Eremia Chelebi
Eremia Chelebi Kömürjian was an Ottoman-Armenian writer and intellectual from Constantinople.
Background
Eremia's recent ancestors came from the district around Kemah in the Armenian highlands. Eremia's great grandfather Sarkis Kömürjian, who was a coal dealer, abandoned his properties in 1590s during the upheaval caused by the Celali rebellions like most local Armenians and migrated to western Anatolia and Thrace. Sarkis died in the town of Gallipoli in southern Thrace. Nahabed, the son of Sarkis, and his only son Mardiros moved to Constantinople.Early life
Eremia was born on 12 or 13 May 1637 in the Langa neighborhood of Constantinople to Papas Mardiros. Eremia belonged to the Kömürjian family, which was distinguished in intellectual and ecclesiastical circles. Like most Ottoman-Armenians, Eremia was a member of the Armenian Apostolic Church. He had a younger brother Komitas, who would become a priest and "an officially beatified martyr" of the Roman Catholic Church and was venerated by Armenian Catholics, but also Armenian Apostolics, Armenian Protestants, Greeks, and Muslims.At an early age, Eremia worked alongside Hajji Ampagoum, a wheat contractor who was Eremia's maternal uncle and guardian for some time. Eremia started school and was taught by Der Hovannes, the bishop of the Surp Sarkis Church in the Hisardibi neighborhood. Eremia picked up Turkish in 1656 and later learned Greek, Persian, Arabic, and Hebrew. Although he grew up among clergy, Eremia steered away from that profession as he likely did not want to limit his studies.