Mikayel Varandian (born Mikayel Hovhannisian, 1870 – 22 April 1934) was an Armenian historian and the main theoretician of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF).[1]
Varandian was born Mikayel Hovhannisian in the village of Kyatuk in the Varanda canton of the region of Karabakh.[2] He took the pen-name Varandian in honor of his home province. He received his secondary education in Shushi. He studied at Geneva University, where he met ARF founders Kristapor Mikaelian and Rostom. From 1892 he was a member of the editorial board of Droshak, the ARF's official organ, which published a large number of his articles and editorials.[2] After 1904, he was a member of the ARF's Western Bureau, one of the party's top decision-making bodies.[1] From 1907 he was the ARF's representative at the Second International. He also served as the editor of the ARF newspaper Horizon published in Tbilisi.[2] When the First Republic of Armenia was established in 1918, Varandian was nominated to serve as the republic's ambassador to Italy.[2]
He authored The History of the ARF (two volumes) and many other books. He died in Marseille on 22 April 1934.