All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Khachkar: Armenia's Cross-Stones and a Long Memory

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, religion, ethics, citizenship
Core question How can a stone slab carved with a cross hold a thousand years of memory — a religion older than English Christianity, a language threatened with extinction, and a community that survived a genocide?
A 13th-century khachkar at Goshavank Monastery, Armenia, carved by master Poghos in 1291. The Armenian cross-stone tradition has produced about 40,000 surviving examples; UNESCO recognised it as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010. Photo: Arabsalam / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Introduction

In the 1st century, the Apostles of Jesus travelled out of Jerusalem to spread Christianity. Two of them — Bartholomew and Thaddeus — went to Armenia, a kingdom in the highlands south of the Caucasus mountains. According to Armenian tradition, they founded the Armenian Apostolic Church. In 301 CE, King Tiridates III converted to Christianity and made Armenia the first country in the world officially to adopt Christianity as its state religion. This was 12 years before the Roman emperor Constantine made Christianity legal in his empire (313 CE), and nearly 80 years before Rome made Christianity its state religion (380 CE). Armenian Christianity is older than Greek, Latin, English, French, German, or Russian Christianity. Today, the Armenian Apostolic Church has about 9 million members worldwide. Of all the cultural creations of medieval Armenia, the most distinctive is the khachkar — the Armenian cross-stone. The word combines two Armenian words: 'khach' (cross) and 'kar' (stone). A khachkar is a tall rectangular stone slab, carved from volcanic tuff, with a cross at its centre surrounded by intricate patterns. The cross is usually 'living' — made of vines or interlace patterns rather than dead lines. Around the central cross, the rest of the stone is filled with carved leaves, grapes, pomegranates, geometric patterns, and sometimes saintly figures. Each khachkar is unique. No two are exactly the same. Khachkars were used as memorial stones for the dead, as votive offerings for the salvation of souls, as boundary markers, as monuments to important events. The tradition reached its artistic peak in the 12th to 14th centuries, when Armenian master carvers produced works of breathtaking complexity. About 40,000 khachkars survive today, mostly in Armenia and the Armenian diaspora. UNESCO inscribed khachkar carving on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010. But the story is also one of destruction. The largest historical collection of khachkars — about 10,000 stones at the Armenian cemetery in Julfa, in present-day Azerbaijan — was systematically destroyed between 1998 and 2005 by the Azerbaijani government. The destruction was documented by satellite photography and called by some scholars 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century'. The khachkar today is both a beautiful art form and a contested symbol — of Armenian survival, of cultural loss, of the long memory of a small nation. This lesson asks who carved the khachkars, what they mean, and what their story teaches us about religion, art, and what happens when cultural heritage is destroyed.

