Yerevan History Museum
The Yerevan History Museum (Armenian: Երևանի Պատմության Թանգարան (Yerevani Patmut'yan T'angaran)) is the history museum of Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia. The museum was founded in 1931 as the Communal Museum.
Oshakan (Օշական) is a major village in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia located 8 kilometers southwest from Ashtarak.
Population: 4,768
Latitude: 40° 15' 52.56" N
Longitude: 44° 18' 52.42" E
The Yerevan History Museum (Armenian: Երևանի Պատմության Թանգարան (Yerevani Patmut'yan T'angaran)) is the history museum of Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia. The museum was founded in 1931 as the Communal Museum.
The Aram Khachaturian House-Museum (Armenian: Արամ Խաչատրյանի Տուն-Թանգարան) opened in Yerevan, Armenia in 1982 and is devoted to the exhibition of the Armenian composer’s personal artifacts, as well as to the research and study of his creative outp…
Economy and Values Research Center (Armenian: «Տնտեսություն և արժեքներ» հետազոտական կենտրոն, Russian: Исследовательский центр "Экономика и ценности") is EV Consulting's research arm focused on studying and promoting competitiveness agenda, educating…
Zvartnots (Armenian: Զվարթնոց, translit.: J̌vart’noc’, meaning celestial angels) is a town located in the Armenian province of Armavir, about 10 km west from Yerevan, approximately half way to Ejmiatsin.
National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia is a state university in Yerevan, Armenia.
The Gabriel Sundukyan State Academic Theatre, founded in 1922 in Yerevan, is the oldest modern theatre in the Republic of Armenia.
The Red Bridge (Armenian: Կարմիր կամուրջ, Karmir kamurj; also known as the Old Bridge of Hrazdan; and also known as Bridge of Khoja Plav, Armenian: Խոջա Փլավի կամուրջ, Khoja Plavi kamurj) is a 17th-century bridge on the Hrazdan River, in Yerevan, Ar…
Rusal Armenal is a wholly owned subsidiary of Rusal which runs an aluminum foil mill in the Arabkir district of Yerevan, Armenia.
Parpi (Armenian: Փարպի) is a village in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. It is home to the 5th-century Tsiranavor Church, with 7th- and 10th-century modifications. There is also S. Grigor or S. Grigor Lusavorich (Gregory the Illuminator) Church a…
Musaler (Armenian: Մուսալեռ) is a village in the Armavir Province of Armenia. The town was renamed in 1972 after Musa Ler, the site of Armenian resistance in 1915.
Apaga (Armenian: Ապագա – meaning "future"; until 1935, Verin Turkmenlu) is a town in the Armavir Province of Armenia.
The 1679 Armenia earthquake (also called Yerevan earthquake or Garni earthquake) took place on June 4 in the Yerevan region of Armenia, then part of the Persian Empire).
Ohanavan (Armenian: Օհանավան, also Romanized as Oganavan) is a town in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. Ohanavan was resettled in 1828 by emigrants from Muş. On a nearby escarpment sits the 13th-century Hovhannavank Monastery. Both the town and t…
Metsamor Castle, is the remains of an old fortress located to the southwest of the Armenian village of Taronik, in the Armavir Province. It has been populated starting from the 5th millennium BC until the 18th century AD. The excavations of the tomb…
Kosh (Armenian: Կոշ, also Romanized as Koghes; formerly, Kvash) is a village in the Ashtarak district, Aragatsotn province, Armenia, about 18 km south-west of the district centre Ashtarak. The town is attested as Kvash in early Christian times. In t…
Kasagh (Armenian: Քասաղ) is a river in the west-central region of modern Armenia which flows north to south.
Arinj (Armenian: Առինջ), is a major village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located just north of Yerevan. The village is 41 km south of the provincial capital Hrazdan. As of the 2011 census, the population of the village is 6,220.
Aratashen (Armenian: Առատաշեն, also Romanized as Arratashen; also, Artashen; until 1978 Zeyva Hayi – meaning "Armenian Zeyva", Zeyva, Bol’shaya Zeyva and Nerkin-Zeyva) is a town in the Armavir Province of Armenia. A neolithic-chalcolithic tell is lo…