 1915 during World
War I, when the Turks ordered the deportation of the Armenian population
to the deserts of Syria and Mesopotamia. According to the majority of
historians, between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians were murdered or
died of starvation. The Armenian massacre is considered the first genocide
of the 20th century. Turkey denies that a genocide took place and claims
that a much smaller number died in a civil war.
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