Levon Larents

[2] During his time as a student in Robert College, Larents along with classmates Yenovk Armen and Hrand Esayan published the Zepur Armenian periodical.

[2] In 1905, Larents went to the United States, escaping from societal pressure in the Ottoman Empire, where he became part of the reform movement of the Armenian Hunchak political party.

[3] While in Boston, Massachusetts, Larents became the editor of a local Armenian newspaper called Tsayn Hayreneats or "Voice of the Fatherland" for a period of two years.

After the Young Turk revolution in 1908, Larents returned to Constantinople where he became the chief-editor of Murj and Tsayn Hayreneats for two years.

[1][2] While in Constantinople, Larents published a book of poems entitled Trahkdi Yerker or "Songs of Heaven".

Levon Larents (Kirisciyan)
Larents' translation of H.F.B. Lynch's Armenia