Tserents
Tserents | |
---|---|
Born |
16 September 1822 Constantinople |
Died |
1 February 1888 (aged 65) Tiflis, Russian Empire (present-day Tbilisi, Georgia) |
Occupation | writer, doctor |
Nationality | Armenian |
Tserents (Armenian: Ծերենց, born Hovsep Shishmanyan, (Armenian: Հովսեփ Շիշմանյան): September 16 (28), 1822 in Constantinople – February 1 (13), 1888 in Tiflis), was a prominent Armenian writer.
Biography
Tserents studied at Venice, at the San Lazzaro degli Armeni of the Mekhitarist Order between 1831–1837 and continued his education in Paris (1848–1853). He returned to Constantinople in 1853 and lived for several years in Cyprus, working as a teacher and a scientist. Among with his daughter he moved to Tiflis in 1878, and worked as a teacher in the Nersisyan Armenian gymnasium. During that period as a doctor he wisited Van, Alashkert, Basean and other towns of Western Armenia.
He is burried at the Armenian Pantheon of Tbilisi.[1]
Works
Together with Raffi, Tserents was the founder of the Armenian historical novel. The novel Thoros, Son of Levon (1877) was dedicated to the tragic events in the history of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia in the 12th century. His best known novel, In the Pains of Birth (1879), reflects the liberation struggle of the Armenian people against the Abbasid Caliphate in the 9th century. Tserents's novel Theodoros Rshtuni (1881) is about the historic struggle of the 7th century for a strong centralized state.
References
- Great Soviet encyclopedia, 3d edition. - Moscow, 1970-77.
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