Approximately 50 centuries ago, the population of Ancient Akkad (and later Babylon) already referred to this tree as Armenian armannu. However, for a long time, the glory of the apricot gardens of the Ararat valley did not travel beyond the limits of the Near East.
Europe got acquainted with apricot through the Romano-Armenian wars, which have been going for quite some time by the 1st century BC. The Roman Senate intended to subordinate the overly strengthened Armenia and in different decades, delegated the best and most ambitious of its generals to the East, including Lucius Lucullus, Gnaeus Pompey, and Mark Crassus.
The fate of the latter was tragic. His head became a stage decoration at the capital Artashat Theater during the presentation of Euripides’ tragedy “Bacchante”.
The “eastern odyssey” of one of the richest Romans Lucullus was also dramatic. During his invasion of Armenia in 68 BC, he was forced to visit the tents of all his legionaries and address each of them separately. According to Plutarch, “he shed tears before them, implored them, even kissed their hands, but all decidedly refused to oppose Tigranes.”
The proconsul was soon recalled, but before admitting his fiasco before the Senate, he managed to acquaint the people of Rome with apricot or prunus armeniaca.
In 1917, at the height of global upheaval during World War I, a small but…
The Armenian Genocide (1915–1921 ...) was not an accident of war, nor a tragic byproduct…
Introduction The first printed edition of the Bible in the Armenian language stands as one…
Armenopolis (modern-day Gherla, Romania) is a remarkable example of how the Armenian diaspora not only…
Regarding the Remarks of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group at the Permanent Council…
While empires rose and fell and borders shifted across millennia, one remarkable constant has endured:…