The object
Origin
Armenia and the Armenian diaspora. The tradition developed in medieval Armenia after the country gained independence from Arab rule in the 9th century. Now made by Armenian communities worldwide.
Period
In use since at least the 9th century. The oldest dated khachkar was carved in 879 CE in Garni. The peak of the art was the 12th to 14th centuries. The tradition declined during the Mongol invasions but revived in the 16th and 17th centuries. Modern khachkars are still carved today.
Made of
Almost always Armenian volcanic tuff — a soft volcanic rock that is easy to carve when fresh but hardens with weathering. Sometimes basalt or other local stone. The carver uses chisels, dies, sharp pens, and hammers, then grinds the surface with fine sand. Cracks are filled with clay or lime plaster. Modern khachkars are sometimes painted.
Size
A typical khachkar reaches about 1.5 metres in height, with examples ranging from small pieces to monumental installations exceeding 4 metres. The stone is usually about 1 to 1.5 metres wide and 20-30 cm thick.
Number of objects
About 40,000 khachkars survive today. The largest collection is at Noratus cemetery in Armenia, with around 900 stones. Major museums holding khachkars include the British Museum (donated by Catholicos Vazgen I in 1977), the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Vatican Museums, and the Historical Museum of Armenia in Yerevan.
Where it is now
Across Armenia (especially at monasteries, cemeteries, churches), in the Armenian diaspora (especially Lebanon, France, the United States, and Argentina), and at Armenian cultural memorials worldwide. The largest historical site, Julfa cemetery in Nakhichevan (now part of Azerbaijan), was destroyed between 1998 and 2005.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Armenia is one of the oldest Christian nations but is rarely taught about. How will you teach this important history honestly?
  2. The Armenian Genocide (1915-1923) and the destruction of the Julfa khachkars (1998-2005) are difficult topics. How will you teach them honestly without making the lesson only about loss?
  3. The khachkar tradition is alive today. How will you teach this in present tense, not as a historical curiosity?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a small kingdom in the mountains. The land is harsh — high plateaus, deep valleys, snowy peaks. The people herd animals, farm small fields, and trade through the mountain passes. The kingdom is between two great empires — the Romans to the west, the Persians to the east. The kingdom is called Armenia. In 301 CE, the Armenian king Tiridates III converted to Christianity. According to tradition, he was converted by Saint Gregory the Illuminator, who had been imprisoned by Tiridates for his faith. The conversion made Armenia the first country in the world officially to adopt Christianity as its state religion. The decision was earlier than Constantine's Edict of Milan (313 CE), which made Christianity legal in the Roman Empire. It was 80 years before Rome made Christianity its state religion (380 CE). In 405 CE, the monk Mesrop Mashtots created an alphabet for the Armenian language — 36 unique letters, carefully designed for Armenian sounds. The alphabet allowed the Bible to be translated into Armenian. It allowed religious schools to teach in Armenian. It allowed Armenian theology, literature, and culture to develop. For over 1,700 years, the Armenian Apostolic Church has been the centre of Armenian identity. Armenian language, alphabet, music, art, and religious practice are bound together. When Armenians moved abroad — first as merchants and pilgrims, later as refugees — they took the church with them. Armenian churches were built in India, Iran, Italy, Poland, France. The Armenian community is one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. Why might a small mountain kingdom adopt Christianity so early?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several possible reasons. Armenia was at a strategic crossroads — between the Roman world and the Persian world, between Christianity and Zoroastrianism. Choosing one religion gave the kingdom an identity. Christianity may have offered a way to align with parts of the Roman world while remaining politically distinct. The conversion was also genuine — Saint Gregory's mission was real, and Christianity spread quickly through the population. The deeper point is that 'first Christian nation' is not just trivia. It shapes everything that comes after. The Armenian alphabet was created specifically to translate Christian texts. Armenian art, literature, and architecture are deeply Christian. The Armenian community's survival through 1,700 years of empires (Roman, Byzantine, Arab, Mongol, Persian, Ottoman, Russian, Soviet) was partly held together by the church. The khachkar — which we are about to discuss — is a creation of Armenian Christianity. None of it would exist without 301 CE. Students should see that the standard 'history of Christianity' usually centres on Rome, then Western Europe, with brief mentions of Greek and Russian Orthodoxy. Armenia is older than all of these. Ethiopia (which became Christian around 333 CE — see another lesson in this collection) is also older than most. The standard story is incomplete.

2
Imagine a stone carver in 12th-century Armenia. He works in a courtyard outside a monastery. Beside him is a slab of volcanic tuff, freshly quarried from the local hills. The tuff is soft when first cut — it can be carved with hand tools. As it weathers, it hardens. A khachkar carved well will last for centuries. The carver has been trained in his trade for years, possibly decades. He learned from his master, who learned from his master before him. The patterns he uses are traditional — there are recognised motifs and forms — but each khachkar must be unique. The carver does not copy. He invents within the tradition. He begins with the cross at the centre. The cross is 'living' — it grows out of the stone like a tree, with leaves and tendrils sprouting from it. Below the cross is a rosette — a circular sun-disc or wheel-of-eternity that pre-dates Christianity in Armenia and was incorporated into the Christian tradition. From the rosette, vines wind upward around the cross. Around the cross and its vines, the rest of the stone is filled with patterns — interlace knots, pomegranates (a symbol of resurrection), grapes (Christ's blood), eight-pointed stars, geometric borders. The patterns are mathematically precise. The tradition uses something close to the golden ratio in its proportions. When the carving is finished, the stone is ground smooth with fine sand. Cracks are filled with plaster of clay or lime. The khachkar is then erected — usually on a stone base, in a graveyard or churchyard or beside a path. A small religious ceremony blesses it. The khachkar is now believed to possess holy power, capable of providing protection, blessings, and intercession for souls. Why might a religious tradition centre itself on stone carving?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First, durability: stone lasts longer than wood, paper, or fabric. The 9th-century khachkar at Garni is still readable today, 1,200 years after it was carved. Second, visibility: a khachkar is meant to be seen, by passers-by, by family members visiting the dead, by pilgrims at monasteries. Third, beauty: the khachkar tradition has produced some of the most beautiful religious art in the world. Fourth, theology: the cross at the centre is sacred, and surrounding it with beautiful intricate patterns honours that sacredness. Fifth, sociology: each khachkar is commissioned by a specific person or family — for a deceased parent, for a saint, for a victory, for a request to God. The act of commissioning a khachkar is itself a religious act. The wealthy commissioned grand khachkars; the poor commissioned smaller ones. The whole community participated in the tradition. Compare with other religious art forms — Russian Orthodox icons, Catholic stained glass, Islamic calligraphy, Jewish mizrach plaques, Hindu murti. Each emerged from a specific religious tradition and served similar functions: making sacredness visible, durable, and communal. The khachkar is one of the world's clearest examples of a religious art form that is also a major artistic achievement in its own right.

