Education
Born in the village of Areg near the town of Talin, Armenia, he completed his elementary and intermediary education in the Technical School of Talin.
Born in the village of Areg near the town of Talin, Armenia, he completed his elementary and intermediary education in the Technical School of Talin.
He was the self-appointed leader of paramilitary units in Getashen and Martunashen villages in Shahumyan Region of Soviet Azerbaijan during the Nagorno-Karabakh War. He was killed during by the Soviet Azerbaijani OMON (special police). After serving in the Soviet army, in 1987 he entered the Faculty of History of Yerevan State University.
In his first year at the university, Tatul joined the Armenian-liberation movement.
In September 1990, he traveled to Nagorno-Karabakh, where the situation continued to deteriorate. Joining the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Tatul has founded the "Dashnaktsakanner" unit of volunteers in Karabakh.
He headed the self-defense of the sub-district Getashen-Martunashen from September 1990 until May 1991 against Azerbaijani armed forces units and police detachments (OMON). Krpeyan was killed on 30 April 1991 in Getashen during the He was buried in Areg, which has been renamed after the hero – Tatul.
A tuffaceous monument has been erected in memory of Tatul.
The sculptor of the monument is Tariel Hakobian. In the spring of 1991 the main battleground of the partisan war was the wooded hills to the north of Nagorno-Karabakh where fighters from Armenia infiltrated to Armenian inhabited villages. Tatul Krpeyan led his people to Getashen and Martunashen.
On the 10th of April 1991 the decision was made by the authorities to start operations against these villages.
The Moscow-based human rights group Memorial has reconstructed what happened. On the 30th of April 1991, 4th Army soldiers and then the Azerbaijani OMON entered Getashen near Shahumian, where Krpeyan was killed, and his people took several soldiers hostage.
The OMON raided and looted houses and attacked many of the inhabitants. The dozen or so killed were in their eighties and nineties.
Many works of art have been dedicated to Krpeyan.
In 2004 Rafayel Sahakian has published a fictional documentary book named Artsvapasht Yerkir (Eagle-idolizing land), dedicated to him. The song "Leran Lanjin" ("Piedmont") was composed by Nersik Ispiryan. "Mayramut Ijav" ("At Sunset") was composed by Ashusgh Gevorg, as well as Ashot Babayan"s sonata for cello and piano in 1993, were all reportedly dedicated to Tatul Krpeyan"s memory.
In 2015, on his 50th birthday a school and a park in Yerevan were named in his honor.
Stamps depicting Krpeyan were issued.
He was also a member of the "Miatsum" (Unification) organization, whose efforts were directed to unite Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast with Armenia.