Ghazaros
Aghayan was one of the important names in the literary and education
awakening of Eastern Armenians in the late nineteenth century.
He
was born on April 4, 1840, in the Armenian village of Bolnis-Khachen,
currently in Georgia. After receiving elementary education in his
birthplace, in 1853 he entered the Nersisian School of Tiflis, but left
after a year. He would become an autodidact.
He
worked as a typographer in Tiflis, Moscow, and St. Petersburg. In 1867
he returned to the Southern Caucasus, and became the manager of the
printing house of Holy Etchmiadzin and the editor of the monthly Ararat of
the Holy See (1869-1870). He later entered the educational field and
taught in schools of Akhaltskha (Akhaltsikhe), Alexandropol (Gumri),
Yerevan, and Shushi (1870-1882), and was also the diocesan director of
the Armenian schools of Georgia.
He
was a theoretician of education. The aim of his pedagogical system was
to develop “strong, smart, and virtuous” citizens. He gave preeminence
to learning the mother tongue and to moral and esthetic education. He
was against corporal punishments and favored co-ed schools, as well as
practical education and physical education. He wrote many works in the
field, and his textbook “Study of the Mother Tongue” was particularly
appreciated; its first volume, with 33 printings, was the most commonly
used first-grade textbook in Armenian schools for four decades
(1875-1916).
Ghazaros Aghayan and Hovhannes Tumanian |
Aghayan,
who wrote the first autobiographical novel in Armenian literature
(“Arutin and Manuel,” 1867) was also a famed author of children’s poetry
and tales; his tale “Anahit” (1881) is a classic of the genre. His
fairy tale “Aregnazan” and his poem “Tork Angegh” are also well-known
works.
He worked in the editorial boards of the monthly Portz and the children journal Aghbiur.
In 1895 he was arrested with the charge of being a member of the
Hunchakian Party; he was exiled first to Nakhichevan-on-the-Don, and
then to Crimea (1898-1900). He remained under police surveillance until
the end of his life. In the 1900s he was the elder member of the
literary cenacle “Vernatun” (Attic), together with Hovhannes
Tumanian, Avetik Isahakian, Levon Shant, and Derenik Demirjian. He
passed away on June 20, 1911, in Tiflis.
Aghayan
was the father-in-law of renowned painter Martiros Sarian (1880-1972)
and maternal grandfather of composer Ghazaros Sarian (1920-1998).