3
In 1915, the Ottoman Empire began the systematic mass killing of its Armenian population. The killings continued through 1923. About 1.5 million Armenians were killed — through forced marches, starvation, mass shootings, and concentration camps. Armenian villages, churches, monasteries, and cultural sites across what had been Western Armenia (now eastern Turkey) were destroyed. The Armenian Genocide is one of the great atrocities of the 20th century. It is widely studied by historians and recognised by many countries (though Turkey continues to deny the genocide label). It scattered Armenian survivors across the world, creating a global Armenian diaspora that exists today. Many of the khachkars in former Western Armenia were destroyed during the genocide. Whole cemeteries were levelled. The cultural heritage of centuries was erased. But the destruction of khachkars did not end in 1923. Between 1998 and 2005, the Azerbaijani government systematically destroyed the largest historical collection of khachkars in the world: the Armenian cemetery at Julfa (Jugha) in the Nakhichevan exclave of Azerbaijan. The cemetery had contained about 10,000 khachkars in 1648. By 1998, weathering and earlier railway construction had reduced this to about 2,700. Then, between 1998 and 2005, Azerbaijani soldiers used sledgehammers and bulldozers to destroy the remaining stones. Satellite photography and video evidence documented the destruction. The European Parliament condemned it. UNESCO had earlier called for protection. The destruction continued anyway. The Azerbaijani government has denied that the destruction occurred or that it was systematic. Scholars have called the Julfa destruction 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century'. The site, once one of the great cultural heritage locations of the Caucasus, is now empty land. The khachkars are gone. What does this teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That cultural heritage destruction is not just an ancient problem. It happens in our lifetimes. The Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan were destroyed by the Taliban in 2001. The cultural sites of Palmyra in Syria were destroyed by ISIS in 2015. The Julfa khachkars were destroyed between 1998 and 2005, by a state that denied the destruction even as satellite images proved it. The deeper point is that cultural heritage is fragile. It can be protected only if people actively protect it. UNESCO recognition is important but not sufficient. International condemnation can fail to stop destruction. The Julfa destruction is one of the worst cases. The Armenian community now works hard to document, photograph, and protect remaining khachkars. New khachkars are being carved in Armenia and the diaspora, partly in response to the loss. The destroyed Julfa khachkars cannot be recreated, but the tradition continues elsewhere. Students should see that cultural heritage destruction is real, present, and ongoing — and that the response is not despair but continued making, documenting, and remembering.

4
Today, khachkar carving continues. Master carvers train apprentices in workshops in Yerevan and other Armenian cities. New khachkars are commissioned for cemeteries, monasteries, churches, and memorials. Many new khachkars are memorials to the Armenian Genocide. There are now hundreds of these around the world — in Armenia, in Lebanon, in France, in the United States, in Argentina, in Russia. The Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan, built in 1967, includes a wall of khachkar designs. The Armenian Genocide Memorial in Marseille, France, includes a 13th-century khachkar that was rescued and brought to France. Khachkars stand in the gardens of Canterbury Cathedral, the courtyards of the Vatican, the grounds of Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin. UNESCO inscribed 'Armenian cross-stones art: Symbolism and craftsmanship of khachkars' on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2010. The recognition acknowledges the tradition as a living global cultural achievement. The Republic of Armenia, which has been independent again since 1991 (after 70 years in the Soviet Union), continues to support the tradition. Armenian artists, archaeologists, and historians document existing khachkars and protect them where possible. Armenian-American, Armenian-French, and other diaspora communities commission new khachkars for their churches and cultural centres. In 2020, war broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Many Armenian cultural sites in the region were lost or fell under Azerbaijani control. The fate of khachkars in those areas is uncertain. The destruction of Armenian heritage continues to be a live issue. What is the khachkar today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A living art form, a memorial of loss, a contested symbol, and a point of cultural identity. Armenian communities worldwide commission new khachkars. Armenian artists train new carvers. Armenian historians document the tradition. The destruction of the Julfa khachkars is remembered as a major cultural crime of our time. The Armenian Genocide is remembered every April 24, the anniversary of the start of the killings in 1915. The khachkar tradition is one of the most visible symbols of Armenian survival. About 9 million Armenians worldwide — 3 million in the Republic of Armenia, the rest in the diaspora — maintain the tradition together. End the discovery here. Right now, somewhere in Yerevan or Beirut or Glendale (the Armenian-American centre near Los Angeles), a carver is shaping volcanic tuff with chisels. The next khachkar is taking shape. The 1,150-year-old tradition continues.

