Jump to content

Vardablur, Lori

Coordinates: 40°58′15″N 44°30′32″E / 40.97083°N 44.50889°E / 40.97083; 44.50889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vardablur
Վարդաբլուր
Vardablur is located in Armenia
Vardablur
Vardablur
Coordinates: 40°58′15″N 44°30′32″E / 40.97083°N 44.50889°E / 40.97083; 44.50889
Country Armenia
ProvinceLori
Government
 • Village chiefHakob Vardanyan
Area
 • Total
13.49 km2 (5.21 sq mi)
Elevation
1,325 m (4,347 ft)
Population
 • Total
1,245
Time zoneUTC+4 (AMT)
Area code1921

Vardablur (Armenian: Վարդաբլուր) is a village in the Lori Province of Armenia. It is located 19 km northwest of the regional center Vanadzor. It is located on both banks of the Gargar River, at an altitude of 1325 meters above sea level. The highest point is the Holy Sargis mountain, 1550 m.

The area of the village is 1349.0 ha, of which 119.0 ha is under development, arable land - 803.0 ha, grassland - 153.0 ha, pastures - 203.0 ha, unusable reserve land - 68.0 ha.

The population is engaged in animal husbandry, cultivation of grains, fodder crops and vegetable growing. In the past, they were engaged in pottery, blacksmithing, and carpet weaving.

Population

[edit]

According to the results of the census 2011, the permanent population of Vardablur was 1245, the existing population was 1094 people.[2] The inhabitants are Armenians, some of whose ancestors came from the Mets Parni village of Spitak and the villages of Muş and Sason in Western Armenia.[3]

History

[edit]

Education

[edit]

The first school in Vardablur was opened in 1892, which was headed by the village priest Yeghia Zohrabyan. He graduated from Gevorgyan Spiritual Lyceum, studied at Leipzig University and mastered five languages, was one of Hovhannes Tumanyan's close friends. In 1923, a school building for 4 classes was built with the funds of the villagers. In 1932, the school became a seven-year school, and in 1944, it graduated the first graduates with secondary education. The typical school building built in 1979 was destroyed during the Spitak earthquake. Vagharshak Harutyunyan, Navasardyan, Mukuch Stepanyan, Vaghinak Amirkhanyan, Shavarsh Sargsyan, Koryun Hakobyan, Andranik Khachatryan, Zaven Vardanyan, Nvard Vardanyan, Haykaram Harutyunyan worked as principals of the school.

Since February 2021, Elsa Vahradyan has been the director of the school . The school has an ethnographic museum rich in valuable collections. The Armat laboratory of information technologies has been operating since 2020, and Artyom Gasparyan is the head of it since November 2021.

It was in this village where the Armenian priest and musicologist Komitas composed Horovel (Armenian: Հորովել) and where the national poet of Armenia Hovhannes Tumanyan wrote Hazaran Bulbul (Armenian: Հազարան Բըլբուլ).

Historical and cultural monuments

[edit]

On the eastern side of the village, on the top of the Holy Sargis mountain, there is the Cyclopean masonry and the chapel of the same name, ″The Asron″ built by the Kiurikian kings (Kiurikian dynasty, year of 1050), on the northern side, on the right-hand side gorge of Dzoraget, there are the Jgrashen church (6th century) and The Broken Clock (6th century), in the village - St. Astvatsatsin Church (1876) and St. Khach (12th century) church. In 1968, the monument dedicated to the memory of the victims of The Great Patriotic War was opened (architect: Vardges Papoyan, sculptor: Shavarsh Hovhannisyan). In 1990, the first monument dedicated to the memory of oppressed in Armenia was built (in 1937), and in the village sculptor Grigor Manukyan's "The Cross and the Woman" (2015) and monuments (2016) dedicated to the creation of the song "Lorva Gutanerg" and Reverend Komitas were built.

"Horovel" monument in the Vardablur village dedicated to the Reverend Komitas
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Statistical Committee of Armenia. "The results of the 2011 Population Census of the Republic of Armenia" (PDF).
  2. ^ 2011 թ ՀՀ մարդահամարի արդյունքները
  3. ^ "Հայաստանի հանրապետության բնակավայրերի բառարան, էջ 188" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-09-12. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
[edit]