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UCLA Cotsen Inst. establishes program in Armenian archaeology, ethnography

The UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology has received a $2 million gift from UCLA alumna Zaruhy Sara Chitjian to establish the first permanent research program in Armenian archaeology and ethnography at a major American university, according to the UCLA Newsroom.

Chitjian also donated a significant collection of artifacts, documents and books related to the history and material culture of Armenia and to the Armenian Diaspora after the Armenian genocide of 1915–23.

The Hampartzoum and Ovsanna Chitjian Collection and Archive of Armenian Ethnographic Artifacts and Documents, named in honor of Chitjian’s parents, will be housed at the Cotsen Institute and digitized, giving scholars around the world access to this important resource.

The gift will enable an expansion of research projects in Armenian archaeology and ethnography, the establishment of a public lecture series, and the publication of scholarly works on the Web and in print. It will also fund seminars and graduate-student conferences devoted to topics in Armenian archaeology, anthropology, ethnography and history and to the preservation of the cultural heritage of historic Armenia and the Armenian diaspora.

“The collection represents a set of objects and letters that will provide an invaluable insight into the Armenian diaspora,” said Charles Stanish, director of the Cotsen Institute. “Each acquisition not only provides insight into a small portion of this tragic but heroic drama but also provides a window into dozens of new questions and areas of inquiry. We hope that the Hampartzoum and Ovsanna Chitjian Collection will be a model for others to emulate.”

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