Mari Beyleryan Explained

Mari Beyleryan
Birth Date:23 March 1877[1]
Birth Place:Beşiktaş, Ottoman Empire[2]
Occupation:Writer, teacher
Known For:Activism, writing
Notable Works:Artemis magazine

Mari Beyleryan (Armenian: Մառի Պեյլերյան; 23 March 1877  - 24 April 1915) was an Armenian feminist activist, writer, and public figure and a victim of the Armenian genocide.[3] [4]

Biography

Mari graduated from the Esayan college of Constantinople, then studied at the studio of Bera. She contributed to various journals including Arevelk and Hunchak. Facing arrest for her participation in the 1895 Bab Ali demonstrations, Beyleryan was forced to flee to Egypt from her native Constantinople.

During her time in Alexandria she taught at a local Armenian school and between 1902 and 1903 she published the Artemis, an Armenian women's journal that ran from January 1902 to December 1903.[5] Beyleryan accepted submissions not only from famous writers but from Armenian women throughout the diaspora. She was especially interested in the role Armenian women would play in the development of national identity. Editorials authored by Beyleryan explored several women's rights themes, including motherhood. She believed women's education and employment were central to Armenian national development.

Beyleryan returned to Constantinople only after the Ottoman Constitution of 1908 was put in place following the Young Turk Revolution. She continued to work as a teacher in Smyrna and later at Tokat Armenian school until 1915, when she died in the Armenian genocide.

Further reading

. Yeghia Jerejian . Martyrs on Bloody Path . Beirut . 1989 . 79–80 .

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ՄԱՌԻ ՊԵՅԼԵՐՅԱՆ . AV Production . 5 August 2020 . Armenian.
  2. Web site: Mari Beyleryan (1877 – 1915): Katledilen, kaçırılan ve yok edilen kadınların anısına . Medya Haber . 5 August 2020 . Turkish.
  3. Book: Rowe, Victoria. Cambridge Scholars Press. 978-1-904303-23-7. A History of Armenian Women's Writing, 1880-1922. 2003.
  4. Web site: Beyleryan, Mari . AIWA International . Armenian International Women’s Association . 5 August 2020.
  5. Rowe . Victoria . Armenian Writers and Women's-Rights Discourse in Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century Constantinople . Aspasia . 1 January 2008 . 2 . 1 . 10.3167/asp.2008.020104.