"The effort towards the truth must continue and I am convinced that this centenary year will see new gestures, new steps on the road to recognition," Hollande said yesterday at a dinner with Armenian groups in Paris.
Armenia says an estimated 1.5 million people were killed by Ottoman forces during World War I in what it calls a genocide.
But modern Turkey has always rejected the term "genocide", putting the toll at 500,000 and blaming their deaths on war and starvation.
Recalling Erdogan's stance last year, Hollande told members of France's Armenian community, the biggest in the European Union, that Ankara's position "cannot stop there".
"It is time to break the taboos and for the two nations, Armenia and Turkey, to create a new beginning," he said.
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