fbpx
Wikipedia

Georgians

The Georgians, or Kartvelians[d] (/kɑːrtˈvɛliənz/; Georgian: ქართველები, romanized: kartvelebi, pronounced [kʰaɾtʰʷelebi]), are a nation and indigenous Caucasian ethnic group native to present-day Georgia and surrounding areas historically associated with the Georgian kingdoms. Significant Georgian diaspora communities are also present throughout Russia, Turkey, Greece, Iran, Ukraine, the United States, and the European Union.

Georgians
ქართველები
Kartvelebi
The Georgian kings, queens consort and the Catholicos-Patriarch depicted on a Byzantine-influenced fresco[a] wearing Byzantine dress at the Gelati Monastery, UNESCO's World Heritage Site landmark.[3]
Total population
c. 5 million[b]
Regions with significant populations
 Georgia 3,224,600[4][c]
For more, see list of population and statistical data
Languages
Georgian and other Kartvelian languages
Religion
Predominant: Georgian Orthodoxy[5]
Significant: Catholicism and Islam[6]

Georgians arose from Colchian and Iberian civilizations of classical antiquity; Colchis was interconnected with the Hellenic world, whereas Iberia was influenced by the Persian Achaemenid Empire until Alexander the Great conquered it.[7] In the early 4th century, the Georgians became one of the first to embrace Christianity and now the majority of Georgians are Orthodox Christians, with most following their national autocephalous Georgian Orthodox Church,[8][9] although there are small Georgian Catholic and Muslim communities as well as a significant number of irreligious Georgians. Located in the Caucasus, on the continental crossroads of Europe and Asia, the High Middle Ages saw Georgian people form a unified Kingdom of Georgia in 1008 AD,[10][11][12] the pan-Caucasian empire,[13] later inaugurating the Georgian Golden Age, a height of political and cultural power of the nation. This lasted until the kingdom was weakened and later disintegrated as the result of the 13th–15th-century invasions of the Mongols and Timur,[14] the Black Death, the Fall of Constantinople, as well as internal divisions following the death of George V the Brilliant in 1346, the last of the great kings of Georgia.[15]

Thereafter and throughout the early modern period, Georgians became politically fractured and were dominated by the Ottoman Empire and successive dynasties of Iran. Georgians started looking for allies and found the Russians on the political horizon as a possible replacement for the lost Byzantine Empire, "for the sake of the Christian faith".[16] The Georgian kings and Russian tsars exchanged no less than 17 embassies,[17] which culminated in 1783, when Heraclius II of the eastern Georgian kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti forged an alliance with the Russian Empire. The Russo-Georgian alliance, however, backfired as Russia was unwilling to fulfill the terms of the treaty, proceeding to annex[18][19] the troubled kingdom in 1801[20] as well as the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti in 1810.[21] There were several uprisings and movements to restore the statehood, the most notable being the 1832 plot, which collapsed in failure.[22] Eventually, Russian rule over Georgia was acknowledged in various peace treaties with Iran and the Ottomans, and the remaining Georgian territories were absorbed by the Russian Empire in a piecemeal fashion through the course of the 19th century. Georgians briefly reasserted their independence from Russia under the First Georgian Republic from 1918 to 1921 and finally in 1991 from the Soviet Union.

The Georgian nation was formed out of a diverse set of geographic subgroups, each with its characteristic traditions, manners, dialects and, in the case of Svans and Mingrelians, own regional languages. The Georgian language, with its own unique writing system and extensive written tradition, which goes back to the 5th century, is the official language of Georgia as well as the language of education of all Georgians living in the country. According to the State Ministry on Diaspora Issues of Georgia, unofficial statistics say that there are more than 5 million Georgians in the world.[23]

Etymology edit

 
 
An exonymic term "Georgian" resulted from the merger of Persian designation "gurğ" (wolf), with the cult of Saint George popular among the Georgians.[24] The saint's name played a definite role in the transformation of "gurğ/gorg" into "Georgia/Georgian".[25]
 
The earliest known example for an endonym "kartveli"[d] (ႵႠႰႧႥႤႪႨ) was found as an archaeological artifact in the neighborhood of Umm Leisun, nearby Jerusalem.[26]

Georgians call themselves Kartveli[d] (ქართველი, pl. Kartvelebi ქართველები), their land Sakartvelo (საქართველო), and their language Kartuli (ქართული).[30][31] According to The Georgian Chronicles, the ancestor of the Kartvelian people was Kartlos, the great-grandson of the Biblical Japheth. However, scholars agree that the word is derived from the Karts, the latter being one of the proto-Georgian tribes that emerged as a dominant group in ancient times.[32] Kart probably is cognate with Indo-European gard and denotes people who live in a "fortified citadel".[33] Ancient Greeks (Homer, Herodotus, Strabo, Plutarch etc.) and Romans (Titus Livius, Cornelius Tacitus, etc.) referred to western Georgians as Colchians and eastern Georgians as Iberians.[34]

