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Becoming Armenian: Religious Conversions in the Late Imperial South Caucasus
2021
Comparative Studies in Society and History
AbstractIn the nineteenth-century South Caucasus, hundreds of local farmers and nomads petitioned Russian authorities to allow them to become Christians. Most of them were Muslims and specifically requested to join the Armenian Apostolic Church. This article explores religious conversions to Armenian Christianity on Russia's mountainous southern border with the Ottoman Empire and Iran. It demonstrates that tsarist reforms, chiefly the peasant reform and the sedentarization of nomads,
doi:10.1017/s0010417520000432
fatcat:tbo3lgcsqnd6dpdwzomxu5naty