Articles of interest in Aygezard
Verin Dvin (Armenian: Վերին Դվին; also, Aysori Dvin and Verkhniy Dvin) is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia located 30 kilometers south of Yerevan. The largest Assyrian community in Armenia is in Verin Dvin, where around 2,000 out of the 2…
Vardashen is a town in the Yerevan Province of Armenia.
Urtsadzor (Armenian: Ուրցաձոր, also Romanized as Urts’adzor and Urcadzor) is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia containing the former town of Chimankend.
Sis (Armenian: Սիս; formerly, Uliya Sarvanlar and Sarvanlar) is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
Pokr Vedi (Armenian: Փոքր Վեդի) is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
Nizami (Armenian: Նիզամի) is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia. The town is named for the poet Nizami Ganjevi.
Lusarat (Armenian: Լուսառատ; until 1968, Khor Virap or Shikhlar) is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia. It is situated adjacent to the Turkish-Armenian border and Khor Virap Monastery. In the village is a statue of an early 20th-century Arm…
Hnaberd (Armenian: Հնաբերդ), formerly known as Torpakhkala, is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
Goght (Armenian: Գողթ; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper-Azat River. It is known from 13th-century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading …
Getazat (Armenian: Գետազատ; also, Getashen; until 1948, Agdzhakishlag and Aghjaghshlagh) is a small town in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
Dvin (Armenian: Դվին; also Nizhniy Dvin, Nerkin Dvin, and Dvin Armyanskiy) is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia. It is located near the ruins of the ancient city of Dvin.
Dimitrov (Armenian: Դիմիտրով; until 1949, Ghuylasar Nerkin) is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia. The town in named in honor of Bulgarian Communist leader, Georgi Dimitrov. The town is mainly inhabited by Armenians and Assyrians.
Aygezard (Armenian: Այգեզարդ; formerly, Aygedzor, Anastasavan, and Dargalu) is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
Erevan (Template:Lang-hy Erevan, Dzhafarapat) is a village in the Ararat province of Armenia. It has been absorbed by modern-day Yerevan and actually sits within the city limits. Located in the village is a Turkmen funerary monument built in 1413.
Ararat (Armenian: Արարատ; formerly, Davalinskiy Tsemzavod) is a major village in the Ararat Province of Armenia. It hosted to the first CYMA – Canadian Youth Mission to Armenia led by Ronald Alepian in 1993. The village is home to the Vazgen Sargsya…
Araks (Armenian: Արաքս) known as Nerkin Karkhun and Sharifabad until 1946, is a village in the eastern part of the Armavir Province of Armenia.
Artashat City Stadium (Armenian: Արտաշատի քաաղաքային մարզադաշտ) is a multipurpose stadium in Artashat, Armenia, mostly used for football games and local events of Athletics. It was opened in 1960 and has a capacity of 5,000 spectators. It served as …
Vostan (Armenian: Ոստան; until 1945, Bedzhazlu and Bekjivazlu) is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia.
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