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Armenia

Trek up to the top of the hill behind the Khor Virap Monastery.
View looking away from the Turkish border into Armenia.
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View of a village just across the border into Turkey
View of the Monastery Khor Virap and surroundings.
The building behind the sign board is the home of the famous Ararat Brandy
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City of Yerevan
Former Soviet Bloc apartments
Kievyan Bridge  or also called the Great Bridge of Hrazden in Yerevan
Visit to the Armenian Genocide Museum
The Armenian Genocide memorial complex is Armenia's official memorial dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide, built in 1967 on the hill of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan
The eternal flame symbolizes an everlasting faith, an everlasting will, and an everlasting nation: a faith to prosper after our hardships, and a will to continuously strive for the common cause of recognition, restoration, and reparation of the injustices of the Armenian Genocide
Definitely a traffic problem in Armenia.
The eternal flame was lit in Armenia on April 23, 2014
The roof of the museum is flat and covered with concrete tiles. It overlooks the scenic Ararat Valley and majestic Mount Ararat.
The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute opened its doors in 1995 on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the genocide.
Since opening its doors, the museum has received tens of thousands of visitors including schoolchildren, college students and huge numbers of tourists from outside Armenia. The Republic of Armenia has turned visiting the museum into part of state protocol and many official foreign delegations have already visited the museum.
The impressive two-story building is built directly into the side of a hill so as not to detract from the imposing presence of the Genocide Monument nearby.
he Genocide Monument is designed to memorialize the innocent victims of the first Genocide of the 20th century. The Genocide Museum’s mission is rooted in the fact that understanding the Armenian Genocide is an important step in preventing similar future tragedies, in keeping with the notion that those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it.[9]

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