Dennis J.D. Sandole (24 January 2007). Peace and Security in the Postmodern World: The OSCE and Conflict Resolution. Routledge. m/s. 182. ISBN9781134145713. The nearly 3 million Armenians in Armenia (and 3–4 million in the Armenian Diaspora worldwide) 'perceive' the nearly 8 million Azerbaijanis in Azerbaijan as 'Turks.'
McGoldrick, Monica; Giordano, Joe; Garcia-Preto, Nydia, penyunting (18 August 2005). Ethnicity and Family Therapy, Third Edition (ed. 3). Guilford Press. m/s. 439. ISBN9781606237946. The impact of such a horror on a group who presently number approximately 6 million, worldwide, is incalculable.
Arthur G. Sharp (15 September 2011). The Everything Guide to the Middle East: Understand the people, the politics, and the culture of this conflicted region. Adams Media. m/s. 137. ISBN9781440529122. Since the newly independent Republic of Armenia was declared in 1991, nearly 4 million of the world's 6 million Armenians have been living on the eastern edge of their Middle Eastern homeland.
Von Voss, Huberta (2007). Portraits of Hope: Armenians in the Contemporary World. New York: Berghahn Books. m/s. xxv. ISBN9781845452575. ...there are some 8 million Armenians in the world...
Freedman, Jeri (2008). The Armenian genocide. New York: Rosen Publishing Group. m/s. 52. ISBN9781404218253. In contrast to its population of 3.2 million, approximately 8 million Armenians live in other countries of the world, including large communities in the America and Russia.
Guntram H. Herb, David H. Kaplan (2008). Nations and Nationalism: A Global Historical Overview: A Global Historical Overview. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. m/s. 1705. ISBN9781851099085. A nation of some 8 million people, about 3 million of whom live in the newly independent post-Soviet state, Armenians are constantly battling not to lose their distinct culture, identity and the newly established statehood.
Robert A. Saunders; Vlad Strukov (2010). Historical dictionary of the Russian Federation. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. m/s. 50. ISBN9780810854758.
Philander, S. George (2008). Encyclopedia of global warming and climate change. Los Angeles: SAGE. m/s. 77. ISBN9781412958783. An estimated 60 percent of the total 8 million Armenians worldwide live outside the country...
Robert A. Saunders; Vlad Strukov (2010). Historical dictionary of the Russian Federation. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. m/s. 51. ISBN9780810874602. Worldwide, there are more than 8 million Armenians; 3.2 million reside in the Republic of Armenia.
^[1]Diarkibkan 21 November 2018 di Wayback Machine հոկտեմբերի 12-21-ը Հայաստանի Հանրապետությունում
անցկացված մարդահամարի արդյունքները (The results of the census conducted in October 2011 in the Republic of Armenia). pp. 6–7. (dalam bahasa Armenia)
^Basyurt, Erhan (26 Disember 2005). "Anneannem bir Ermeni'ymiş! [My Grandmother is Armenian]". Aksiyon (dalam bahasa Turki). Diarkibkan daripada yang asal pada 10 November 2013. Dicapai pada 10 November 2013. 300 bin rakamının abartılı olduğunu düşünmüyorum. Bence daha da fazladır. Ama, bu konu maalesef akademik bir çabaya dönüşmemiş. Keşke akademisyen olsaydım ve sırf bu konu üzerinde bir çalışma yapsaydım.
^Canada National Household Survey, Statistics Canada, 2021, dicapai pada 20 December 2022. Of those, 38,010 reported single and 30,835 mixed Armenian ancestry.
^"Armenian Diaspora in Spain". Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to Spain. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia. Dicapai pada 7 April 2016.
^Ralat petik: Tag <ref> tidak sah; tiada teks disediakan bagi rujukan yang bernama :1
^"Israel". The Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs. Dicapai pada 2023-05-05.
^"lamender". Kamus Dewan (ed. ke-4). Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka Malaysia. 2017. m/s. 647. Dicapai pada 17 April 2020 – melalui Pusat Rujukan Persuratan Melayu.
^"Armenian Rarities Collection". www.loc.gov. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. 2020. Diarkibkan daripada yang asal pada 7 Mac 2023. Dicapai pada 27 Mac 2023. The lands of the Armenians were for millennia located in Eastern Anatolia, on the Armenian Highlands, and into the Caucasus Mountain range. First mentioned almost contemporaneously by a Greek and Persian source in the 6th century BC, modern DNA studies have shown that the people themselves had already been in place for many millennia. Those people the world know as Armenians call themselves Hay and their countryHayots' ashkharh–the land of the Armenians, today known as Hayastan. Their language, Hayeren (Armenian) constitutes a separate and unique branch of the Indo-European linguistic family tree. A spoken language until Christianity became the state religion in 314 AD, a unique alphabet was created for it in 407, both for the propagation of the new faith and to avoid assimilation into the Persian literary world.
^"Armenia: Ancient and premodern Armenia". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Diarkibkan daripada yang asal pada 26 April 2019. Dicapai pada 17 July 2018. The Armenians, an Indo-European people, first appear in history shortly after the end of the 7th century BCE[, d]riving some of the ancient population to the east of Mount Ararat [...]
^Agathangelos, History of the Armenians, Robert W. Thomson, State University of New York Press, 1974
^Ralat petik: Tag <ref> tidak sah; tiada teks disediakan bagi rujukan yang bernama HistofChrist
^Hovannisian, Richard G. (1997) The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: the fifteenth century to the twentieth century, Jilid 2, m/s. 421, Palgrave Macmillan, .
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