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  1. Classical Armenian (Armenian: գրաբար, romanized: grabar, Eastern Armenian pronunciation [ɡəɾɑˈpʰɑɾ], Western Armenian pronunciation [kʰəɾɑˈpʰɑɾ]; meaning "literary [language]"; also Old Armenian or Liturgical Armenian) is the oldest attested form of the Armenian language.

  2. Armenian ( endonym: հայերեն( reformed ),հայերէն( classical ),hayeren, pronounced [hɑjɛˈɾɛn]) is an Indo-European language and the sole member of an independent branch of that language family. It is the native language of the Armenian people and the official language of Armenia.

  3. The language whose records date back to this period is termed Classical Armenian. Much later, in the twelfth to seventeenth centuries, one finds the legacy of Middle Armenian, whose authors attempted to emulate the style of the Golden Age of Classical Armenian. Between these two time periods one further distinguishes two stages of the Armenian ...

  4. Classical Armenian orthography uses 38 letters: the original 36 letters of the Armenian alphabet invented by Mesrop Mashtots during the 5th century, and the 2 additional letters included later in the Armenian alphabet during the Middle Ages. It uses also 2 letters that were added to the Armenian alphabet in the 13th century: Vowels. Monophthongs.

  5. Introduction to Classical Armenian. Matthew 5:1-16. Moses of Khoren's History, Book II, Chapter 30. Faustos Buzand's The History of Armenia, Book IV, Chapter 5. Koriwn's The History of the Life and Death of the Holy Teacher Mesrop, Books V and VI. Yeznik of Kolb's Against the Heresy of Sects, Chapter 12. Selected Annotated Bibliography.

  6. Our Digital Library. Operating since 1999, the American University of Armenia’s Digital Library of Classical Armenian Literature (DIGILIB) has been established as a platform for the collection, digitization, preservation, and presentation to worldwide audiences of some of the enormous cultural wealth contained in the rich holdings of the ...