Although the first Armenians settled in France in the Middle Ages, like most of the
Armenian diaspora, the Armenian community in France was established by survivors of the
Armenian genocide of 1915. Others came through the second half of the 20th century, fleeing political and economic instability in the Middle Eastern countries (Turkey, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and Iran) and, more recently, from
Armenia.
History
Early history
Armenians have a long history of settlement in France.[5] The first Armenians appeared in
Francia in the
Early Middle Ages. In 591, an Armenian bishop named Simon is recorded to have met
Gregory of Tours in the city of
Tours.[6][7] Among other churches, the 9th-century church of
Germigny-des-Prés—built by
Odo of Metz (possibly an Armenian)—is said by architecture historians to have an Armenian influence.[8][9] The thirty-six letters of the
Armenian alphabet found in a Latin inscription at the
St. Martha Church in
Tarascon show that Armenians lived there before the 13th century, when the last three characters of the Armenian alphabet were added.[10][11]
Contact between Armenians and the French became frequent during the
Crusades.[10] The
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, located on the north-eastern shore of the
Mediterranean Sea, became of strategic importance to the crusaders en route to Palestine. Armenian kings
Oshin and
Leo IV are known to have given special trading privileges to the French.[12] In the 14th century, the
Hethumids were unable to retain power in Cilician Armenia and following the assassination of
Leo IV in 1341, his
Lusignan cousin became King of Armenia as
Constantine II. The Lusignan kings were of French origin and ruled the country until 1375 when the last king,
Leo V, was captured by the Mamluks and taken to Egypt. He was later released and transferred to France where he died in 1393 and was buried at the
Basilica of St Denis, the burial place of the French monarchs.[5]
Since the 15th century, Armenians began migrating to France in small numbers.[12] An Armenian inscription from this period survives on the
Bourges Cathedral.[13] In 1672, an Armenian named Pascal (Harut'iwn) opened the first
coffee house in Paris.[14][15][16][17][18] From 1672 to 1686,
Voskan Yerevantsi operated a publishing house in Marseille.[12] With the liberalization of the economy, the number of Armenians in France increased and reach 300–400 by 1680.[12]Jean Althen (Hovhannès Althounian), a
Persian-Armenian agronomist from
Nakhchivan, is known to have introduced
madder to southern France in the 1750s.[19][20][21][22] A statue of him was erected in
Avignon expressing the city's gratefulness to him.[23] During his
campaign in Egypt,
Napoleon was presented an Armenian
Mamluk named
Roustam Raza. He became Napoleon's bodyguard and served him until 1814.[24][25]
In the 19th century, many young Armenian males (among them poet and political activist
Nahapet Rusinian and architect
Nigoğayos Balyan) moved to France for education.[12]Papier d'Arménie ("Armenian Paper"), a popular deodorising paper,[26] was created in the late 1880s by Auguste Ponsot. He visited
Turkish Armenia and found out that the Armenians use
benzoin resin and
plant sap to disinfect their homes and churches.[27]
During the late 19th century and early 20th century, thousands of Armenians escaped persecution in
their ancestral homeland that was part of the
Ottoman Empire at the time. Events like the
Hamidian massacres and the
Adana massacre gave rise to greater Armenian emigration. By the eve of the First World War, around 4,000 Armenians lived in France.[12]
As a result of the Allied victory in the First World War, tens of thousands of survivors of the
Armenian genocide found themselves living in the French-occupied part of the
Ottoman Empire in
Cilicia, and far more in the
French Mandate territories of Syria and Lebanon, as the
death camps of
Deir ez-Zor were in Syria. In 1920, the French army under General
Henri Gouraud ordered the French Armenian Legion to lay down their weapons and that the Armenian refugees should leave at once. He had formed a "peaceful, reconstructive policy" with the
Turkish nationalists to pull French troops out of Cilicia, but all that ended up doing was allowing attacks against Armenian civilians to resume.[28] Most Cilician Armenian fled alongside the French and were resettled in refugee camps in
Alexandretta,
Aleppo, the
Beqaa Valley (e.g.