The term "Georgians" is derived from the country of Georgia. In the past, lore-based theories were given by the medieval French traveller Jacques de Vitry, who explained the name's origin by the popularity of St. George amongst Georgians,[35] while traveller Jean Chardin thought that "Georgia" came from Greek γεωργός ("tiller of the land"), as when the Greeks came into the region (in Colchis[32]) they encountered a developed agricultural society.[32]

However, as Alexander Mikaberidze adds, these explanations for the word Georgians/Georgia are rejected by the scholarly community, who point to the Persian word gurğ/gurğān ("wolf"[36]) as the root of the word.[37] Starting with the Persian word gurğ/gurğān, the word was later adopted in numerous other languages, including Slavic and West European languages.[32][38] This term itself might have been established through the ancient Iranian appellation of the near-Caspian region, which was referred to as Gorgan ("land of the wolves"[39]).[32]

History edit

 
 
A Georgian woman, by Teramo Castelli; and a man, by Cesare Vecellio.

Most historians and scholars of Georgia as well as anthropologists, archaeologists, and linguists tend to agree that the ancestors of modern Georgians inhabited the southern Caucasus and northern Anatolia since the Neolithic period.[40] Scholars usually refer to them as Proto-Kartvelian (Proto-Georgians such as Colchians and Iberians) tribes.[41]

The Georgian people in antiquity have been known to the ancient Greeks and Romans as Colchians and Iberians.[42][43] East Georgian tribes of Tibarenians-Iberians formed their kingdom in 7th century BCE. However, western Georgian tribes (Colchian tribes) established the first Georgian state of Colchis (c. 1350 BCE) before the foundation of the Kingdom of Iberia in the east.[44][45] According to the numerous scholars of Georgia, the formations of these two early Georgian kingdoms of Colchis and Iberia, resulted in the consolidation and uniformity of the Georgian nation.[46]

According to the renowned scholar of the Caucasian studies Cyril Toumanoff, the Moschians also were one of the early proto-Georgian tribes which were integrated into the first early Georgian state of Iberia.[45] The ancient Jewish chronicle by Josephus mentions Georgians as Iberes who were also called Thobel (Tubal).[47] David Marshall Lang argued that the root Tibar gave rise to the form Iber that made the Greeks pick up the name Iberian in the end for the designation of the eastern Georgians.[48]

 
Georgians presenting gifts to the Byzantine emperor. The Skylitzes Chronicle.

Diauehi in Assyrian sources and Taochi in Greek lived in the northeastern part of Anatolia. This ancient tribe is considered by many scholars as ancestors of the Georgians.[49] Modern Georgians still refer to this region, which now belongs to present-day Turkey, as Tao-Klarjeti, an ancient Georgian kingdom. Some people there still speak the Georgian language.[50]

Colchians in the ancient western Georgian polity of Colchis were another proto-Georgian tribe. They are first mentioned in the Assyrian annals of Tiglath-Pileser I and in the annals of Urartian king Sarduri II, and also included western Georgian tribe of the Meskhetians.[45][51]

Iberians, also known as Tiberians or Tiberanians, lived in the eastern Georgian kingdom of Iberia.[45]

Both Colchians and Iberians played an important role in the ethnic and cultural formation of the modern Georgian nation.[52][53]

According to the scholar of the Caucasian studies Cyril Toumanoff:

Colchis appears as the first Caucasian State to have achieved the coalescence of the newcomer, Colchis can be justly regarded as not a proto-Georgian, but a Georgian (West Georgian) kingdom ... It would seem natural to seek the beginnings of Georgian social history in Colchis, the earliest Georgian formation.[54]

Genetics edit

An FTDNA collection of Georgian Y-DNA suggests that Georgians have the highest percentage of Haplogroup G (39.9%) among the general population recorded in any country. Georgians' Y-DNA also belongs to Haplogroup J (32.5%), R1b (8.6%), L (5.4%), R1a (4.2%), I2 (3.8%) and other more minor haplogroups such as E, T and Q.[55]

Culture edit

 
Georgian language is written in its own unique alphabet since the early 5th century.

