|
Search
-
1.
Ethnic Cleansing: Does International Law Still Matter?
-
Human Rights Violations and Aggression subject of Bishop Grigoris Balakian Annual Lecture
Diocesan Newsletter. London, 20 March 2024— Critical issues of ethnic cleansing and international law was the subject of the inaugural Bishop Grigoris Balakian Annual Lecture, a new initiative of the Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church of the United Kingdom and Ireland.
Two distinguished speakers, Lord Alton of Liverpool and Dr Arman Tatoyan delivered compelling lectures on the topic of “Ethnic Cleansing: Does International Law Still Matter?” at St. Yeghiche Armenian Church in London on March 19th.
In setting the larger context of the annual lecture, Dr Hratch Tchilingirian, in his opening remarks as chair of the proceedings, said: “We are here tonight because “‘Never Again’ is again, and again, and again… We are gathered because crimes against humanity and human rights abuses are being committed before our very eyes from the Middle East to the Caucasus, to Eastern Europe, Asia, Central America and many parts of the world.”
-
2.
Reverse Engineering: A State-Created Albanian Apostolic Church
-
... Jasmine Dum-Tragut. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2023: 581-609, https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110794687-019.
Abstract: This Chapter provides a brief historical overview of Christianity in Nagorno-Karabakh ...
-
3.
New hope for Turkey-Armenia to heal old wounds
-
New hope for Turkey-Armenia to heal old wounds
Two historical adversaries edge towards rapprochement with an eye on opening trade routes to Central Asia and beyond
by Jonathan Gorvett
Asia Times, January 13, 2022
"...Now though, “We’ve come 180 degrees,” Hratch Tchilingirian, from the Faculty of Oriental Studies at Oxford University, told Asia Times, “and there’s a completely different context.”
-
4.
Why It Matters
-
Why It Matters: Armenia defiant against Turkey, Azerbaijan despite shrinking borders
By Peter Aitken | Fox News November 15, 2021
... "I think we’re back to square one in the sense that what started as a conflict between self-determination of the Karabakh Armenians and the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan…30 years later, this conflict has not been resolved, even despite the war, even despite Azerbaijan saying there is no longer Karabakh conflict," Hratch Tchilingirian, a scholar and activist, told Fox News...
-
5.
Karabakh: The rich religious heritage in Artsakh from 4th to 21st century”
-
Lecture: "Christians in Karabakh. The rich religious heritage in Artsakh from 4th to 21st century”
Diocese of the Armenian Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland, 12 May 2021.
(video)
-
6.
The rich religious heritage in Artsakh from 4th to 21st century
-
Lecture: "Christians in Karabakh. The rich religious heritage in Artsakh from 4th to 21st century”
Diocese of the Armenian Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland, 12 May 2021.
(video)
-
7.
Nagorno-Karabakh: War Fails to Resolve the Conflict
-
Hratch Tchilingirian (2021) "Nagorno-Karabakh: War Fails to Resolve the Conflict", The Cambridge Journal of Law, Politics, and Art (CJLPA), Issue 1, Summer 2021: 398-400.
Imagine Boris Johnson ordering the bombing of Edinburgh because the Scots voted for independence in a referendum, or the British Government declaring war against Northern Ireland because it wished to join the Republic of Ireland. Unlike the political dialogue and the search for legal remedies that dissatisfied nations of the United Kingdom utilise to resolve their conflicts, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, who have been natives of the territory for centuries, have been the target of years of demonisation in Azerbaijan for voting for independence in 1991 as the Soviet Union was collapsing.
[download]
-
8.
Network Nation: Crisis
-
Network Nation, USC Institute of Armenian Studies, 14 May 2021
Covid and the Karabakh War impacted institutions in the Diaspora, and changed Homeland-Diaspora relations. Or did they? Are Armenians a Crisis Nation – mobilizing urgently but not altering fundamentally? Artsakh Foreign Minister David Babayan joins Dr. Laurie Brand, Dr. Vicken Cheterian, Dr. Shushan Karapetian and Dr. Hratch Tchilingirian to analyze short and long-term impact.
-
9.
Religion in a Non Religious War
-
"Religion in a Non-Religious War: The Conflict over Nagorno Karabakh"
Hratch Tchilingirian, University of Oxford
Strategic Note on Religion & Diplomacy (Georgetown University), May 2021, pp. 8-10.