Anjar) and
Beirut. From there, entire families took the opportunity to flee to France. The influx of the
Armenian genocide survivors brought tens of thousands of Armenians to France. By the early 1920s, approximately 50,000 to 60,000 Armenians lived in France.[29] According to another source 90,000 genocide survivors settled in France, more than half of whom were villagers.[30]
Most Armenians initially arrived in Marseille, thereafter many of them spread across France and settled in large cities, especially in Paris and the urban areas across the
Paris–Marseille railway, notably
Lyon. In the
Interwar period, the majority of Armenians in France were unskilled villagers that mostly worked in factories for low wages.[29] Between 1922 and 1929, 80% of Armenians in France were labourers earning 10–15% less than Frenchmen.[30]
On 29 October 1920, Grégoire Sinabian was appointed by the
Armenian government as the consul-general of
Armenia to France.[31]
The Armenian community of France played an active role in the
French Resistance. Poet and communist militant
Missak Manouchian, the commander of the multiethnic
Groupe Manouchian, became an important Resistance leader. Besides Arpen Lavitian, the other executed Armenian member, his group also included many Jews from across Europe. Poets
Kégham Atmadjian and
Rouben Melik were other prominent participants in the Resistance. The
Anti-Fascist Underground Patriotic Organization was commanded by Armenian officers.
Resisters Alexander Kazarian and Bardukh Petrosian were awarded by the highest military orders of France by General
Charles de Gaulle.[36]
Another Resistance fighter,
Louise Aslanian, a famous writer and poet, was a recruiter for the
Francs-Tireurs et Partisans in a combat cell of the
French Communist Party. She along with her husband
Arpiar Aslanian worked in an underground publishing house and actively engaged in supplying fighters of the
French Resistance with weapons. Louise opened the women's division of the
French Resistance and was responsible for the Armenian Resistance in Northern France. She and her husband were arrested on 24 July 1944 and were later killed in
Nazi concentration camps.
Henri Karayan, a member of the Manouchian Group, participated in the illegal distribution of Humanité in Paris and was engaged in the armed struggle until the Libération.[37]
In 2012, 95-year-old
Arsène Tchakarian, the last survivor of the Manouchian resistance group who fought against occupying Nazi German forces during World War II, was decorated as Officer of the
Legion of Honor by President
Nicolas Sarkozy.[38]
Immediately after the Second World War, about 7,000 Armenians were repatriated to Soviet Armenia.[39]
Migration of Armenians from the Middle East
Thousands of new immigrants have arrived in France from Middle Eastern countries like
Turkey,
Lebanon,
Syria and
Iran since the 1950s. These new immigrants mobilized the French Armenian community. By the 1980s around 300,000 Armenians lived in France.[39]
The
devastating earthquake in Armenia on 7 December 1988 led to a huge mobilization of the French Armenian community. Among others,
Charles Aznavour established a charitable foundation to help the victims of the earthquake.[41]
As the
Institut national d'études démographiques, France's national statistics agency, does not collect data on ethnicity there is no reliable information about the number of French people of Armenian ancestry. Various experts, media and organizations have estimated the number of French Armenians to be 250,000,[42] 300,000,[3][43] 400,000,[44][45] 450,000,[46][39] 500,000,[47][48][49][50] 500,000–700,000,[51] 750,000.[52] As of 2005, there were 12,355 Armenian-born people residing in France.[53]
Culture
Language and education
SIL Ethnologue as of 2009 estimated that Armenian is spoken by around 70,000 people in France.[54]
Most French Armenians speak
Western Armenian, while a minority (recent Armenian immigrants from Armenia and Armenians from Iran) speak
Eastern Armenian.[55]
Today, Armenian classes are organized in many localities with full bilingual kindergartens and primary schools near Paris and Marseille attended by several thousand children and youths. Armenian is currently a valid option counting toward the Baccalaureate, the French High School certificate.[citation needed]
Each of the three Armenian Churches has its own organization in France.
The Diocese of France the Armenian Apostolic Church under the spiritual guidance and jurisdiction of the
Catholicos of All Armenians. The Diocese has its own Youth movement l'Association de la jeunesse de l’Eglise apostolique arménienne de France, which has chapters in the various 26 parishes of the Diocese.
The Eparchy of Sainte-Croix-de-Paris depends on the Armenian Catholic Church, and the Armenian Evangelical Churches Union of France, part of the Armenian Evangelical Church.
