, removed from the
Julfa graveyard before its
destruction by Azerbaijan. . The first true
khachkars appeared in the 9th century, About 40,000 khachkars survive today. Most of them are free standing, though those recording donations are usually built into monastery walls. The following three khachkars are believed to be the finest examples of the art form: • One in
Geghard, carved in 1213, probably by master
Timot and master
Mkhitar • The Holy Redeemer khachkar in
Haghpat (see gallery), carved in 1273 by master
Vahram • A khachkar in
Goshavank, carved in 1291 by master
Poghos. A number of good examples have been transferred to the Historical Museum in
Yerevan and beside the cathedral in
Echmiadzin. The largest surviving collection of khachkars is in Armenia, at
Noraduz cemetery on the western shore of the
Lake Sevan, where an old graveyard with around 900 khachkars from various periods and of various styles can be seen. The largest number was formerly located at the
Armenian cemetery in Julfa in the
Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic of
Azerbaijan, which contained approximately 10,000 khachkars in 1648. The number of khachkars dwindled over time through destruction of various causes until the only 2,700 khachkars remained in 1998, when the Azerbaijani government embarked on a systematic campaign destroying and leveling the entire medieval cemetery between 1998 and 2005. ==Present==