What this object teaches

A khachkar (Armenian: 'cross-stone') is a tall carved stone slab with an ornate cross at its centre, surrounded by intricate patterns of interlace, leaves, vines, geometric forms, and sometimes saintly figures. Made of Armenian volcanic tuff, the stones serve as memorials, votive offerings, and religious markers. The tradition began in the 9th century after Armenia gained independence from Arab rule and reached its artistic peak in the 12th-14th centuries. Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion in 301 CE — the first country in the world to do so, earlier than the Roman Empire (380 CE). The Armenian alphabet, created in 405 CE, allowed Armenian Christianity to develop its own theology, literature, and art. About 40,000 khachkars survive today. The largest collection is at Noratus cemetery in Armenia (about 900 stones). The largest historical collection — about 10,000 stones at Julfa, in present-day Azerbaijan — was systematically destroyed by the Azerbaijani government between 1998 and 2005, called by some scholars 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century'. The Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 killed about 1.5 million Armenians and destroyed many khachkars across former Western Armenia. UNESCO inscribed khachkar carving on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010. The tradition is alive today, with master carvers training apprentices in Armenia and the Armenian diaspora worldwide (Lebanon, France, the United States, Russia, Argentina). Many new khachkars are memorials to the Armenian Genocide. The Goshavank khachkar of 1291, by master Poghos, is widely considered one of the most beautiful examples.