Institutions
The
Armenian General Benevolent Union, one of the largest Armenian organizations in the world, was headquartered in Paris between 1922 and 1940.[56]
The Armenian Social Aid Association, operating Armenian retirement homes, was founded before this period and is unique to France. National institutions, and first and foremost the Armenian Church of Paris founded in 1905, were very soon to co-exist in Paris, playing a fundamental role in defending and protecting the refugees.[citation needed]
There are also umbrella organizations, the Forum des associations arméniennes de France, created in 1991,[58] and the Conseil de coordination des organisations arméniennes de France, new name since 2001 of the « Comité du 24 avril ».[59]
Media
Press
The first Armenian journal in France began publishing in 1855. As of 1991, around two hundred Armenian newspapers and magazines have been published in France, more than any other European country.[60] Currently, the only daily newspaper is Nor Haratch, an independent publication that started publishing on October 27, 2009, on the basis of 2 issues per week. It replaced Haratch (Յառաջ), a daily founded in 1925 by Schavarch Missakian that stopped publication in May 2009.
Online media
Nouvelles d'Arménie magazine
France-Arménie magazine
Broadcasting
AYP FM, radio station operating in Paris and
Île-de-France
Radio Arménie, radio station operating in Lyon and the surrounding area
France is one of the countries that has recognized the Armenian genocide. There are monuments dedicated to the genocide victims in several cities in France, including Paris,
Lyon, and Marseille.
The
French Senate passed a bill in 2011 that criminalizes denial of acknowledged genocides, which includes both the Holocaust and the Armenian genocide. The bill was submitted by the parliament in 2012.[61] However, the bill was considered unconstitutional on 28 February 2012 by the
French Constitutional Court: "The council rules that by punishing anyone contesting the existence of ... crimes that lawmakers themselves recognised or qualified as such, lawmakers committed an unconstitutional attack on freedom of expression,".[62]
According to a 1996 survey in France, 69% of respondents were aware of the Armenian genocide, of which 75% agreed that the French government should officially recognize it.[63]
On 24 April 1965, 10,000 Armenians marched on
Champs-Elysées to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the genocide.[64]
Anita Conti (1899–1997), explorer and photographer, first French female oceanographer
Fictional characters
Ana Khesarian, a character in The Promise (2016). Pietro A. Shakarian, a PhD candidate in Russian history at
Ohio State University, wrote in The Nation that Ana represented the wealth held by the Armenians in France, with her wishes highlighting "affinities of the prosperous Armenian urban class for Europe."[101]
^"Immigration and asylum". Ararat. 34.
Armenian General Benevolent Union: 2. 1993. The Armenian Diaspora of France, with almost 300,000 people, is the third largest community of Armenians in the world outside of Armenia itself (the first is in the United States, the second in Russia).
^Greenwood, Tim (2012).
"Armenia". In Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press.
ISBN978-0-19-999633-9.
^Heinzelmann, Martin[in French] (2001). Gregory of Tours: History and Society in the Sixth Century (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 82.
ISBN978-0-521-63174-7.
^Buxton, David Roden (1975). Russian Mediaeval Architecture with an Account of the Transcaucasian Styles and Their Influence in the West. New York: Hacker Art Books. p.
100 Reprint of the 1934 ed. published by the
Cambridge University Press.
ISBN978-0-87817-005-0.
^Bournoutian, George A. (2005). A concise history of the Armenian people: (from ancient times to the present). p. 254.
^Dédéyan 2007, p. 907: "C'est du même siècle que remonte l'alphabet mesrobien de trente-six lettres, gravé sur une niche de l'église Sainte-Marthe de Tarascon, sans doute par un pèlerin arménien qui se dirigeait vers Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle."
^Aslanian, Sebouh David (2010). From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean: The Global Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 76.
ISBN978-0-520-94757-3.
^Spary, E.C. (2013). Eating the Enlightenment: Food and the Sciences in Paris, 1670–1760. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 53.
ISBN978-0-226-76888-5.
^United States Department of Agriculture (1848). Annual Reports of the Department of Agriculture ... : Report of the Secretary of Agriculture. Reports of Chiefs. United States Government Printing Office. p.
192.
^Bradshaw, George (1807). Bradshaw's Illustrated Hand Book to France. London. p.
