According to Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, by the turn of the twentieth century, the population of Erivan (modern
Yerevan), center of the Erivan Governorate, was over 29,000; of this number 49% were "Aderbeydzhani Tatars" (modern
Azerbaijanis), 48% were Armenians and 2% were
Russians, and there were seven Shia mosques in Erivan.[2] According to the traveler
H. F. B. Lynch, the city of Erivan was about 50% Armenian and 50% Muslim in the early 1890s.[3]H. F. B. Lynch thought that some among the Muslims were Persians when he visited the city within the same decade.[4] According to modern historians George Bournoutian and
Robert H. Hewsen, however, Lynch thought many were Persian.[5]
After the capture of Yerevan by Russians as a result of the
Russo-Persian War, the main mosque in the
city fortress, built by Turks in 1582, was converted to an
Orthodox church under the orders of the Russian commander, General
Ivan Paskevich. The church was sanctified on December 6, 1827, and named the Church of the Intercession of the Holy Mother of God.[6]
According to
Ivan Chopin, there were eight mosques in Yerevan in the middle of the nineteenth century:
Hajji Jafar Beg Mosque (Hajji Nasrollah Beg)[7][8]
After 1917, many of the city's religious buildings were demolished in accordance with the Soviet government's modernization and anti-religious policies. The campaign saw the demolishment of
churches, mosques, and the only
synagogue in the city.[9] According to the journalists Robert Cullen and
Thomas de Waal, a few residents of Vardanants Street recall a small mosque being demolished in 1990.[10][11] In 1988–1994 the overwhelming majority of the Muslim population, consisting of
Azeris and Muslim
Kurds,[citation needed] fled the country as a result of the
First Nagorno-Karabakh War and the ongoing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Arjut Mosque – ruined mosque in the village of
Arjut[13]
Building in
Lori Berd - The original purpose of the building is unknown, but it was later turned into a mosque during the 14th-15th century, and then into a church in the 18th century[14]
Mosques in the
Kond quarter of Yerevan - the central square contains a "cluster of non-operating mosques dating back to the 17th and 18th centuries":[20]
Abbasqoli Khan Mosque (also known as the Tepebashi, Thapha Bashi,or Kond Mosque) – a large, derelict 17th century mosque in the
Kond quarter of Yerevan, the mosque was used to house 17 refugee families after the
Armenian genocide. Today, 4 families use the mosque as makeshift housing.[21] The dome of the mosque collapsed after the
1988 Armenian earthquake and is in a crumbling state today.[22][18] In 2022, plans were announced in cooperation between Iranian authorities and the Yerevan municipality to renovate the mosque.[20]
Small mosque of Kond - a small mosque in ruins in the
Kond quarter of Yerevan.[22]
^Кавказский календарь на 1870 год [Caucasian calendar for 1850] (in Russian) (50th ed.). Tiflis: Tipografiya kantselyarii Ye.I.V. na Kavkaze, kazenny dom. 1870. p. 392. Archived from
the original on 26 November 2020.
^Kettenhofen, Erich; Bournoutian, George A.;
Hewsen, Robert H. (1998).
"EREVAN". In
Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume VIII/5: English IV–Eršād al-zerāʿa. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 542–551.
ISBN978-1-56859-054-7.