Armenian History volume I
from ancient times to current republic of Armenia
von VAROUJEAN TILBIAN
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Über das Buch
It is survival.
The Long Middle is a reflective memoir shaped by an Armenian family’s journey through exile, labor, reinvention, and memory. It does not begin with catastrophe, nor does it end with arrival. Instead, it lives in the long middle — the generations spent rebuilding life between loss and belonging.
Across continents and decades, the author traces how survival is carried forward not by land or power, but by faith, craft, responsibility, and quiet endurance. In the Armenian experience, continuity is not preserved by holding ground, but by holding values — adapting without erasing, remembering without being trapped by the past.
This is not a history written from above, but a life remembered from within. A meditation on survival as a moral act, and continuity as a choice made again and again, long after the world has stopped watching.
Eigenschaften und Details
- Hauptkategorie: Biografien & Erinnerungen
- Weitere Kategorien Geschichte
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Projektoption: 15×23 cm
Seitenanzahl: 168 -
ISBN
- Bedrucktes Hardcover: 9798261088301
- Veröffentlichungsdatum: Feb. 02, 2026
- Sprache English
- Schlüsselwörter history, Armenian
Über den Autor
Varoujean A. Tilbian was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the son of Avedis Tilbian, a master shoemaker and survivor of the Armenian Genocide. Raised among stories of courage, displacement, and cultural endurance, Varoujean built a remarkable career that spanned over five decades and four continents. A pioneer and visionary in the printing industry, he helped lead the transition from conventional to digital printing, working as an executive and innovator in the U.S. and Europe. His professional legacy includes shaping early digital printing applications, mentoring teams, and directing product development before turning his creative energy toward writing. His books, ranging from memoir to historical fiction, give voice to forgotten stories and explore the legacy of survival, identity, and justice. He writes in English, Western Armenian, Italian, and Amharic, and donates all proceeds to children’s cancer research. Today, Varoujean continues to write and reflect, weaving the lessons of th