110.
^Sayyāḥ, Muḥammad ʻAlī (1999). An Iranian in Nineteenth Century Europe: The Travel Diaries of Haj Sayyah, 1859–1877. Bethesda, Maryland: Ibex Publishers. p.
115.
ISBN978-0-936347-93-6.
^Jean-Paul Labourdette; Dominique Auzias; Dominique Auzias (2010). Petit Futé Paris, Ile de France (in French). Paris:
Le Petit Futé. p.
311.
ISBN978-2-7469-2778-0. En 1888, Auguste Ponsot, en voyage dans l'Empire ottoman, se rend en Armenie. Il decouvre que les habitants parfument et desinfectent leurs maisons en faisant bruler du benjoin, la resine d'un arbre. De retour en France, il met au point le papier d'Armenie dans son petit labrotoire de Montrouge.
^Auron, Yair (2005). The banality of denial: Israel and the Armenian genocide. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. p. 67.
ISBN978-0-7658-0834-9.
^Totoricaguena, Gloria (2005). Basque diaspora : migration and transnational identity. Reno:
University of Nevada Press. p. 403.
ISBN978-1-877802-45-4. France has the largest Armenian community in Europe, estimated at between five hundred thousand and seven hundred thousand ...
^Taylor, Tony (2008). Denial: history betrayed. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Publishing. p. 4.
ISBN978-0-522-85482-4.
^Videlier, Philippe[in French] (2011). "French Society and the Armenian Genocide". In
Hovannisian, Richard G. (ed.). The Armenian Genocide: Cultural and Ethical Legacies. Transaction Publishers. p.
332.
^"Alice Sapritch Resume" (in French).
L'Express. Retrieved 2 February 2014. Alice Sapritch, de son vrai nom Alice Sapric, née le 29 juillet 1916 à Ortaköy à Turquie et morte le 24 mars 1990 à Paris, est une actrice et chanteuse d'origine arménienne naturalisée française.
^"Francis Veber règle ses comptes". Le Point (in French). 22 November 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2014. ... d'une mère arménienne qui avait créé un personnage récurrent pour des romans à l'eau de rose ...
^"François Berléand". Le Point (in French). Retrieved 2 February 2014. François Berléand est un acteur français, né le 22 avril 1952 à Paris d'un père russe d'origine arménienne ...
^"Danyel Gerard".
Olympia. Archived from
the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2014. Gérard Daniel Kherlakian, dit Danyel Gérard, est né à Paris le 7 mars 1939, d'un père arménien et d'une mère corse d'origine antillaise.
^von Voss, Huberta, ed. (2007). Portraits of Hope: Armenians in the Contemporary World (1st English ed.). New York: Berghahn Books. p. 101.
ISBN978-1-84545-257-5.
^Marsh, David (2011). The Euro. New Haven:
Yale University Press. p. 1956.
ISBN978-0-300-17390-1. Chirac's appointee as finance minister - effectively No. 2 to the prime minister - was the prime, precisely-worded Edouard Balladur, born in Turkey of an Armenian family who emigrated to Marseille in the 1930s.
^von Voss, Huberta, ed. (2007). Portraits of Hope: Armenians in the Contemporary World (1st English ed.). New York: Berghahn Books. p. 205.
ISBN978-1-84545-257-5.
^
abLegal Newsletter from France. 1. Kevorkian & Partners: 43. 1995. I am pleased to note that the team also boasted two Armenians, or rather half- Armenians, Youri Djorkaeff, whose mother is Armenian, and Alain Boghossian, whose mother isn't.{{
cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (
help)
^Street, Julie (13 January 2012).
"Francis Kurkdjian, Parfumeur". France Today. Retrieved 9 February 2014. Kurkdjian, a suave-looking Frenchman of Armenian descent ...
Hacikyan, Agop Jack; Basmajian, Gabriel; Franchuk, Edward S.; Ouzounian, Nourhan (2005). The Heritage of Armenian Literature: From the eighteenth century to modern times. Vol. 3. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
ISBN978-0-8143-3221-4.
Dédéyan, Gérard[in French] (2007). Histoire du peuple arménien [History of the Armenian People] (in French). Toulouse: Privat. p. 907.
ISBN978-2-7089-6874-5.