Our History
This page presents the history of the Armenian communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and offers a chronology of its main activities since its inception in 1956.
Our Founder
The great Armenian philanthropist and businessman, Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian, was born in 1869 in Scutari near Constantinople (Istanbul). He received his early education at the local Aramyan Uncuyan Armenian school. He then attended the Lycée Saint-Joseph French school, and continued his studies at the American Robert College before moving to Europe at the age of 14 to continue his education.
Throughout his life, Gulbenkian was involved with philanthropic activities, including the establishment of a library, a church, aid to many schools, and other institutions. He paid special attention to the Armenian communities dispersed throughout the Middle East, and especially refugees, in the wake of the Armenian Genocide.
Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian spent his last 13 years in Lisbon, where he died in 1955. His final resting place is the Saint Sarkis Armenian Church in London.
The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation was created in 1956 by his bequest and continues to promote arts, charity, education, and science throughout the world, as per the Founder’s will.
Gulbenkian accumulated his wealth through the oil industry in the Middle East, and throughout his life, he amassed a huge art collection, which became the basis of the Gulbenkian museum in Lisbon.
More about Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian
About the Armenian Communities Department
The Armenian Communities Department, formerly named the Department for the Middle East, was set up in 1956 by two executors of the Calouste Gulbenkian’s will, Kevork Essayan, Gulbenkian’s son-in-law, and José de Azeredo Perdigão, the first Chairman of the Foundation.
The Trustee responsible for the Armenian Communities Department has always been Armenian and a member of the founder’s family. Presently the Trustee responsible for the Department is Martin Essayan, Calouste Gulbenkian’s great grandson. Previous Trustees include Mikhael Essayan, Gulbenkian’s grandson and Honorary President of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, and Roberto Gulbenkian, Gulbenkian’s nephew.
Since 2013, Razmik Panossian has been the Director. Previous directors have been Roberto Gulbenkian, Goriun Kechichian and Zaven Yegavian. During 2012, Astrig Tchamkerten acted as Interim Director.
Below are some of the important activities undertaken by the Department over the years:
1957–1960
1957–58
The university scholarships programme was established. The programme continues until today and over tens of thousands of Armenian students have benefited from it.
1959–60
The “Free Bursaries” programme was established to help students attend Armenian schools around the world, particularly in the Middle East. Thousands of children benefitted from the scheme which continued for decades. Subsequently, funds were also allocated for the building and renovation of many schools in the Middle East, Turkey, Argentina and Uruguay. Supporting Armenian education and schools remains a key activity of the department.
1959
The first book in the Armenian and Armenian studies publications programme was published.
1960–1970
1960
Several apartment houses for needy Armenians in Beirut, Lebanon were constructed, in partnership with UNHCR, the Howard Karageusian Commemorative Corporation and the Swiss Friends of Armenians. Similar construction of apartments were undertaken for Armenian refugees in Athens, Greece, with UNHCR.
1960–1970
Medical equipment was donated to the Surp Pirgiç Armenian Hospital in Istanbul, including an x-ray machine and an operating theatre. Calouste Gulbenkian’s parents and other relatives are laid to rest in the courtyard of the Hospital, at a dedicated shrine.
1988–1990
1988–1989
Humanitarian relief support was sent to Soviet Armenia after the massive earthquake. In addition to sending funds, the Foundation acted as an intermediary for the help provided by Portugal to Armenia. A total of 138 tons of first aid products was gathered, and delivered directly to affected areas. Medical equipment was also sent to hospitals in Armenia. The Department continues to support initiatives in Armenia independent since 1991, focusing on civic education and scholarships.
1990
After 15 years of civil war in Lebanon, the Department embarked on a vast school reconstruction programme for several school buildings in the country. Support to schools in Diaspora continue to this day.
2001–2012
2001
The renovation of the Calouste Gulbenkian Library at the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem was supported. The library, built in the 1930s with a donation from Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian, is one of the most important Armenian libraries in the Diaspora.
2003
“Matenagirk Hayots” (Armenian Classical Authors), a multiple-volume handbook of Armenology and bibliography, was supported; the project is continuous and the publication of the volumes is supported by the Department to this day.
2003–2005
Aid was provided to various Armenian schools, mainly in the Middle East and Turkey.
2003–2012
Aid was given to Armenian orphanages in the Middle East, as well as other educational institutions such as the Zvartnots and Cahl in Lebanon. The Foundation also supported The Armenian Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia, including The Theological Seminary, as well as The Armenian Prelacy in Lebanon, The Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul, The Surp Pirgiç Armenian Hospital of Istanbul, and The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
2004–2006
The Arevik CD ROM (Արեւիկ Այբբենարան – Armenian Computer Based Course) project was supported, the first multimedia tutorial for learning the Armenian language and literature for three levels.
2007–2011
Grants were given to the Yerevan State University for various publications.
2008–2010
The Armenian Studies course was supported at the SOAS School of Oriental and African Studies, London.
2013–2018
2013
The new Five Year Programme Plan was launched, emphasising the revitalisation of Western Armenian, educational reform and pedagogic modernisation in the Diaspora, merit-based university scholarships, civil society support in Armenia, Armenian-Turkish dialogue and electronic publications.
2014
The first-ever “Armenian Culture Week” was organized at the Foundation, with concerts, exhibitions and conferences. “Armenians in 2115” seminar was held with diasporan leaders.
