Last modified: 2022-04-23 by rob raeside
Keywords: hammer and sickle: no star (yellow) | ccpa | ssra | hssr | hayasdani khorhurtayin sovedagan hanrabedutyun |
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Red with in the upper hoist yellow Cyrillic initials (SSRA)
in sans-serif.
Mark Sensen, 17 April 1996
Soviet Armenia or the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic was
proclaimed on November 29, 1920 by the Armenian Communists.
Gevork Nazaryan, 24 March 2001
The image above is based on Dunin-Borkovsky, K. Album of Flags and Pennants
of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, Union Soviet Republics and
Foreign States: Based on Nar. com. according to foreign Affairs and Headquarters
of the Commander of the Naval Forces of the Republic / Comp. K. Dunin-Borkovsky.
- M.: Ed. Nar. Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the RSFSR, 1923.
http://elib.shpl.ru/
Valeriy Koba, 20 March 2022
After the three republics
(Armenia,
Azerbaidjan,
and Georgia)
had been conquered by the Red Army, a
Transcaucasian Socialist
Federal Soviet Republic was formed in 1922,
becoming a Union Republic of the USSR in the
same year. In 1936 this republic was abolished
and Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia were
established as Union Republics.
Jarig Bakker, 26 March 1999,
quoting
Everyman’s Concise Encyclopaedia of Russia,
S. V. Utechin, 1961
Red with in the upper hoist yellow Armenian script initials
in serif. Yellow hammer and sickle above.
Carsten Linke, 6 June 1996
The four Armenian letters correspond to "H-Kh-S-H", that most probably
stand for, by Western Armenian pronunciation, to "Hayasdani Khorhurtayin
Sovedagan Hanrabedutyun", which means "Armenian Soviet Socialist
Republic".
Nareg Seferian, 13 September 2002
Red with in the upper hoist yellow Armenian script initials
in serif. Yellow hammer and sickle above.
Mark Sensen, 02 June 1996
The Armenian letters correspond to "H-S-S-R", that most probably stand
for "Hayastani Sovetakan Sotsialistikakan Respublika" (this one in
Eastern pronunciation), which means "Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic",
again but with more "Armenised" Russian words. It just shows how much
Russian influence had been brought into the society of Soviet Armenia by
then. Even proper Armenian spelling within the republic was changed.
Nareg Seferian, 13 September 2002
This flag was replaced by a new one
in 17 December 1952.
Željko Heimer, 17 April 1996