The hayren () is an old form of Armenian folk poetry. Hayrens are typically composed of four lines with each of the four lines containing 15 syllables. Each line divides into two half-lines that consist of seven and eight syllables. This form of poetry dates back to medieval Armenia and has been used by various poets and writers throughout history. The content of hayrens can vary, covering topics such as love, satire, or lessons in morality.
The hayren () is an old form of Armenian folk poetry. Hayrens are typically composed of four lines with each of the four lines containing 15 syllables. Each line divides into two half-lines that consist of seven and eight syllables. This form of poetry dates back to medieval Armenia and has been used by various poets and writers throughout history. The content of hayrens can vary, covering topics such as love, satire, or lessons in morality.
== Famous writers == Nahapet Kuchak is known as the "father of Armenian hayrens". Kuchak's poems often explore themes of love and nature. His works are considered classics in Armenian literature. Kuchak lived in a time of political turmoil in the 16th century, and a dark age for the Armenian arts. Kuchak's poetry was often seen as a bright light in this dark time, being simple, direct, witty, and lyrical.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).