2014 onwards, a number of initiatives were supported in Istanbul to highlight the Armenian presence in Turkey, and to support civil society and academic organizations valorizing Armenian history, culture and language.
2015
The Department initiated the digitization of materials from the Mekhitarist Congregation invaluable newspapers and periodicals collection. To date, half a million pages have been digitized, and the ready content is available free of charge. Other digitization works followed suit, including the complete works of Hagop Oshagan, hundreds of ebooks and audiobooks on the platforms Vlume and Digilib, as well as 83 dictionaries on Nayiri.
The Calouste Gulbenkian Translation Series was launched in Armenia. The series makes seminal texts in the humanities and the social sciences available in the Armenian language. Books being translated into both branches of the Armenian language include Michel Foucault, Edward Said, Jurgen Habermas, Simone de Beauvoir, Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Hannah Arendt, etc.
2016–2018
Major academic conferences were supported in Armenia, at the Yerevan State University on the Armenian Diaspora of Russia and at American University of Armenia on challenges facing Armenia.
2017
The Universal Armenian Spellchecker and the Western Armenian Text Corpus project was initiated. The spellcheckers for Android and iOS were made freely available and easily downloadable on any device. Other IT-language related initiatives were also successfully concluded, including the Western Armenian Treebank, a tool that plays a crucial role in the development of modern language processing systems.
The Western Armenian summer programme Zarmanazan was launched for children and young adults, which takes place on a yearly basis. Other initiatives pertaining to Western Armenian followed suit, including the launch of the pedagogic resource website Zndoog in 2021, the publication of Zartiss children’s literature series, teacher training projects and the Yertik online programme for pre-teens.
2018
The Armenian Diaspora Survey was launched, a project that conducts surveys of public opinion in Armenian Diaspora communities to inform the public, scholars, policy-makers and community leaders about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the Armenian world in the 21st century.
2019–2024
2019
The 2014-2018 Five Year Plan was reaffirmed for the 2019-2023 period, with some adjustments, the most important changes being in the means the Department implements its priorities to ensure further focus and greater impact in its core priority areas of focus.
The Department launched its Lebanon Strategy, with a detailed program including collaboration with Armenian schools, a professional Teacher Development programme, targeted scholarships and a focus on the enhancement of Western Armenian cultural production.
The Department was actively involved in the Foundation-wide celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the birth of Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian.
2020
During the Covid-19 pandemic, humanitarian aid was sent to Armenia and Lebanon, support was given to schools and new innovative initiatives were launched in response to the pandemic, including the Be Heard prize and the Prize for Teaching in Armenian Online.
2021
The արդ եւս|in view was launched as the first and only grant programme dedicated to progressive cultural practices in Western Armenian. Each year up to 10 grants are awarded to cultural actors and change-makers, enhancing the use of culture as a catalyst for social progress, climate action, and democracy. The programme is ongoing.
2022–2023
An Emergency Scholarship programme was developed for Lebanon, for Armenian university students in face of the severe economic crisis in the country. 41 scholarships were awarded for this needs-based scholarship category.
2023
Humanitarian aid was sent to the Middle East in response to the devastation caused by the earthquake and to help with community reconstruction efforts.
The Department held the Advanced Technologies and the Armenian Language two-day working meeting in collaboration with TUMO, with the participation of more than 20 domain experts from around the world to chart the next steps that need to be taken in the language-related IT programming.
The Department developed a three-part strategy to help with the consequences of the Nagorno-Karabakh calamity; focusing on projects providing psycho-social support, heritage monitoring, and research on the losses faced by the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.
The second phase of the Calouste Gulbenkian Translation Series was launched at the end of 2023, featuring new seminal texts in the humanities and the social sciences to be made available in Armenian, including Benedict Anderson, John Rawls, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Lawrence Venuti, Jacques Le Goff, Carlo Ginzburg, William James, Terry Eagleton, Edgar Wind, etc.
2024
The “A Changing Philanthropy” two-day conversation with the Los Angeles Armenian community event took place in Glendale. Various round table discussions took place around language, identity, and diaspora-focused grant-making.
A unique event was organised at the Foundation headquarters; an exhibition dedicated to the activities of the Armenian Communities Department was inaugurated on the walls of the Foundation’s Cafeteria, where each wall depicted one priority area of the Department ranging from our scholarship programme, to the Western Armenian language, to the cultural creativity priority, to our activities in Armenia, as well as a historic overview and a wall dedicated to our Founder, his origins and his philanthropy.
The Department, in collaboration with the Gulbenkian Art Library and Archives, organised the exhibition “Armenians and Jerusalem” in the Foundation in Lisbon, exploring the relationship between Armenians and Jerusalem, and highlighting Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian’s own connections with the Holy City. It offered an introduction to this unique community which is the first and oldest Armenian diaspora, having survived for over a millennium through sweeping changes, major upheavals, and wars.
The Armenian Communities Department hosted a landmark event in Lisbon, bringing together some of the most esteemed intellectuals of the Armenian Diaspora featuring 36 participants from 14 countries. A three-day gathering, entitled Հաւասարում նորոգ | Renewed Equation: An Intergenerational Dialogue, that reinforced the Diaspora’s intellectual legacy while fostering a dynamic conversation across generations.
The Department continues to provide scores of scholarships per year to university students and researchers around the globe.