-
Kerovbe Patkanian or
Kerope Petrovich Patkanov (Armenian: Քերովբէ Պատկանեան, Russian: Керопэ́ Петро́вич Патка́нов; 16 May [O.S. 4 May] 1833 – 14 April [O...
- Чеченское племя. Tbilisi: Сборник сведений о кавказских горцах. Patkanian,
Kerovbe (1877).
Armenian geography of the 7th
century AD. Гюльденштедт 2002, p...
-
Biwzandakan kasrutʻean mēj ew ****zawor
hertsuatsayin erewoytʻner
Hayastani mēj
Kʻerovbē Patkanean Dorpatum Hay
mijnadarean aṛakner
Dorpati hay usanoghutʻiwně Das...
- (PDF). Arak-29
Charitable Foundation.
Retrieved July 15, 2012. Garabedian,
Kerovbe. The
Songbook of Daron,1930, p. 39 Ghaziryan, A. (1989). Հայ ժողովրդական...
- English,
Latin (both 1736),
French (1819), and
Russian (1877). In 1877,
Kerovbe Patkanian first attributed it to
Anania as the most
probable author. Another...
- English,
Latin (both 1736),
French (1819), and
Russian (1877). In 1877,
Kerovbe Patkanian first attributed it to
Anania as the most
probable author. Another...
- were
published in 1879, 1913, and 1939. It was
translated into
Russian by
Kerovbe Patkanian in 1862 and by
Stepan Malkhasiants in 1913.
Heinrich Hübschmann...
- world.
Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-16756-8. Patkanian,
Kerovbe Patkanian (1874).
History of the
Mongols according to
Armenian sources...
-
originally thought to have been a
personal name. However, in the 19th
century Kerovbe Patkanian identified it as a
common word
possibly meaning "musician" and...
- of Sciences: 99–102.
Retrieved 28
March 2013.
Further reading Patkanov,
Kerovbe (1875).
Mushkii dialekt [Dialect of Mush] (in Russian). St. Petersburg:...