Language and linguistic subdivisions edit

Georgian is the primary language for Georgians of all provenance, including those who speak other Kartvelian languages: Svans, Mingrelians and the Laz. The language known today as Georgian is a traditional language of the eastern part of the country which has spread to most of the present-day Georgia after the post-Christianization centralization in the first millennium CE. Today, Georgians regardless of their ancestral region use Georgian as their official language. The regional languages Svan and Mingrelian are languages of the west that were traditionally spoken in the pre-Christian Kingdom of Colchis, but later lost importance as the unified Kingdom of Georgia emerged. Their decline is largely due to the capital of the unified kingdom, Tbilisi, being in the eastern part of the country known as Kingdom of Iberia effectively making the language of the east an official language of the Georgian monarch.

All of these languages comprise the Kartvelian language family along with the related language of the Laz people, which has speakers in both Turkey and Georgia.

Georgian dialects include Imeretian, Racha-Lechkhumian, Gurian, Adjarian, Imerkhevian (in Turkey), Kartlian, Kakhetian, Ingilo (in Azerbaijan), Tush, Khevsur, Mokhevian, Pshavian, Fereydan dialect in Iran in Fereydunshahr and Fereydan, Mtiuletian, Meskhetian and Javakhetian dialect.

Religion edit

 
Gelati Monastery, one of the most significant religious structures in Georgia, located near the former capital city of Kutaisi.

According to Orthodox tradition, Christianity was first preached in Georgia by the Apostles Simon and Andrew in the 1st century. It became the state religion of Kartli (Iberia) in 337.[56][57] At the same time, in the first centuries A.D., the cult of Mithras, pagan beliefs, and Zoroastrianism were commonly practiced in Georgia.[58] The conversion of Kartli to Christianity is credited to St. Nino of Cappadocia. Christianity gradually replaced all the former religions except Zoroastrianism, which become a second established religion in Iberia after the Peace of Acilisene in 378.[59] The conversion to Christianity eventually placed the Georgians permanently on the front line of conflict between the Islamic and Christian world. Georgians remained mostly Christian despite repeated invasions by Muslim powers, and long episodes of foreign domination.

As was true elsewhere, the Christian church in Georgia was crucial to the development of a written language, and most of the earliest written works were religious texts. Medieval Georgian culture was greatly influenced by Eastern Orthodoxy and the Georgian Orthodox Church, which promoted and often sponsored the creation of many works of religious devotion. These included churches and monasteries, works of art such as icons, and hagiographies of Georgian saints.

Today, 83.9% of the Georgian population, most of whom are ethnic Georgian, follow Eastern Orthodox Christianity.[60] A sizable Georgian Muslim population exists in Adjara. This autonomous Republic borders Turkey, and was part of the Ottoman Empire for a longer amount of time than other parts of the country. Those Georgian Muslims practice the Sunni Hanafi form of Islam. Islam has however declined in Adjara during the 20th century, due to Soviet anti-religious policies, cultural integration with the national Orthodox majority, and strong missionary efforts by the Georgian Orthodox Church.[61] In the early modern period, converted Georgian recruits were often used by the Persian and Ottoman Empires for elite military units such as the Mameluks, Qizilbash, and ghulams. The Iranian Georgians are all reportedly Shia Muslims today, while Ingiloy (indigenous to Azerbaijan), Laz (indigenous to Turkey), Imerkhevians (indigenous to Turkey), and Georgians in Turkey (who descend from Georgian immigrants) are mostly Sunni Muslim.

There is also a small number of Georgian Jews, tracing their ancestors to the Babylonian captivity.

In addition to traditional religious confessions, Georgia retains irreligious segments of society, as well as a significant portion of nominally religious individuals who do not actively practice their faith.[62]

Cuisine edit

 
Georgian Supra, by Niko Pirosmani.

The Georgian cuisine is specific to the country, but also contains some influences from other European culinary traditions, as well as those from the surrounding Western Asia. Each historical province of Georgia has its own distinct culinary tradition, such as Megrelian, Kakhetian, and Imeretian cuisines. In addition to various meat dishes, Georgian cuisine also offers a variety of vegetarian meals.

The importance of both food and drink to Georgian culture is best observed during a Caucasian feast, or supra, when a huge assortment of dishes is prepared, always accompanied by large amounts of wine, and dinner can last for hours. In a Georgian feast, the role of the tamada (toastmaster) is an important and honoured position.

In countries of the former Soviet Union, Georgian food is popular due to the immigration of Georgians to other Soviet republics, in particular Russia. In Russia all major cities have many Georgian restaurants and Russian restaurants often feature Georgian food items on their menu.[63]

Geographic subdivisions and subethnic groups edit

 
Svan peasant in Mestia, c. 1888

Geographical subdivisions edit

The Georgians have historically been classified into various subgroups based on the geographic region which their ancestors traditionally inhabited.

