Vardan of Aygek
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Vardan of Aygek (Template:Langx), also known as Vardan of Marata (Script error: No such module "Lang".;[1] died 1250), was an Armenian Christian monk, famous for his works on Armenian folklore.
Life
Aygektsi was born in Ma'arrata, a village near Afrin, then located in the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. He was educated in the Monastery of Arkakaghin and received the title of vardapet. He first pursued his career in Amid and later near his ancestral lands.[2]
In 1198, he took part in the coronation ceremony of King Levon II. In 1208, he started living at the monastery of Aygek on the Amanus Mountains, near the village Yenicekale,[1] for an unknown reason.[2]
He died in 1250.
Works
His first known work is Armat Havato (Template:Literal translation 'The root of faith'), which was a collection of the principles of the Armenian Apostolic Church as well as the church's position against the rulings of the Council of Chalcedon, which were becoming more influential at the time.[2] Among his works is his Fables and a Geography, both of which have been mistakenly attributed by some to Vardan Areveltsi.
In 1668, an extensive collection of Aygektsi's fables, under the title Aghvesagirq (Book of the Fox) was published in Amsterdam. The naming of the collection was based on the fact that the key character in most of the fables was a fox.[3]
Modern interpretations
In 1825 the French academic Antoine-Jean Saint-Martin published a French translation of the Fables.[4]
In 1975, Soviet-era director Robert Sahakyants made a 10-minute animated film, The Fox Book, based on Aigektsi's Fables.[5] In association with the Hover Chamber Choir of Armenia, contemporary Armenian composer Stepan Babatorosyan created Six Fables, an original composition based on Aigektsi's Fables, with contemporary lyrics by Yuri Sahakyan.[6] It won the 2004 Armenian Music Awards – Best Choir/Chorus Album.[7] The Hover Chamber Choir of Armenia has also presented an outdoor musical-theatrical production based on Aigektsi's Fables.[8]
See also
References
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- ↑ A.J. Saint-Martin, "Choix de fables de Vartan", Paris, 1825. Librairie orientale de Dondey-Dupré père et fils
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External links
- Template:Trim Choix de fables de Vartan at Google Books, Paris, Librairie orientale de Dondey-Dupré Père et Fils, 1825. Armenian text, French translation by Antoine-Jean Saint-Martin
- Pages with script errors
- Year of birth missing
- 1250 deaths
- Syrian people of Armenian descent
- Syrian monks
- Syrian writers
- 13th-century Armenian writers
- Armenian Christian clergy
- Middle Eastern Christians
- Armenian Christian monks
- Armenian fabulists
- People from the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
- Armenian Christians
- Syrian Christians