Matenadaran being both a museum of ancient manuscripts and a scientific research institute is a major center with a uniqueand exceptionally rich manuscript collection, one that has become a symbol of Armenia. It is named after Mesrop Mashtots,the inventor of the Armenian alphabet in 405.
Mashtots also established a collection of Armenian manuscripts at the Holy See of Echmiadzin (the center of the Armenian Church). For almost 1500 years the collection was connected to the Holy See and subjected to the triumphs and tragedies of the times. In 1920 the Echmiadzin Matenadaran was nationalized and moved to the capital city of Yerevan in 1939. In 1959 it became a research institute by decision of the Armenian government.
Matenadaran is one of the world’s richest manuscript depositories, with a collection of nearly 17,500 manuscripts covering almost all areas of ancient and medieval Armenian Culture and Science: history, geography, grammar, philosophy, law, medicine, mathematics, cosmology, chronology, alchemy, literature, art history, miniature painting, music, literature in translation, etc. Many originals lost in their mother tongue are available only in their Armenian translations, preserved at Matenadaran and are of exceptional value to the world culture and science.
In addition to Armenian manuscripts, which form the main part of Matenadaran collection, there are also preserved manuscripts in Arabic, Persian, Greek, Assyrian, Old Slavic, Latin, Ethiopian, Indian, Japanese and other languages.