Greeks in Armenia

Greeks in Armenia
Greek Church in Hankavan
Total population
900[1] (2011, census)
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Religion
Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Greek diaspora

The Greeks in Armenia (Armenian: Հույները Հայաստանում, romanizedHuynery Hayastanum; Greek: Έλληνες στην Αρμενία, romanizedÉllines stin Armenía), like the other groups of Caucasus Greeks such as the Greeks in Georgia, are mainly descendants of the Pontic Greeks, who originally lived along the shores of the Black Sea, in the uplands of the Pontic Alps, and other parts of northeastern Anatolia. In their original homelands these Greek communities are called Pontic Greeks and Eastern Anatolia Greeks respectively. Seafaring Ionian Greeks settled around the southern shores of the Black Sea starting around 800 BC, later expanding to coastal regions of modern Romania, Russia, Bulgaria and Ukraine. The Pontic Greeks lived for thousands of years almost isolated from the Greek peninsula, retaining elements of the Ancient Greek language and making Pontic Greek unintelligible to most other modern Hellenic languages. They were joined in the region by later waves of Greeks in the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine period, ranging from traders, scholars, churchmen, mercenaries, or refugees from elsewhere in Anatolia or the southern Balkans.