Vera cemetery
Cemetery of Vera (Armenian: Վերայի գերեզմանատուն) was an Armenian cemetery in western Tbilisi, Georgia, now used as a Georgian cemetery.
The cemetery of Vera was founded in 1836. In 1844 an Armenian church, Holy Cross (Surb Khach), was built inside the cemetery by David Tamashev’s financial support. Later, the territory of cemetery was expanded. Many famous Armenians of Tiflis were buried in the cemetery, including: General Yeremia Artsuni, the first mayor of Tiflis; Harutyun Tumanyan, writer and teacher; landowner Natalia Skhhoyan; the businessman, industrialist and tobacco manufacturer Mikhail Bozarchyants; linguist, educator and armenologist Shahan Jrpetyan; the first zincographer of Tiflis Sarkis Soghomonyan; architect Gavril Ter-Mikelov; doctor Nikoghayos Khudadyan, etc.
After 1920 funerals in the cemetery were stopped.[1]
Georganisation
In 1992, with coming to power of Zviad Gamsakhurdia, the cemetery was vandalized. Gamsakhurdia followers began to destroy the cemetery. During the reconstruction of the church of the Holy Cross (Surb Khach) on the initiative of Georgian composer Nodar Gigauri, it was renamed the Church of Saint Pantaleon and turned into a Georgian Orthodox church. Tombstones inside the church, under which were stored the urn with the ashes of the dead, were covered with Turkish tiles. In the cemetery, space for new graves for Georgians were created by destroying the graves of Armenian burials.[1]
The cemetery of Vera was known with its familial tombs: Ananovs, Yenikolopovs, Tsurinovs, Kamoyans, Babanasovs, Avan Yuzbashyans, Argutyans, etc. Today, the graves of many famous Armenians are without tombstones.[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 (Russian) Грузинское кладбище на костях армян ‘‘(Georgian cemetery on the bones of Armenians’’) in Analitika.at.ua by Razmik Muradyan
External links
- Gallery in THE CHRONICLE OF A LONG APPROPRIATION PROCESS
- National Committee of the Armenians of Georgia
- (Armenian) ԹԻՖԼԻՍԱՀԱՅՈՒԹՅՈՒՆ. ԺԱՄԱՆԱԿԻ ՄԱՐՏԱՀՐԱՎԵՐՆԵՐՆ ՈՒ ՀԱՄԱՅՆՔԻ ՀԵՌԱՆԿԱՐՆԵՐԸ (Tbilisi Armenians: Challenges and Future) by Tamara Vardanyan
Coordinates: 5°05′09″N 1°21′10″E / 5.0858°N 1.3528°E