DateEventWhat changed
301 CEArmenia adopts Christianity as state religionFirst country in the world to do so, earlier than the Roman Empire
405 CEMesrop Mashtots creates the Armenian alphabetAllows Armenian Christianity to develop its own literature and theology
879 CEOldest dated khachkar carved at GarniThe tradition is established
1100s-1300sPeak period of khachkar artMaster carvers like Poghos, Vahram, Timot, and Mkhitar create the most elaborate works
1648Julfa cemetery has about 10,000 khachkarsThe largest collection in the world is well-documented at this point
1915-1923Armenian GenocideAbout 1.5 million Armenians killed by the Ottoman Empire; many khachkars destroyed in former Western Armenia
1991Republic of Armenia regains independenceIndependent from the Soviet Union; supports khachkar tradition openly
1998-2005Julfa khachkars destroyed by AzerbaijanAbout 2,700 surviving stones systematically destroyed; documented by satellite
2010UNESCO inscriptionKhachkar craft recognised as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity
TodayLiving traditionMaster carvers train apprentices in Armenia and worldwide diaspora
Key words
Khachkar
Armenian cross-stone. A carved stone slab with a cross at its centre, surrounded by intricate patterns. The word combines 'khach' (cross) and 'kar' (stone) in Armenian. Used as memorials, votive offerings, and religious markers since the 9th century.
Example: The 1,150-year-old khachkar tradition has produced an estimated 40,000 surviving stones, each unique in design. The tradition is recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage.
Armenian Apostolic Church
The main Christian church of Armenia. According to tradition, founded by the apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus in the 1st century. Adopted as state religion in 301 CE. Independent from the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. About 9 million members worldwide today.
Example: The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, founded in 301 CE, is the spiritual centre of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The Catholicos (head of the church) lives there. It is one of the oldest functioning Christian institutions in the world.
Armenian alphabet
The unique 36-letter alphabet of the Armenian language, created by the monk Mesrop Mashtots in 405 CE specifically to translate Christian texts. Has changed little in 1,600 years. Some khachkars include Armenian inscriptions in the original medieval forms of the letters.
Example: The first sentence translated into Armenian using the new alphabet was from Proverbs 1:2 — 'To know wisdom and instruction'. The alphabet is still used today by all Armenian-language publications.
Volcanic tuff
The soft volcanic rock used for most khachkars. Formed from compacted volcanic ash. Soft when freshly quarried (carvable with hand tools), but hardens with weathering. Found across the Armenian Highlands. Comes in various colours, including red, pink, orange, and grey.
Example: Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, is sometimes called 'the pink city' because most of its older buildings are made from pink volcanic tuff. The same stone provides material for khachkar carving.
Armenian Genocide
The systematic mass killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923. About 1.5 million Armenians killed through forced marches, starvation, and direct killings. Recognised as genocide by many countries; denied by Turkey. Created the global Armenian diaspora.
Example: April 24 is observed as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day worldwide. Many new khachkars commissioned in the Armenian diaspora are memorials to the genocide. The Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan is the main national memorial.
Julfa cemetery
A historic Armenian cemetery in the Nakhichevan exclave of Azerbaijan, on the Aras river. Contained about 10,000 khachkars in 1648, the largest collection in the world. About 2,700 remained in 1998. All were systematically destroyed by Azerbaijani soldiers between 1998 and 2005, documented by satellite photography.
Example: The destruction of the Julfa khachkars has been called 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century' by scholars. The European Parliament condemned the destruction. UNESCO had previously called for protection. The site is now empty.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of Christianity: Jesus's death (around 33 CE), Christianity legal in Roman Empire (313 CE), Armenia adopts Christianity (301 CE), Aksumite Ethiopia adopts Christianity (around 333 CE), England converts (around 597 CE), Russia converts (988 CE). Discuss: Armenia and Ethiopia are older than most European Christianity.
  • Geography: On a class map, mark Armenia and the Armenian diaspora. Major communities: France, Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Russia, the United States (especially Glendale, California), Argentina. Discuss: the diaspora was created by the Armenian Genocide and has maintained the khachkar tradition for over 100 years away from the homeland.
  • Art: The khachkar combines several visual elements: the central cross, the rosette below, the surrounding interlace patterns, the geometric border, sometimes saintly figures. Each student designs their own symbolic stone — choosing a central symbol, a pattern around it, and a border. Discuss: each khachkar carver works the same way, with established traditions and personal creativity.
  • Citizenship: The Julfa khachkars were destroyed by a state that denied the destruction. International condemnation failed to stop it. Discuss: how can cultural heritage be protected? What works? What does not? Compare with other cases — the Bamiyan Buddhas (Afghanistan, 2001), Palmyra (Syria, 2015), the Maqdala objects taken from Ethiopia (Britain, 1868, in another lesson in this collection).
  • Ethics: The Armenian Genocide is recognised by many countries but denied by Turkey. Discuss: what is the ethical responsibility to recognise historical atrocities? What about the responsibility to protect cultural heritage from destruction? Strong answers will see that recognition matters and that ongoing destruction is a continuing ethical issue.
  • Language: The Armenian alphabet has 36 unique letters, created in 405 CE. Compare with the Latin alphabet (26 letters), the Greek alphabet (24 letters), the Cyrillic alphabet (33 in Russian), the Geʽez script (used in Ethiopia, see another lesson in this collection). Each was designed for a specific language at a specific time. Each has shaped a culture.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Christianity is a Western European religion.

Right

Christianity began in the Middle East and spread in many directions. Armenia became Christian in 301 CE, earlier than the Roman Empire (380 CE), and far earlier than England (597 CE), France (around 500 CE), or Russia (988 CE). Ethiopia became Christian around 333 CE. Armenian and Ethiopian Christianity are older than most European Christianity.

Why

'Western European Christianity' is a partial story. The full picture is much more diverse and older than commonly taught.

Wrong

Khachkars are basically just gravestones.

Right

Khachkars served many functions — as memorials for the dead, as votive offerings for the salvation of souls, as boundary markers, as monuments to victories, as protections against evil. They are also major artistic achievements in their own right. UNESCO recognised them as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010.

Why

'Just gravestones' undersells what khachkars actually do. They are more like a fusion of art, religion, and memory.

Wrong

The destruction of cultural heritage is mostly a problem of ancient times.

Right

Cultural heritage destruction is happening in our lifetimes. The Bamiyan Buddhas were destroyed in 2001. Palmyra was attacked in 2015. The Julfa khachkars were destroyed between 1998 and 2005. Many heritage sites are still under threat today.

