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Major Tourist Attractions In Yerevan
Sep 05,2007 00:00
by
newsdesk
You’ll find a humungus likeness of Vardan Mamikonyan, an Armenian hero since the days of the Zoroastrian Persian rule. Sasuntsi Davit (David of Sasoun), seated majestically on horseback is another denizen of Armenia’s epic past. The Memorial Monument of Armenian genocide, is a destination you must visit, if only to remind yourself of the ugliness that humans are capable of. The memorial is dedicated to the 1.5 million who were killed by the Turks in their campaign of 1915. Holding its head high is the Opera House – proud awardee of the Grand Prix for Architectural Design in 1937. Today you can hear the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra playing in its precincts. Intended for the same musical sentiment, The Komitas Chamber Music Hall isn’t as pleasing a sight. Soviet Architecture was at it’s ugliest in Armenia, some might disagree but will concede that the contrast between Armenian Heritage Architecture and 'Soviet Brutal' architecture school, made the latter lose favour with most. Yet the Komitas Chamber Music Hall remains one of the finest performance halls in the country and gets it’s name from the famed Armenian composer and clergyman who preserved Armenian folk songs for posterity. The homes of many Armenian artistes are now open to the public. A visit to Artashat is interesting as it is the site of an early Armenian capital of the 2nd century BC. This is also the site of the Khor Viran Monastery – mythology says Gregory the Illuminator –the prisoner who cured and converted King Tiridates III was confined in a well at the Monastery. If you want to visit an ongoing excavation site, visit nearby Dvin. This too was once the capital (around 340 AD). Artashat is 30km (18.6mi) south of Yerevan and buses travel between the two cities. Echmiadzin is a quiet city that bears a holy symbolism for the country and is only a 20 km bus ride to the west of Yerevan. The Orthodox Cathedral, in Echmiadzin, remains the most revered and important historic site here. This is also home to the Supreme Catholicos who are the leaders of the Armenian Orthodox Church. Sevan: Located 50 km north east of the capital, trains between Yerevan-Tsovagyukh pass Sevan thrice daily. The settlement shares its name with the Lake that lies along its south eastern side. The lake is the biggest in all of Transcaucasia at 1900m above sea level, it once covered nearly 5% of Soviet Armenia. Ever since the Armenian’s began harnessing water from the Razdan River that feeds the lake, for hydroelectricity and irrigation the lake has shrunk. The only good that came of this was that monuments, historical buildings as old as 2000 years that had been submerged when the lake rose were exposed. The river even today is the source of the most delicious trout in Armenia. In Sevan you could visit two churches, the last mementos of a 9th century monastery.
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