Harutiun Jangülian (Armenian: Յարութիւն Ճանկիւլեան; 1855 – 15 June 1915) was an Armenianhistorian, political activist, and member of the Armenian National Assembly. He was especially known for his involvement in the Kum Kapu demonstration. He spent six years imprisoned in exile. He returned to Constantinople and continued his political activity after his release. Jangülian was arrested on 24 April 1915, at the beginning of the Armenian genocide, deported, and ultimately executed.
Towards the close of the nineteenth century, Armenian revolutionary societies began to agitate for reform and renewed European attention to the Armenian Question. The Hnchak party in particular used mass demonstration tactics.[5]
The Kum Kapu demonstration took place on 27 July 1890 in Constantinople's Kumkapı district, where the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople is located. Jangülian interrupted a mass by stepping onto the altar and reading aloud a statement concerning maltreatment of Armenians, which denounced the church's leadership as indifferent.[6] Demonstrators then forced the patriarch to join a procession heading to Yıldız Palace to demand reforms for the Armenian provinces.[3] As the procession formed, police surrounded the crowd and shots were fired, resulting in several fatalities, including that of a policeman.[3] Other sources claim seven deaths, including four police.[7]
Although some considered Jangülian a hero, he was subsequently sentenced to death, but the Sultan commuted his sentence to life imprisonment in exile.[3][6][8][9] He was exiled to Akka, Palestine and imprisoned in a fortress.[6] He remained there until being pardoned and released in 1896.[6] However, some sources claim he escaped.[1]
Life after prison
Once free, Jangülian went to Cyprus where he tried to unify the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party, which had become divided over various political disagreements.[10]
Jangülian then moved to Cairo and became an editor of the local Armenian newspaper Timagavor.[10] He later moved to Europe, where he sought to unite various Armenian political parties under one umbrella.[10] After the Young Turk Revolution in 1908, he returned to Constantinople, remaining politically active in the Hunchakian Party.[1] He was elected as a deputy to the Armenian National Assembly representing the district of Gedikpaşa.[1]
In 1913, he published four volumes of his memoirs on Armenian Revolutionary figures and their activities, entitled Memories of the Armenian Crisis (Armenian: Հիշատակներ հայկական ճգնաժամեն).[10]