Why

Treating heritage destruction as a historical problem ignores what is happening now. The fight to protect heritage is ongoing.

Wrong

The Armenian Genocide is a disputed historical claim.

Right

The Armenian Genocide is recognised as genocide by the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the European Parliament, the United States (officially since 2021), France, Germany, Canada, and many other countries. Turkey officially denies the genocide label, but the historical evidence is overwhelming.

Why

Treating well-documented genocide as 'disputed' creates false equivalence between historical evidence and political denial.

Teaching this with care

Treat Armenian Christianity and the Armenian people as living and present. Use 'Armenian' (not 'Armenian Christian' as if it were a foreign category) — being Armenian and being Christian are deeply linked but Armenia is also a nation. Pronounce 'khachkar' as 'KHATCH-kar' (the kh is a guttural sound like in Bach); 'Armenia' as 'ar-MEE-nee-ah'; 'Mashtots' as 'mah-SHTOTS'; 'Etchmiadzin' as 'etch-mee-ah-DZIN'; 'Goshavank' as 'go-shah-VANK'; 'Julfa' as 'JOOL-fah' (also spelled Jugha, pronounced 'JOO-gha'); 'Tsitsernakaberd' as 'tsit-ser-na-ka-BERD'. Be careful with the Armenian Genocide. It is a real historical event, well-documented, recognised as genocide by most major historians and many countries. Some students may have family histories connected to it. Do not soften the facts (1.5 million dead, systematic policy by the Ottoman government). Do not treat Turkish denial as equivalent to historical evidence. Be careful with the Julfa destruction. It is recent (1998-2005), documented by satellite photography and video, and has been called 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century' by scholars. The Azerbaijani government denies it. The denial is not equivalent to the evidence. Mention the destruction honestly. Be respectful of the Armenian Apostolic Church. It is one of the oldest Christian traditions and deserves the same respect as any other major religion. Avoid the lazy framing of 'Eastern Christianity' as exotic or marginal — Armenian Christianity is older than most Western Christian traditions. Be aware that Armenia and Azerbaijan are currently in conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. Avoid taking political sides on the territorial dispute, but be clear about the documented destruction of Armenian cultural heritage. The two are not the same. If you have students of Armenian heritage, give them space to share family experiences. Many will have grandparents or great-grandparents who survived the genocide. Be sensitive. Avoid stereotyping. Armenians are diverse — some are religious, some not; some are from the Republic of Armenia, some from the diaspora; some speak Armenian, some only Russian or English or French. Treat the diversity as real. End the lesson on the present. Master carvers are working today. New khachkars are being commissioned. The 1,150-year-old tradition continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the khachkar.

  1. What is a khachkar, and what is it for?

    A khachkar is an Armenian cross-stone — a tall carved stone slab with an ornate cross at its centre, surrounded by intricate patterns. The word combines 'khach' (cross) and 'kar' (stone). Khachkars serve as memorials for the dead, as votive offerings for the salvation of souls, as religious markers, and as monuments to important events.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains the basic object and at least one of its functions.
  2. When did Armenia become Christian, and how does this compare with Europe?

    Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion in 301 CE, under King Tiridates III. This was earlier than the Roman Empire (Christianity legal in 313 CE, state religion in 380 CE), and far earlier than England (around 597 CE), France (around 500 CE), Germany (around 800 CE), or Russia (988 CE). Armenia is the first country in the world to officially adopt Christianity.
    Marking note: Strong answers will give the date 301 CE and at least one comparison with another country.
  3. What was the Armenian Genocide?

    The systematic mass killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923. About 1.5 million Armenians were killed through forced marches, starvation, mass shootings, and concentration camps. Many Armenian cultural sites, including khachkars, were destroyed. The genocide created the global Armenian diaspora.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that names the perpetrator (Ottoman Empire), gives the period, and recognises the scale (about 1.5 million).
  4. What happened to the Julfa khachkars?

    The Armenian cemetery at Julfa, in the Nakhichevan exclave of Azerbaijan, contained about 10,000 khachkars in 1648 — the largest collection in the world. About 2,700 remained in 1998. Between 1998 and 2005, the Azerbaijani government systematically destroyed all remaining stones. The destruction was documented by satellite photography. Scholars have called it 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century'.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name Julfa, give a sense of the scale (the largest collection in the world), and explain that they were destroyed by Azerbaijan in 1998-2005.
  5. Is the khachkar tradition alive today?

