The Kaghakatsi Hagopian family paterfamilia, Hagop Hagopian,
and his wife Anna (nee Kevorkian), had for years lived in a house
in a large compound in the Armenian Quarter of the Old city.
Hagop,
whose
original
family
name
had
been
Hovsepian
before
it
was
changed
for
unknown
reasons,
had
two
brothers
as
neighbors,
one
of
whom
was
Vahan Hovsepian, the clan godfather.
The
house
in
which
Hagop
and
Anna
lived,
and
which
they
had
inherited
from his parents, was known as “Dar Bedour.”
Where
this
particular
appellation
sprang
from
has
never
been
satisfactorily
determined,
unlike
many
of
the
other
clan
names
whose
origins
are
patently
clear:
Dar El Hattiti, Dar El Basha, Dar El ‘Ajajez, etc.
But
it
is
just
possible
that
we
may
now
have
found
the
answer,
thanks
to
the
relentless
efforts
of
Kaghakatsi scion, Sona Hairabedian.
‘Going
through
the
domar
records,
I've
discovered
more
family
links,
and
am
in
the
process
of
figuring
out
where
people
fit
into
the
family
tree,”
Sona says.
She
reveals
that
she
has
been
told
that
the
“Bedour”
were
wealthy
merchants
who
settled
either
in
Jaffa
or
Jerusalem--possibly
they
were
the
Baddour
Brothers, the cigarette makers.”
“According
to
a
family
account,
somebody's
sister
Heghene
was
married
to
Murad
Bedour,
and
after
the
couples'
death,
they
bequeathed
a
jewel-
studded bishop's crown to the Armenian Convent,” she adds.
“This
was
in
gratitude
to
God
for
Heghene's
surviving
a
severe
case
of
cholera.
I
haven't
yet
found
a
record
of
Heghene's
or
Murad's
death
in
the
register, which I hoped would pinpoint where she fits into my family tree. “
Sona
has
made
another
interesting
discovery:
she
noticed
that
one
of
the
photos
(
on
right
)
in
the
"Foreign
cast"
section
of
the
Armenian
Jerusalem
website,
which
shows.
an
old
man
tatooing
a
young
lady
in
the
street,
is
"Nerses
the
goldsmith",
to
whom
her
father’s
uncle
Alexan
Mukhtarian
was
apprenticed,
and whose shop he "inherited" after Nerses retired.
“After
Alexan
retired,
my
father
spent
the
years
of
WWII
tattooing
Australian and New Zealand soldiers in the same shop,” Sona adds.
Solving a mystery
Anna Hagopian with grandson Setrag and family