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The Armenia Ethnography Museum and the National Liberation Movement is a state-owned museum in Armenia, located in the village of Araks, Armavir Province, within the Sardarapat Memorial complex, approximately 10 km southwest of the provincial centre Armavir. Designed by architect Rafael Israelyan, the museum opened in 1978.[1]
Location | Araks, Armavir Province, Armenia |
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Coordinates | 40°8′8.5″N 44°0′55.4″E / 40.135694°N 44.015389°E |
Type | Ethnographic museum |
Description
editThe museum building, designed to resemble a medieval Armenian castle, features an exterior without windows. The southern (rear) facade is flanked by two octagonal towers named Aragat and Ararat. Between these towers is a planned two-window opening. The interior design is characterised by smooth tuff-carved arches and walls, adorned with significant symbolic elements.
Collections
editThe Collection of the Armenia Museum of Ethnography and the National Liberation Movement comprises more than 70,000 items, spanning from the Stone Age to the modern day.[2]
The collection includes:
- Hunting and primitive working tools
- Ceramics, stonework, and unique metallurgy designs
- Petroglyphs
- Household and ritual vessels
- Weapons
- Musical instruments
- Jewellery and other items from early human societies
Gallery
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ Albert Baboyan (1979). "The centuries under the arches". Soviet Armenia. 4: 10, 11.
- ^ "Which exhibits are important to see in Sardarapat Museum?". www.1lurer.am. 2015-05-28. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
Sources
edit- What is, Encyclopedia, Volume 3, page 25.
External links
edit- About Armenian Ethnography Museum Archived 2020-09-20 at the Wayback Machine