Historical Armenian population

Accurate or reliable data for historical populations of Armenians is scarce, but various scholars and institutions have proposed estimates for different periods.

For most recent data on Armenian populations, see Armenian population by country.

Ancient and medieval

According to the book Armenian National Atlas (2007), there were 2.5 to 3.5 million Armenians in the first century BC. The number of Armenians within the Armenian Highland rose to around 6 million by the 13th century, prior to the Mongol invasion of Armenia.[1]

Modern period

19th and early 20th century

In his 1847 book Lands of the Bible: Visited and Described, the Scottish missionary John Wilson estimated the total Armenian population at 2.5 million, with 1 million in the Russian Empire, 1 million in the Ottoman Empire and 0.5 million in Persia and "other distant lands." In the same book, he quoted the figures provided by Lucas Balthazar (Ղուկաս Պալդազարեան), the "intelligent editor" of the Smyrna-based Armenian newspaper The Dawn of Ararat («Արշալոյս Արարատեան», Arshaluys Araratian). Balthazar estimated 5 million Armenians overall, with 2 million in Russia, 2 million in Turkey and 1 million in Persia, India and elsewhere.[2]

The 9th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1875) cited Édouard Dulaurier's estimates c. 1850: "approximately four millions of Armenians in the world, of whom 2,500,000 were inhabitants of the Ottoman empire, 1,200,000 of the Russian empire, 25,000 in the empire of Austria, 150,000 in Persia and Azerbaijan, 25,000 in continental India and the Archipelago of Asia, and the remaining 100,000 scattered in various countries."[3]

In his 1862 book The Turkish Empire. In its Relations with Christianity and Civilization, Richard Robert Madden wrote that the Armenian population worldwide is estimated at 4 million, of whom an estimated 2,400,000 in the Ottoman Empire ("an approximate computation, and probably below the truth"), 900,000 in the Russian Empire, 600,000 in Persia, 40,000 in India and "other realms of Asia", and 60,000 in "various European countries."[4]

In his 1896 book Story of Turkey and Armenia Reverend James Wilson Pierce estimated 2.4 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, 1.25 million in the Russian Empire, 150,000 in Persia, 100,000 in Europe and 5,000 in the United States.[5]

Ottoman Empire
Russian Empire

According to the first Russian census of 1897, there were 1,173,096 Armenian-speakers in the empire.[6] The religious breakdown gave 1,179,241 "Armenian-Gregorians" (followers of the Armenian Apostolic Church) and 38,840 Catholic Armenians, amounting to a total of 1,218,081.[7] Estimates by John Foster Fraser (1907)[8] and Richard G. Hovannisian (2005)[9] put the number of Armenians within the Russian Empire in the early 20th century at around 2 million.

1911

Armenian population worldwide (Malachia Ormanian, 1911)

  Ottoman Empire (48.7%)
  Russian Empire (45%)
  Elsewhere (6.3%)

Malachia Ormanian, a scholar and former Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, estimated the population of Christian Armenians by the dioceses of the Armenian Apostolic Church in his 1911 book The Church of Armenia.[10] It is the most detailed population distribution estimates available prior to the Armenian Genocide. Robert Hewsen wrote that "Ormanian's figures appear moderate and reasonable, although this does not necessarily make them precise."[11] Levon Marashlian notes that "the purpose of Ormanian's book was not to provide comprehensive population statistics" and that "his numbers for [Armenian] Protestants and Catholics may be even more incomplete" than for Armenian Apostolics.[12]

Country/territory Armenians
 Ottoman Empire 1,709,550
 Russian Empire 1,579,500
Persia 83,400
United States 50,000
Western Europe ( Great Britain, France,  Belgium,   Switzerland) 21,000
Bulgaria 20,000
Egypt 15,500
Romania 10,000
Austria-Hungary 9,000
India & Indochina 6,000
Dutch East Indies 4,000
Greece 1,000
Total 3,508,950

1922

The 1922 US State Department document

The United States Department of State summarized the populations of Armenians in a November 1922 document titled "Approximate number of Armenians in the world" (NARA 867.4016/816). Of the total 3,004,000 Armenians, 817,873 were refugees from Turkey "based upon information furnished by the British Embassy, Constantinople, and by the agents of the Near East Relief Society, in 1921. The total given does not include the able-bodied Armenians, who are retained by the Kemalists, nor the women and children,—approximately 95,000,—according to the League of Nations-who have been forced to embrace Islam."

Country Armenians
 Soviet Union2,195,000
Armenian SSR1,200,000
Georgian SSR400,000
Azerbaijan SSR340,000
Transcaspia30,000
— rest of Soviet Russia225,000
 Ottoman Empire281,000
 USA &  Canada125,000
Syria, Palestine and Mesopotamia104,000
Greece & Cyprus79,000
Persia50,000
Bulgaria46,000
Romania43,000
Central and Western Europe38,000
Egypt, Sudan and Abyssinia28,000
India, Java and  Australia12,000
 Argentina3,000
Total 3,004,000

1966

The following estimates were originally published on 4 December 1966 in the Yerevan-based weekly Hayreniki dzaynՀայրենիքի ձայն») of Soviet Armenia's Committee for Cultural Relations with Armenians Abroad. They were cited by Richard Hrair Dekmejian in the journal Soviet Studies in 1968[13] and by David Marshall Lang and Christopher J. Walker in 1976 in Minority Rights Group's entry on Armenians.[14]

Country Armenians
 Soviet Union3,500,000
Armenian SSR2,000,000
Azerbaijani SSR560,000
Georgian SSR550,000
Russian SFSR330,000
— rest of USSR60,000
 USA &  Canada450,000
 Turkey250,000
Iran200,000
 France200,000
 Lebanon180,000
Syria150,000
rest of the world570,000
Total 5,500,000

Soviet republics (1926–1989)

Precise figures are available for the number of Armenians in the Soviet Union and its constituent republics because all censuses in the USSR enumerated people by ethnicity.

