The Armenian Monastery of Holy Saviour is one of the unique Armenian holy places in Jerusalem, whereas the date of the construction is still unknown. It was likely built in the fourth century under the patronage of Queen St. Helena. The monastery is located at the site, where the house of High Priest Caiaphas was formerly located. The religious belief states that one of the Hebrew high priests ordered soldiers to whip and defame Christ there right after the betrayal. (Math. 26: 3-4, 57, 67). The century of the historical appropriation of the monastery by the Armenians is undisclosed. However, Armenian historical sources of Jerusalem mention that the Armenian congregation used to live in the monastery in the 12th-13th centuries. They built a scriptorium and produced many Armenian manuscripts. The first lapidary inscriptions of the monastery have come down to us since the 14th century. The number of the inscriptions has grown in further years since the Armenian pilgrims, donors, and sponsors, who visited the Holy Land or lived there, used to commission many memorial inscriptions and locate them on the khachkars in the cemeteries or pierce them in the walls of the sepulchres they built or renovated. The Jerusalem Armenian cemetery still survives near the monastery. This is the reason that most of the inscriptions are epitaphs. Our paper will present only a few of them.