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Nubar Sarkis Gulbenkian (Armenian: Նուպար Սարգիս Կիւլպէնկեան; 2 June 1896 – 10 January 1972) was an Armenian-British business magnate and socialite [1] born in the Ottoman empire.
Signature of the Treaty of London on May 30, 1913.. Subsequently, Boghos Nubar made regular journeys from Paris to Berlin, Geneva, and London. [2] In this city, his contacts with high-ranking English dignitaries were relayed by the influential British Armenia Committee (in which Lord Bryce sat [13]), which sought to have reforms in Ottoman Armenia discussed at the London Conference convened to ...
Ekserdjian was educated at Westminster School and Cambridge University. [2] He is the son of London School of Economics graduate Colonel Nubar Martin 'Bill' Ekserdjian (1913-1967), a Northhampshireman whose family were Armenian nobility - Amira - a class of influential wealthy Armenians in the Ottoman Empire between the 18th and 19th centuries. [3]
Nubar Terziyan; References ... Laurence Raw. Exploring Turkish Cultures: Essays, Interviews and Reviews. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011. External links ...
Nubar (Eastern Armenian: Նուբար, Western Armenian: Նուպար) is an Armenian masculine given name. It is derived from Persian نوبر ( nowbar , “freshly ripened fruit, first fruit”), consisting of نو ( now , “new”) and بر ( bar , “fruit”).
The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) was founded on April 15, 1906, in Cairo, Egypt, by the initiative of renowned national figure Boghos Nubar, son of Nubar Pasha (three times prime minister of Egypt) [2] and other prominent representatives of the Egyptian-Armenian community to contribute to the spiritual and cultural development of ...
Nubar Pasha Նուբար Փաշա Egypt: Prime Minister of Egypt: 1878–79, 1884–88, 1894–95 [1] 2 Édouard Balladur Էդուար Բալլադյուր France: Prime Minister of France: 1993–95 [2] 3 Émile Lahoud Էմիլ Լահուդ Lebanon: President of Lebanon: 1998–2007 [3]
The Tasty Sandwich Shop, often called "The Tasty", was a restaurant that operated from 1916 to 1997 near the intersection of JFK Street and Brattle Street, at the center of Harvard Square, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.