Republic 1926[15] 1939[16] 1959[17] 1970[18] 1979[19] 1989[20]
 Soviet Union 1,567,568 2,152,860 2,786,912 3,559,151 4,151,241 4,623,232
Armenian SSR 743,571 1,061,997 1,551,610 2,208,327 2,724,975 3,083,616
Azerbaijan SSR 282,004 388,025 442,089 483,520 475,486 390,505
Georgian SSR 313,741 415,013 442,916 452,309 448,000 437,211
Russian SFSR 195,410 218,156 255,978 298,718 364,570 532,390
Uzbek SSR 14,976 20,394 27,370 34,470 42,374 50,537
Ukrainian SSR 10,631 21,688 28,024 33,439 38,646 54,200
Turkmen SSR 13,859 15,996 19,696 23,054 26,605 31,829
Kazakh SSR 7,777 9,284 12,518 14,022 19,119
Tajik SSR 1,272 2,878 3,787 4,861 5,651
Kirghiz SSR 728 1,919 2,688 3,285 3,975
Byelorussian SSR 99 1,814 1,751 2,362 2,751 4,933
Moldavian SSR 1,218 1,336 1,953 2,873
Latvian SSR 1,060 1,511 1,913 3,069
Lithuanian SSR 471 508 955 1,655
Estonian SSR 648 604 845 1,669

See also

References

Notes
  1. 89.7% of 3,072,000 (as of 1979)
  2. Additionally, over 1,000,000 Islamized Armenians
Citations
  1. Հայաստանի ազգային ատլաս` հատոր Ա [Armenian National Atlas. Volume I] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Center of Geodesy and Cartography. 2007. p. 96.
  2. Wilson, John (1847). The Lands of the Bible: Visited and Described in an Extensive Journey Undertaken with Special Reference to the Promotion of Biblical Research and the Advancement of the Cause of Philanthropy, Vol. II. London: William Whyte & Co. pp. 479-480.
  3. Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, Volume II. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black. 1875. p. 548.
  4. Madden, Richard Robert (1862). The Turkish Empire: In Its Relations with Christianity and Civilization, Volume 2. London: T. Cautley Newby. p. 121.
  5. Pierce, James Wilson (1896). Story of Turkey and Armenia. Baltimore: R. H. Woodward Company. p. 14.
  6. "Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. Распределение населения по родному языку, губерниям и областям [The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897 Population distribution by native language, provinces and regions]". demoscope.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 October 2020.
  7. "Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. Распределение населения по вероисповеданиям и регионам [The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897 Distribution of the population by faith and region]". demoscope.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 5 November 2010.
  8. Fraser, John Foster (1907). Red Russia. New York: The John Lane Company. p. 212. ...the Armenians , intellectual superiors of the peoples south of the Caucasus range, number about two millions...
  9. Hovannisian, R. G. (2005). "Genocide and independence, 1914-21". In Herzig, Edmund; Kurkchiyan, Marina (eds.). The Armenians: Past and Present in the Making of National Identity. London: Routledge. p. 90. ISBN 9781135798376.
  10. Ormanian, Malachia (1911). Հայոց եկեղեցին և իր պատմութիւնը, վարդապետութիւնը, վարչութիւնը, բարեկարգութիւնը, արաողութիւնը, գրականութիւն, ու ներկայ կացութիւնը [The Church of Armenia: her history, doctrine, rule, discipline, liturgy, literature, and existing condition] (in Armenian). Constantinople. pp. 259–267.
  11. Hewsen, Robert (2003). "Summit of The Earth: The Historical Geography of Bardzr Hayk". In Hovannisian, Richard G. (ed.). Armenian Karin/Erzerum. Mazda Publishers. p. 49. ISBN 1-56859-151-9.
  12. Marashlian, Levon (1991). Politics and Demography: Armenians, Turks, and Kurds in the Ottoman Empire. Zoryan Institute. p. 59. ISBN 9780916431303.
  13. Dekmejian, R. H. (1968). "Soviet‐Turkish relations and politics in the Armenian SSR". Soviet Studies. 19 (4): 520–521. doi:10.1080/09668136808410616.
  14. "The world upward trend is further confirmed by the break-down given in 1966 by the Erevan periodical Hayreniki Dzayn (summarized by Dekmejian in Soviet Studies of Glasgow University, 1968). Here we find a world-wide total of five and a half million Armenians, sub-divided as follows..."; quoted in Lang, David Marshall; Walker, Christopher J. (1987) [1976]. The Armenians (PDF). Minority Rights Group. p. 12. ISBN 0-946690-43-X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 September 2019.
  15. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1926 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  16. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1939 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  17. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1959 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  18. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1970 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru. Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  19. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1979 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru. Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  20. "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР". demoscope.ru. Archived from the original on 8 September 2019.
  21. Eremian, Suren (1987). "Հայերը [Armenians]". Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia Volume XIII: (in Armenian). Yerevan. pp. 27.
  22. Ayvazyan, Hovhannes, ed. (2012). "Հայերի թիվն աշխարհում՝ ըստ երկրների [Armenians in the world, by country]". Հայաստան Հանրտագիտական [Armenia Encyclopedia] (in Armenian). Yerevan: National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. p. 914. ISBN 978-5-89700-040-1.

Further reading

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