The instrumentalization of religion—especially Islam by Azerbaijan in foreign relations—in the nonreligious Nagorno Karabakh conflict could further deepen the differences among the parties in the conflict and in the region, and make a final resolution and reconciliation even more difficult.
-
10.
Karabağ’da Hristiyanlık
-
Karabağ’da Hristiyanlık: Azerbaycan’ın Tarihi Yeniden Yazma Çabaları Yeni Değil
Hratch Tchilingirian, Oxford Üniversitesi
HyeTert.org, 9.12.2020 - Karabağ’da silahlı çatışma başlamadan çok daha önce, bölgenin gerçek tarihini ‘ispatlama’ çabaları, tarihçiler, siyaset bilimi uzmanları, arkeologlar, araştırmacılar ve bürokratlar için akademik ve bilimsel bir savaş alanıydı. Sovyet araştırma geleneği, özellikle de tarihin inşası süreci, oldukça yıkıcıydı ve hala da çatışan tarafların...
-
11.
Nagorno Karabakh, il mistero della chiesa scomparsa
-
Nagorno Karabakh, il mistero della chiesa scomparsa
Dopo la fine del conflitto, continua la preoccupazione degli armeni per la perdita del loro patrimonio culturale
ACI Stampa, 26 marzo 2021, Andrea Gagliarducci
... In questi giorni è stato pubblicato uno studio di Hratch Tchilingirian, che ha messo in luce come, da quando il Nagorno Karabakh è stato assegnato all’Azerbaijan divenuto una repubblica sovietica...
-
12.
Challenges Facing Christian Communities in Turkey Today
-
Lecture: Challenges Facing Christian Communities in Turkey Today
Broadcast on November 23, 2020, chaired by Robert R. Reilly, Director of Westminster Institute (Virginia, USA)
(video)
-
13.
Christianity in Karabakh: Azerbaijani Efforts At Rewriting History Are Not New
-
Christianity in Karabakh: Azerbaijani Efforts At Rewriting History Are Not New
Dr. Hratch Tchilingirian, Oxford
EVN Report / MassisPost / Aravot (22 November 2020)—Long before the start of the armed conflict in Karabakh, the “authentication” of the history of the region had become the scholarly battleground of historians, political scientists, archaeologists, researchers and bureaucrats. The consequences of Soviet scholarship—particularly in the process of constructing histories—have been disastrous and continue to have a negative impact on how conflicting parties view “the other.” It should be noted that, even today,
-
14.
We have outlived empires and can build our nation's tomorrow
-
We have outlived empires and can build our nation's tomorrow
CivilNet / HyeTert / Massis Post 11 November 2020
Hratch Tchilingirian, Oxford
As one of the nations in this world, whose millennia-long biography is the envy of the world, we should not allow some anomalous, self-interested forces, circles or personalities trample the national wisdom we have gained through myriads of imposed wars, destruction and displacement.
-
15.
Christians in Modern Turkey
-
-
16.
Crisis in the Caucasus: Nagorno Karabakh
-
-
17.
Publications & lectures about Nagorno Karabakh
-
... Club, 9 November 2020.
Hratch Tchilingirain (2020) "Christianity in Karabakh: Azerbaijani Efforts At Rewriting History Are Not New", EVN Report, 22 November.
Hratch Tchilingirian (2020) "Karabağ’da ...
-
18.
Restructuring Minority Majority Relations
-
London School of Economics
LSE Forum for Russian, Eastern European and Eurasian Studies Schapiro Seminar
Lecture
“Restructuring Minority-Majority Relations in Soviet and Post-Soviet Abkhazia and Karabakh”
Dr. Hratch Tchilingirian, University of Cambridge
26 October 2004, 5:00 PM
D702, Clement House, LSE European Institute.
-
19.
Declining Christian communities
-
-
20.
Electing 'Patriarch of Constantinople': Church and State relations in Turkey
-
Lecture: "Electing 'Patriarch of Constantinople': Church and State relations since the establishment of the Republic of Turkey." Eastern Christianity Lecture Seminar Series (6th edition), 28 May 2019, Pembroke College, Oxford.
|