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Kegham Vanigian

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Kegham Vanigian, one of the so-called "20 Martyrs" hung by the Turkish government in 1915.

Kegham Vanigian (Armenian: Գեղամ Վանիկեան), also known as "Vanig," (1889 – 1915) was an Armenian political activist and newspaper editor. Vanigian is best remembered as the founder of the socialist monthly Gaidz of the Hnchak party. Vanigian was executed by the Turkish government for his political activities in 1915 during the Armenian Genocide.

Biography

Kegham Vanigian was born in Van, Turkish Armenia, Ottoman Empire in 1889.

In 1907 he finished the Yeremian college of Van, where his uncle, Hakob Ardzruni was one of his teachers. In 1904 he met Ashot's Hunchakian fedayi group and joined the party. After finishing the college he lived in Caucasus for a short time, then moved to Constantinople and finished the Law department of the University in 1914.

In 1909 Vanigian became one of the founders of Gaidz Student's Union, and since 1911 he was the founding editor and contributor of Gaidz monthly which propaganded the ideas of scientific socialism.[1] Vanigian participated at Hunchakian 6th Conference. He was a cadet of a military school, when he was arrested among with his Hunchakian friends. In 1915 20 of them were hanged in Constantinople by the Turkish government.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Yeghia Jerejian, Martyrs on Bloody Path. Beirut, 1989, pg. 32.

Bibliography

  • Yeghia Jerejian, Martyrs on Bloody Path. Beirut, 1989, pp. 31–33.
  • K. Khudaverdyan (ed.), The Armenian Question. Yerevan, 1996.

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