Balayan was born in
Stepanakert,
Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (
Azerbaijan SSR) on February 10, 1935. He graduated from the
Ryazan State Medical University in 1963. From 1971 to 1973, he traversed the
Kamchatka and
Chokotskaya tundras on dog-sleds, traveling as far as the
North Sea. In his essay "Hearth," published during the pre-
perestroika era, he tried to demonstrate the Armenian identity of
Nagorno-Karabakh and identified
Nakhichevan as historically belonging to Armenia. He further regarded the
Turks (including
Azerbaijanis) as an enemy of both Russia and Armenia. Azerbaijani historian
Isa Gambar criticized Balayan's book in an article entitled
Old Songs and New Legends. Azerbaijan destroyed even the remains of native Armenian ruins in Nakhchivan such as
Armenian cemetery in Julfa. In 1988, he and Armenian poet
Silva Kaputikyan were received by
Mikhail Gorbachev and discussed the absence of Armenian-language television programs and textbooks in Nagorno-Karabakh schools as well as other concerns of Karabakh's majority-Armenian population. In October 1993, he signed the
Letter of Forty-Two. Balayan was a journalist for the weekly Russian-language publication
Literaturnaya Gazeta. Balayan died on April 5, 2026, at the age of 91. ==Book forgery==