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Long Tulip Silver Earrings and Ring
Set of Large Earrings and Adjustable Ring Sterling Silver 925 made in form of Tulip, Ethnic Style, Statement Dangle Long Earrings, Party Earrings, Armenian Handmade Jewelry.
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White Armenian Alphabet Silk Scarf
Size: 75x75cm
50 grams:Silk
$15.00 -
Decorative Ceramic Cheeseboard
Decorative ceramic tableware is entirely handmade, made of clay and illustrated glaze.
$110.00Decorative Ceramic Cheeseboard
$110.00 -
Sterling Silver Wheel of Eternity Necklace
Pendant Wheel of Eternity Sterling Silver 925, Armenian Symbol, Silver chain as a gift – Armenian Jewelry, Gift for Her, Gift for Him ???????
$28.00 – $41.00 -
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“Poppy” Folder
Handmade Folder for papers/MacBook/notes
$40.00 Buy 2 to get 10% discount“Poppy” Folder
$40.00 Buy 2 to get 10% discount -
“Mothers” Diary
Diary «Mothers», by Dilakian Brothers
300 pages, 3 illustations inside
$14.99 Buy 5 to get 10% discount“Mothers” Diary
$14.99 Buy 5 to get 10% discount -
Cigar 20th Anniversary
4 3/4 x 54 – Box of 20
The culmination of more than two decades of Garo Cigars’ passion and experience in the cigar manufacturing.
$250.00Cigar 20th Anniversary
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“Trchnagir” Alphabet
The Armenian alphabet was created in 405 AD.
One of the greatest marks of the Armenian identity is the Armenian language. The exact origins of the Armenian language, however, are a little bit obscure. Such is the case with many ancient languages. Serious scholarship starting from the 19th century has placed Armenian among the wider family of Indo-European languages, although it forms its own separate branch within that group. So the language does not have any close relatives today, even Indo-European ones, such as Spanish and Portuguese or Russian and Polish might be considered.Armenian is also unique in its writing system. The Armenians use their own alphabet which was, by tradition, created following the studies and meditations of a monk, Mesrop Mashtots, in the early 5th century AD. Christianity had already been accepted as the national religion for a hundred years in Armenia, but the Bible was not yet available in the native language. The tradition goes that the main motivation to come up with a separate Armenian alphabet was in order to translate the Bible in such a way that would be accessible and suitable for the language and the people.
Mesrop Mashtots – who has since been venerated as a saint, as the patron of teaching and learning for Armenians – accomplished the task in the year 405 AD, thus setting the stage for a rich trove of works of religion and history, science and philosophy, illuminated manuscripts, and published books in the millennium and a half that followed, continuing on today. A major road in the capital of Armenia, Yerevan, is named for Mashtots, and one end of it is the apt location for the Matenadaran, the national repository of manuscripts which also functions as a research institute and museum.
$110.00“Trchnagir” Alphabet
$110.00