    Yes. Master carvers train apprentices in Armenia and the Armenian diaspora worldwide (Lebanon, France, the United States, Russia, Argentina, and elsewhere). New khachkars are commissioned for cemeteries, monasteries, churches, and memorials — particularly memorials to the Armenian Genocide. UNESCO inscribed the tradition on the Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2010.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the tradition is alive and gives at least one specific detail of its continuing existence.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. Armenia is one of the oldest Christian nations but is rarely taught about. Why might this be, and what does it tell us about how history is taught?

    Push students to think about whose history gets told. Reasons may include: the dominant narrative of Christianity in many countries focuses on Western Europe; Armenia is a small country with a small population; the Armenian Genocide and ongoing political tensions complicate the story; teaching about minority Christian traditions takes effort that often is not made. The deeper point is that 'mainstream history' is often partial, and what is left out matters. The Ethiopian Church (in another lesson in this collection) faces similar marginalisation. Strong answers will see that the question 'whose Christianity gets taught' is connected to the question 'whose history matters'.
  2. The Julfa khachkars were destroyed by a state that denied the destruction, despite international condemnation. What can be done when cultural heritage is being deliberately destroyed?

    This is a real ongoing question. Students may suggest: international institutions like UNESCO can document and condemn; satellite photography can prove destruction; legal action can be pursued; alternative copies can be made before destruction occurs; the global community can refuse to forget. The deeper point is that international condemnation has limited power against determined states. UNESCO recognition is important but not sufficient. The Bamiyan Buddhas, Palmyra, and Julfa show that cultural heritage destruction is not stopping. Strong answers will see the limits of current protections and the importance of documentation, public memory, and continued making in response to destruction.
  3. Many new khachkars are memorials to the Armenian Genocide. What does it mean to memorialise loss in art that is itself part of the tradition that was attacked?

