Vahan Terian
Vahan Teryan | |
---|---|
Born | Vahan Teryan 9 February 1885 Gandzani, Tiflis Governorate, Russian Empire |
Died | 7 January 1920 Orenburg, Russian SFSR | (aged 34)
Occupation | Poet |
Nationality | Armenian |
Education | University of Moscow Lazarian College |
Period | 1903–1911 |
Genre | Lyric poetry |
Spouse | Susanna Terian |
Vahan Terian (Armenian: Վահան Տերյան; 9 February 1885 – 7 January 1920) was an Armenian poet, lyricist and public activist. He is known for his sorrowful, romantic poems, the most famous of which are still read and sung in their musical versions.
Biography
[edit]Terian was born in the Gandza village (განძანი) of Javakheti region of Georgia (then in Russian Empire). Schooled in Tiflis, he then studied at the Lazarian College in Moscow, where he was exposed to symbolism and joined the Russian Social Democrats. He was jailed by Czarist police for his political activity. He is mostly known for his poems dedicated to autumn and love. That's why Teryan is known as "Singer of Autumn" in Literature. He published his first book of poems, "Dreams at Dusk", in 1908, which made him an immediate sensation, Hovhannes Tumanian calling him the most original lyric poet of his age. He later published "Night Remembrance", "The Golden Legend", "The Return", "The Golden Link", "In the Land of Nairi" (where he substitute the word 'Nairi' for each instance where the word 'Armenia' would have suited), and "The Cat's Paradise". His poems are filled with images of rain, mist, pallid fields and shapeless shadows, symbols of sorrow, despair and eventually, peace.
In 1913, Terian left Moscow University for the University of St. Petersburg, where he majored in oriental languages, intensifying his political involvement. After the revolution he became representative of Armenians in the Ministry of Nations, personally working with Lenin and Stalin. In 1916, Vahan Terian published a collection of poems entitled Land of Nairi (in Armenian: (Yerkir Nairi), in which he uses Nairi in place of Armenia. Likewise in 1923, Yeghishe Charents wrote a satirical novella entitled Land of Nairi, using once again Nairi as a synonym for Armenia. Hayastan Yeghiazarian used Nairi Zarian as his pen name, replacing his first name, Hayastan (which is what Armenians call Armenia in their own language) with Nairi.
He died in Orenburg of tuberculosis shortly before his 35th birthday. He was buried there and the grave had been marked by a wooden cross, which was quickly forgotten and the exact spot lost. In 1964 soil from the Orenburg cemetery was brought to Yerevan by Terian's daughter and buried in the Komitas Pantheon with a cenotaph was placed.[1]
Each year there is a commemoration of his life in Javakhk region at Gandza village where he was born.
Works in Armenian
[edit]- 1903-12, ՄԹՆՇԱՂԻ ԱՆՈՒՐՋՆԵՐ (Dreams of The Dawn)
- 1905-1908, ՓՇԵ ՊՍԱԿ (Crown of Thorn)
- 1908-1911, ԳԻՇԵՐ ԵՎ ՀՈՒՇԵՐ (Night and Reminiscences)
- 1908-1911, ՈՍԿԻ ՀԵՔԻԱԹ (Golden Tale)
- 1911, ՎԵՐԱԴԱՐՁ (Return)
Works in Russian
[edit]- 1903-12, ГРЕЗЫ СУМЕРЕК (Dreams of The Dawn)
- 1903-12, ТЕРНОВЫЙ ВЕНЕЦ (Crown of Thorn)
- 1908-11, НОЧЬ И ВОСПОМИНАНИЯ (Night and Reminiscences)
- 1908-11, ЗОЛОТАЯ СКАЗКА (Golden Tale)
- 1911, ВОЗВРАЩЕНИЕ(Return)
- 1912-19 ЗОЛОТАЯ ЦЕПЬ (Golden Chain)
- 1917 КОШАЧИЙ РАЙ (Cat Heaven)
- 1917-19, ПЕСНИ СВОБОДЫ (Songs of Freedom)
- 1912-19, СТРАНА НАИРИ (Land of Nairi)
- 1913-19, РАЗНЫЕ СТИХОТВОРЕНИЯ (Misc. Poems)
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Armenian activists
- 20th-century Armenian poets
- 1875 births
- 1920 deaths
- People from Tiflis Governorate
- People from Samtskhe–Javakheti
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- Soviet Armenians
- Burials at the Komitas Pantheon
- Armenian male poets
- 20th-century male writers
- Tuberculosis deaths in the Soviet Union
- Tuberculosis deaths in Russia
- Male poets from the Russian Empire