To a good extent, my original interest in morphological theory arose from documenting and analyzing morphological and syntactic variation across Modern Armenian.
On the eve of World War I, the Armenian oecumene included numerous dialects of great diversity with pockets of speakers dispersed all over the Ottoman, Russian, and Qajar empires. Over the next century, the number of dialects and the overall number of speakers decreased dramatically.
Nevertheless, a lot of non-standard Armenian varieties were documented and are being documented nowadays. Unfortunately, not much of this work is available to the international linguistic community. To fill this gap, I am planning to put together a list of resources on Armenian dialects that would include summaries/translations of Armenian-language work, some novel data collected by me, as well as links to useful external sources.