    This is a deep question about cultural survival. Students may suggest: making new khachkars is itself a refusal to be erased; the form connects past and present; the tradition keeps the people alive; memorial art turns loss into ongoing presence. The deeper point is that memorial art is often more than commemoration — it is a form of resistance. Other examples include Holocaust memorials in many countries, monuments to the victims of slavery, the Maya Lin Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the AIDS Memorial Quilt. Each turns loss into permanent visible presence. The khachkar tradition has done this for over 1,000 years and continues to do it. End by saying that 'memorial' is not a passive thing — it is active work that refuses forgetting.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'Which was the first country in the world to make Christianity its state religion?' Take guesses (most will say Italy or some European country). Then say: 'Armenia. In 301 CE. Twelve years before Constantine made Christianity legal in Rome, and 80 years before Rome made it the state religion. We are going to find out about the cross-stones Armenians have been carving for over 1,000 years.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the khachkar: tall stone slab, central cross, intricate surrounding patterns, made of volcanic tuff. About 40,000 survive. Each unique. UNESCO recognised the tradition in 2010. Pause and ask: 'Why might a small country develop such an elaborate stone-carving tradition?' Listen to answers.
  3. THE OLDEST CHRISTIAN NATION (15 min)
    Tell the story: Armenia adopts Christianity in 301 CE, Mesrop Mashtots creates the alphabet in 405, the khachkar tradition emerges in the 9th century, peak art in the 12th-14th centuries. Discuss: how does a tradition continue for over 1,100 years? End by mentioning the Armenian Apostolic Church, still active worldwide today.
  4. DESTRUCTION AND SURVIVAL (10 min)
    Tell the difficult parts: the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 (about 1.5 million dead, many khachkars destroyed); the Julfa destruction of 1998-2005 (about 2,700 stones systematically destroyed by Azerbaijan, documented by satellite). Discuss: how can a tradition survive such losses? Mention that new khachkars are being carved today as memorials to the very losses that destroyed their predecessors.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the khachkar teach us about religion, memory, and what survives?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Right now, in a workshop in Yerevan, a master carver is shaping volcanic tuff. The cross is taking form. The pattern around it is unlike any other. The khachkar will be erected at a monastery, a cemetery, or a memorial. The tradition is 1,150 years old. The genocide tried to end it. The Julfa destruction tried to end it. The tradition is still here. The carving continues.'
Classroom materials
Design a Memorial Stone
Instructions: Each student designs a memorial stone on paper for someone or something that should be remembered. They must choose: (1) a central symbol; (2) a surrounding pattern; (3) one specific detail that connects to what they are remembering. Display the designs. Discuss: each khachkar is a memorial in this way. The central cross combined with personal patterns creates a unique stone for a specific person or event.
Example: In Mr Petrosyan's class, students designed memorial stones for grandparents, lost pets, important historical events, and personal struggles. The teacher said: 'You have just done what every Armenian carver does. You have started with a meaningful symbol and built a pattern around it. The Armenian tradition has been doing this for over 1,000 years. Each khachkar is unique. Yours is unique too.'
Mapping the Diaspora
Instructions: On a class map of the world, mark the major Armenian communities: Republic of Armenia, France, Lebanon, the United States (especially Glendale, California), Russia, Argentina, Iran, Syria. Discuss: the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 created this global diaspora. Wherever Armenians live, they have built churches and commissioned khachkars. The tradition lives across borders.
Example: In Mrs Hovhannisyan's class, students were surprised at how widespread the Armenian community is. The teacher said: 'You are looking at the geography of survival. The genocide tried to destroy the Armenian people. It killed 1.5 million but it could not kill them all. The survivors went out into the world. Wherever they went, they took their faith, their language, and their tradition. The diaspora is the proof that the genocide failed to achieve its goal.'
Heritage Under Threat
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What other cultural heritage sites have been destroyed in our lifetimes?' Examples might include: the Bamiyan Buddhas (destroyed by the Taliban in 2001), Palmyra in Syria (damaged by ISIS in 2015), the Tombs of Timbuktu in Mali (damaged by Islamist groups in 2012), the Buddhist Manuscripts of Nalanda (some lost during conflict), the Brazilian National Museum (mostly destroyed by fire in 2018, partly through neglect). Each group shares one example. Discuss: cultural heritage destruction is a present-day issue.
Example: In one class, students named several recent cases. The teacher said: 'You have just listed real cultural losses from this century. The Julfa khachkars are part of a wider pattern. UNESCO and other institutions try to protect heritage, but they cannot always succeed against determined destruction. The response is to document carefully, to teach widely, and to keep making — to refuse to let the destruction be the last word. The khachkar tradition responds to its losses by making more khachkars. The principle is: keep creating.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Ethiopian processional cross for another ancient African Christian tradition.
  • Try a lesson on the Yiddish prayer book for another tradition that survived a genocide.
  • Try a lesson on the Palestinian key for another contested object of cultural memory.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Armenian Genocide and its denial. The history is well-documented but politically contested.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of cultural heritage protection. UNESCO, ICCROM, and other institutions try to protect; they often fail.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on stone carving traditions worldwide. Khachkars, Egyptian stelae, Mayan stelae, Indian sculptural stelae, Roman tombstones — each has its own visual language and cultural meaning.
Key takeaways
  • A khachkar is an Armenian cross-stone — a tall carved stone slab with an ornate cross at its centre, surrounded by intricate patterns. The word combines 'khach' (cross) and 'kar' (stone). About 40,000 survive worldwide.
  • Armenia adopted Christianity as its state religion in 301 CE — the first country in the world to do so, earlier than the Roman Empire (380 CE) and far earlier than most of Europe. The Armenian alphabet was created in 405 CE specifically to translate Christian texts.
  • The khachkar tradition began in the 9th century after Armenia gained independence from Arab rule. The peak of the art was the 12th to 14th centuries, with master carvers like Poghos (whose 1291 work at Goshavank is a famous example).
  • The Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 killed about 1.5 million Armenians and destroyed many khachkars in former Western Armenia. The genocide created the global Armenian diaspora that maintains the tradition today.
  • The largest historical collection of khachkars — about 10,000 stones at Julfa, in present-day Azerbaijan — was systematically destroyed by the Azerbaijani government between 1998 and 2005. Scholars have called this 'the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century'.
  • UNESCO inscribed khachkar carving on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2010. The tradition is alive today through master carvers in Armenia and the Armenian diaspora worldwide. Many new khachkars are memorials to the very losses the tradition has suffered.
Sources
  • The Khachkar or Cross-Stone — Hamlet Petrosyan (2001) [academic]
  • Armenian cross-stones art: Symbolism and craftsmanship of khachkars — UNESCO (2010) [institution]
  • Sacred Stones: A History of the Khachkar — Patrick Donabédian (2014) [academic]
  • The Destruction of Julfa: Cultural Cleansing in the Caucasus — Simon Maghakyan and Sarah Pickman (2019) [news]
  • The Armenian Genocide: A Complete History — Raymond Kévorkian (2011) [academic]