-
Ghukas Karnetsi (Armenian: Ղուկաս Կարնեցի, lit. 'Luke of Karin/Erzurum'; 1722 – 28
December 1799) was
Catholicos of All
Armenians (head of the Armenian...
-
Hakop Karnetsi, (1618–1673)
Armenian historian,
geographer Ghoukas Karnetsi, (1722–1799)
Catholicos of All
Armenians (1780–1799)
Hovhannes Karnetsi, (1750–1820)...
- m****
conversion to
Islam was
described by
Armenian cleric Hakob (Yakob)
Karnetsi. In the
region of Tayk
centered around Tortum, a
Muslim cleric named Mullah...
-
surname include:
Ghukas Chubaryan (1923–2009),
Armenian sculptor Ghukas Karnetsi (1722–1799),
Armenian religious leader Ghukas Madoyan (1906–1975), Soviet...
- of Vardavar. In
accordance with his wishes, his
former student Ghukas Karnetsi was
elected his
successor as catholicos.
Reformed orthography: Սիմեոն Ա...
-
Trans and introd.
William Irvine. 4 vols. Calcutta:
Editions Indian.
Karnetsi, Yeghia. Patmut‘iwn imn
karcharot i vera antskuteants‘
Yeghiayis Astuatsaturian...
- don't know if more can be done. The 17th-century
Armenian chronicler Hakob Karnetsi [hy]
described an
episode about how
Khwaja Sanos, "a
pious man from Aleppo"...
- Gapantsi,
Hovhannes Beriatsi,
Grigor Oshakantsi,
Gazar Chakhketsi,
Hovannes Karnetsi, and others. Both in
Armenia and in the Diaspora, they
stood at the forefront...
-
entrance built in
stone from the
northern side. In 1790
Catholicos Ghukas Karnetsi (r. 1780–1799)
added a rotunda-shaped bell
tower on the porch/narthex built...
- Shahamirian. The
excommunication was
lifted by Simeon's
successor Ghukas Karnetsi in 1780
after Shahamirian's
repeated requests.
Movses later moved to Bombay...