Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1837-1941 (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
Global extent: 1575 cases for the whole collection; 22 cases for list 3; 5 selected and described items from 4 selected cases
Context area
Name of creator
Repository
Archival history
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Content and structure area
Scope and content
This collection includes 88 “lists” (sections) and each of them is dedicated to a famous Armenian (either an historian, a musician, a painter, a monk, a general, a professor, an editor, a doctor, or an engineer), or to a well-known institution or event. For instance, this collection also includes papers from the Armenian orphanage of Aleppo, documents about the massacres of Cilicia, or papers from the charitable organizations of Syria, Lebanon and etc.
These are mostly personal papers that have been given to the National Archives of Armenia by relatives.
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
The collection is still increasing.
System of arrangement
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Subject to the authorization of the National Archives of Armenia (HAA).
Conditions governing reproduction
Language of material
Script of material
Language and script notes
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Finding aids
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
ISAD(G), Second Edition, Ottawa 2000.
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation revision deletion
Catalogue prepared from September to November 2016, and February 2017
Language(s)
Script(s)
Sources
Archivist's note
Inventory of a range of 5 items from Gartashyan Artashes’s papers, (1902-1914), held by the National Archives of Armenia (Erevan), made by Arman Khachatryan, Gohar Avakyan, Sonya Mirzoyan and Hovakimyan Nazenyi, 2016-2017.