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Yakov Zarobyan

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Yakov Zarobyan
Yakov Zarobyan's plaque in Yerevan
First Secretary of the
Communist Party of Armenia
In office
1960–1966
Preceded bySuren Tovmasyan
Succeeded byAnton Kochinyan
First Deputy Premier of the Armenian SSR
In office
June 1953 – July 1958
Deputy Minister of Security of the Armenian SSR
In office
April 1952 – 1953
Personal details
Born
Hakob Nikitayi Zarobian

September 25, 1908
Artvin, Russian Empire, (now in Turkey)
DiedApril 11, 1980(1980-04-11) (aged 71)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1932–1966)

Yakov Nikitayi Zarobyan (Armenian: Յակով Նիկիտայի Զարոբյան; 25 September 1908 – 11 April 1980[1]) was the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Armenia from 1960 to 1966.

Biography

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Zarobyan was born in 1908 in Artvin, then in the Russian Empire, now in Turkey. Together with his family, he moved further into Russia during the First World War. From 1925–1941 he worked in Kharkiv as a factory worker. In 1932 he joined the Communist Party and became the party's committee secretary of the main Kharkiv factory in 1939. In 1949 he became the head of the factory's department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party.

He became Secretary of the Yerevan City Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia in July 1950 and Deputy Minister of Security of the Armenian SSR in April 1952, served as First Deputy Premier of Armenia from June 1953 to July 1958 and First Secretary of the Communist Party of Armenia from 1960 to 66. He was dismissed in February 1966 partly as a result of the huge demonstrations in Yerevan in April 1965, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. In 1966, he was made Soviet Deputy Minister for Electrification, effectively a demotion, and was succeeded by Anton Kochinyan.[2]

He died in Moscow in 1980.

References

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  1. ^ "Armenian SSR". freenet.am. Archived from the original on 2011-05-31.
  2. ^ Maike Lehmann, "Apricot Socialism: The National Past, the Soviet Project, and the Imagining of Community in Late Soviet Armenia," Slavic Review 74 (Spring 2015), p. 29.

Sources

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