Categories: News

Concealment of the Origins of Armenian Artifacts

Undoubtedly, Armenia and the Armenian Highlands are the most interesting historical places on earth.

This makes Armenians happy and proud even though some of their valuable artifacts are found during excavations on the territories of the Armenian Highlands that are not a part of the modern Republic of Armenia. That’s because all these finds are directly connected with Armenians, their history and, according to the latest data on the excavations, history of all mankind.

Everything in the territory of modern Armenia becomes public property of the whole world while various artifacts in the territory of modern Turkey at best are being hidden in Turkish museums. The most absurd thing is that the Turks tell unbelievable stories about those miraculously preserved finds. Everyone (not only the Turks) tells a unique story, be he or she a local or a museum guide.

For example, in regard to the artifact found near Mount Ararat and depicted on the image below, one Sitchin, who has seemingly been just a charlatan (you can find data on that on www.sitchiniswrong.com), told a nice story about aliens and the Homo Sapiens created by them for the purpose of being used as slaves exclusively.

Let’s hope that it will become possible to study the found artifacts better, unless, of course, the Turks continue to destroy them as usual.

In the meantime, the Turks quietly unearth the archaeological antiquities of the Armenian people and hide them in museums to help them fabricate some stories. Of course, they have nothing to say about those artifacts because they are much older than the Ottomans and Oguzes combined. Particularly, the most ancient image of an astronaut discovered during excavations in the Rusakhinli area near Van is kept at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.

Vigen Avetisyan

Recent Posts

From Lake Van to Yerevan: The Bronze Helmet of Urartu, the First Armenia

The crested bronze helmet on the left of this comparison was not made by a…

6 days ago

A Tower Crowned by a Lion-Rider: Reading a Bronze Age Cult Vessel Through the Lens of the Armenian Highlands

A small, weathered piece of fired clay — barely 31 centimeters tall — sits today…

1 week ago

A Hand Reaching Through Three Millennia: The Bronze Pendant from Yeghvard

Pendant (Amulet) in the Shape of a Human Hand | 7th–6th centuries BC | Yeghvard…

2 weeks ago

Duduk (Tsiranapogh): The Ancient Voice of Armenia from the Bronze Age to UNESCO Heritage

Introduction The duduk (Armenian: դուդուկ)—traditionally known as tsiranapogh (ծիրանափող, “apricot-wood pipe”)—is one of the most…

3 weeks ago

The Earliest Known Mention of Yerevan in Armenian Epigraphy: The 874 Inscription of Sevanavank

Perched on the rocky peninsula of Lake Sevan, the medieval monastery of Sevanavank preserves one…

4 weeks ago

The Land of Kajants: Language, Kings, and Gods

Reconsidering the Language and Sacred Heritage of Urartu in Armenian Historical Thought For more than…

1 month ago