Armenian education in the Ottoman Empire
Beginning with the 1863 education has been offered to the whole people, and so far as funds permit is absolutely free for all. All Armenian education is under the direction of lay committees. During this period in Russian Armenia the association of the schools with the Church is rather closer, but the same principle obtains. This became a problem for Russian administration, which was peaked during 1897, Tsar Nicholas appointed the Armenophobic Grigory Sergeyevich Golitsin as governor of Transcaucasia, and Armenian schools, cultural associations, newspapers and libraries were closed.
The Armenian charitable works, hospitals, and provident institutions we were organized along the explained perspective. The Armenians, in addition to paying taxes to the State, have voluntarily imposed extra burdens on themselves in order to support such philanthropic agencies. The taxes to the State did not have direct return to Armenians in such cases.
The education and philanthropic agencies made the Armenians most educated and rich section of the Ottoman population.
There existed over 1,996 Armenian schools with 173,022 pupils; of these 1,251 schools with over 76,548 pupils were on the territories of Western Armenia before World War I.
The following table is the list of Armenian schools in the Ottoman Empire gives the number and statistics of Armenian schools for each geographical district in the Ottoman Empire in 1912.[1]
Geographical district | Schools | Boys | Girls | Teachers |
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Siirt (Sghert) | 3 | 163 | 84 | 11 |
Amasya and Merzifon (Marsofan) | 9 | 1,524 | 814 | 54 |
Şebinkarahisar (Shabin-Karahisar) | 27 | 2,040 | 105 | 42 |
Erzurum (Karin) | 27 | 1,956 | 1,178 | 85 |
Kiğı | 27 | 1,336 | 367 | 43 |
Bayburt (Baberd) | 9 | 645 | 199 | 32 |
Diyarbakır (Amida) | 4 | 690 | 324 | 27 |
Elâzığ (Kharpert) | 27 | 2,058 | 496 | 58 |
Kemaliye (formerly Eğin, Akn) | 4 | 541 | 215 | 22 |
Çemişgezek (Chmshkatsag) | 12 | 456 | 272 | 15 |
Arapgir (Arabkir) | 18 | 713 | 223 | 25 |
Peri (formerly Çarsancak) | 12 | 617 | 189 | 18 |
Şanlıurfa (Edessa) | 8 | 1,091 | 571 | 26 |
Gürün (Kyurin) | 12 | 736 | 78 | 20 |
Darende | 2 | 260 | 70 | 5 |
Divriği (Tevrik) | 10 | 757 | 100 | 20 |
Sivas (Sebastia) | 46 | 4,072 | 549 | 73 |
Bitlis (Baghesh) | 12 | 571 | 63 | 20 |
Erzincan (Yerznka) | 22 | 1,389 | 475 | 63 |
Kemah (Kamakh) | 13 | 646 | 28 | 16 |
Doğubeyazıt (Daroynk) | 6 | 338 | 54 | 13 |
Muş (Mush) | 23 | 1,034 | 284 | 35 |
Van | 21 | 1,323 | 554 | 59 |
Lim and Ktuts Islands | 3 | 203 | 56 | 6 |
Akhtamar Island | 32 | 1,106 | 132 | 36 |
Tercan (Derjan) | 12 | 485 | 10 | 12 |
İspir (Sper) and Yusufeli (Kiskim) | 3 | 80 | - | 3 |
Pasinler (Bassen) | 7 | 315 | - | 7 |
Hınıs (Khnus) | 8 | 352 | 15 | 12 |
Silvan (Tigranakert) | 2 | 180 | - | 5 |
Palu (Balu) | 8 | 505 | 50 | 15 |
Malatya | 9 | 872 | 230 | 19 |
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Antep (Gaziantep) | 9 | 898 | 708 | 58 |
Hatay (Antioch, Antakya) | 10 | 440 | 47 | 10 |
Aleppo (Halep) | 2 | 438 | 249 | 18 |
Saimbeyli (Hadjin) | 4 | 508 | 69 | 12 |
Süleymanlı (Ulnia, Zeytun) | 10 | 605 | 85 | 15 |
Sis and neighbourhood | 7 | 476 | 165 | 19 |
Adana | 25 | 1 1,947 | 808 | 69 |
Kahramanmaraş (Maraş) | 23 | 1,361 | 378 | 44 |
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Edirne (Adrianople) | 6 | 314 | 251 | 22 |
Tekirdağ (Rodosto) | 9 | 1,017 | 856 | 48 |
İzmit (Nicomedia) | 38 | 5,404 | 3,103 | 212 |
Bilecik | 10 | 1,120 | 143 | 21 |
Kütahya | 5 | 825 | 349 | 23 |
İzmir (Smyrna) | 27 | 1,640 | 1,295 | 109 |
Ankara (Angora) | 7 | 895 | 395 | 29 |
Kayseri (Kesaria) | 42 | 3,795 | 1,140 | 125 |
Samsun (Amisos) | 27 | 1,361 | 344 | 59 |
Trabzon (Trapizon) | 47 | 2,184 | 718 | 85 |
Baghdad | 2 | 68 | 46 | 11 |
Yozgat (Bozok) | 12 | 1,197 | 557 | 43 |
Bursa (Brusa) | 16 | 1,345 | 733 | 54 |
Balıkesir and Bandırma | 8 | 700 | 634 | 35 |
Tokat | 11 | 1,408 | 558 | 50 |
Kastamonu | 3 | 110 | 50 | 2 |
Konya | 3 | 213 | 137 | 12 |
Akmeşe (Armasha) | 2 | 190 | 110 | 6 |
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TOTAL | 803 | 59,513 | 21,713 | 2,088 |
See also
- List of Armenian Schools worldwide
- Education in Armenia
- Education in Turkey
- Armenian education in the Ottoman Empire
References
- ↑ Viscount Bryce, James (1916). The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915-1916. T. Fisher Unwin Ltd. ISBN 0-9535191-5-5.