Teotig

[1][2] Teotig was born in 1873 to Armenian parents in Üsküdar, a district of Constantinople situated on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus.

[3] Aside from his yearly Almanac production, Teotig was also known for his "Golgotha of the Armenian Clergy",[1][4] a compilation of sources analyzing the priests, clergymen, and monks who were massacred during the Armenian genocide.

[1] After returning to Constantinople in 1922 and on the eve of its occupation by the army of Mustafa Kemal, he followed with other intellectuals such as Levon Tutundjian, Arshag Boyadjian and Armenak der Hagopian the orphans transported to Corfu by the Near East Relief on a ship.

He stayed in Corfu until at least 1925 publishing articles in the press and corresponding with Tutundjian who had left in 1924 for Lausanne, in Switzerland [Source: Tutundjian Fund 413, Central Historical Archive of the Republic of Armenia, Yerevan.

He died in May 1928 in Paris, when the 18th volume of his yearbooks (his "paper children", as he called them) was in press.

Teotig in 1905
Dib u Dar (1912)