Boghos Nubar (1851-1930) son of Nubar Pasha He was a liberal and disenchanted socialists with ten other Armenian national movement leaders drafted the Armenian General Benevolent Union on April 15, 1905. Nubar Pasha (1825 - 1899) (Arabic: Ø¨ÙØºÙص ÙÙØ¨Ø§Ø± باشا) was an Egyptian statesman and politician of Armenian descent and the first Prime Minister of Egypt. ... For the political party under Armenia; see Armenian national movement (party) Armenian national movement, Armenian national liberation movement or before establishment of First Armenian Republic commonly known as Armenian revolutionary movement was the Armenian effort to re-establish an Armenian state in the historic Armenian homelands of eastern Asia Minor... The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU), established in 1906, is the worldâs largest non-profit Armenian organization. ... April 15 is the 105th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (106th in leap years). ... 1905 (MCMV) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar). ...
Bous Nubar was awarded the Belgian Ordre de Leopold and Egyptian "Mejidieh" "Osmanieh" and "Nile" honorary degrees and medals for distinguished services[1] Nubar fought valiantly for the Armenian cause.[2] In January, 1919, The times published a latter from the Boghos Nuber in which he protests, blatedly, about the non representation of Armenians at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919. The letter includes a useful summary of the Armenian contribution to the allied war effort.[3] The Paris Peace Conference of 1919 was a conference organized by the victors of World War I to negotiate the peace treaties between the Allied and Associated Powers and the defeated Central Powers. ...
Our voluenteers fought in the French Foreign Legion and covered themselves with glory. In the Legion d'orient they numbered over 5,000 and made up more than half of the French contingent in Syria and Palestine, which took part in Genereal Allenby's decisive victory.
In the Caucasus, without mentioning the 150,000 Armenians in the Russian Armies, about 50,000 Armenian voluenters under Andranik Nazarbekoff and others, not only fought for four years for the Entente, but after the breakdown of Russia, they were the only forces in the Caucasus to resist the advance of the Turks, whom they held in check until the Armistice was signed. They helped the British in Mesopotamia by preventing the ...[4]