Even if a member of any of these subgroups moves to a different region, they will still be known by the name of their ancestral region. For example, if a Gurian moves to Tbilisi (part of the Kartli region) he will not automatically identify himself as Kartlian despite actually living in Kartli. This may, however, change if substantial amount of time passes. For example, there are some Mingrelians who have lived in the Imereti region for centuries and are now identified as Imeretian or Imeretian-Mingrelians.

Last names from mountainous eastern Georgian provinces (such as Kakheti, etc.) can be distinguished by the suffix –uri (ური), or –uli (ული). Most Svan last names typically end in –ani (ანი), Mingrelian in –ia (ია), -ua (უა), or -ava (ავა), and Laz in –shi (ში).

Name Name in Georgian Geographical region Dialect or Language
Adjarians აჭარელი achareli Adjara Adjarian dialect
Gurians გურული guruli Guria Gurian dialect
Imeretians იმერელი imereli Imereti Imeretian dialect
Javakhians ჯავახი javakhi Javakheti Javakhian dialect
Kakhetians კახელი kakheli Kakheti Kakhetian dialect
Kartlians ქართლელი kartleli Kartli Kartlian dialect
Khevsurians ხევსური khevsuri Khevsureti Khevsurian dialect
Lechkhumians ლეჩხუმელი lechkhumeli Lechkhumi Lechkhumian dialect
Mingrelians მეგრელი megreli Samegrelo Mingrelian language
Meskhetians მესხი meskhi Meskheti (Samtskhe) Meskhian dialect
Mokhevians მოხევე mokheve Khevi Mokhevian dialect
Pshavians ფშაველი pshaveli Pshavi Pshavian dialect
Rachians რაჭველი rachveli Racha Rachian dialect
Svans სვანი svani Svaneti Svan language
Tushs თუში tushi Tusheti Tushetian dialect

The 1897 Russian census (which accounted people by language), had Imeretian, Svan and Mingrelian languages separate from Georgian.[64] During the 1926 Soviet census, Svans and Mingrelians were accounted separately from Georgian.[65] Svan and Mingrelian languages are both Kartvelian languages and are closely related to the national Georgian language.

Outside modern Georgia edit

Laz people also may be considered Georgian based on their geographic location and religion. According to the London School of Economics' anthropologist Mathijs Pelkmans,[66] Lazs residing in Georgia frequently identify themselves as "first-class Georgians" to show pride, while considering their Muslim counterparts in Turkey as "Turkified Lazs".[67]

Subethnic groups Georgian name Settlement area Language
(dialect)
Number Difference(s) from mainstream Georgians
(other than location)
Laz people ლაზი lazi Chaneti (Turkey) Laz language 1 million Religion: Muslim majority, Orthodox Minority
Fereydani ფერეიდნელი pereidneli Fereydan (Iran) Pereidnuli dialect 100,000 +[6] Religion: Muslim[6]
Chveneburi ჩვენებური chveneburi Black Sea Region (Turkey) Georgian language 91,000[68]–1,000,000[69] Religion: Muslim[68]
Ingiloy people ინგილო ingilo Saingilo Hereti Zaqatala District (Azerbaijan) Ingiloan dialect 12,000 Religion: Muslim majority,[70]
Orthodox minority[71]
Imerkhevians

(Shavshians)

შავში shavshi Shavsheti (Turkey) Imerkhevian dialect Religion: Muslim majority.
Klarjians კლარჯი klarji Klarjeti (Turkey) Imerkhevian dialect

Extinct Georgian subdivisions edit

Throughout history Georgia also has extinct Georgian subdivisions

Name Name in Georgian Geographical location Dialect or language
Dvals დვალი dvali Georgia (Racha and Khevi regions) and Russia (North Ossetia) Dval dialect

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The fresco was a demonstration of the ambitious imperial[1] example on which the Georgian monarchs modeled themselves and competed in magnificence with those of Byzantine Empire.[2]
  2. ^ The total figure is merely an estimation; sum of all the referenced populations only.
  3. ^ Ethnic Georgians are 86.8% of Georgia's current population of 3,713,800. Data without the Russian-occupied territories of Georgia.
  4. ^ a b c The term Kartveli, derived from Old Georgian Kartueli (ႵႠႰႧႭႳႤႪႨ), originally designated inhabitants of the Kingdom of Iberia and were natively known as Kartvelians,[27] that stood at the political, cultural, religious and economic vanguard of the nation. Kartvelians, tracing their definitive appearance since post-Assyrian times, gradually became a dominant element in nation-building that would give its name to the whole country and people.[28] After the Georgian unification, the term would come to signify all-Georgian enterprise, becoming absolute and universal.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ Rapp (2016), location: 8958
  2. ^ Eastmond, pp. 26-61-62
  3. ^ Eastmond, pp. 60-28
  4. ^ Census data of National Statistics Office of Georgia
  5. ^ (PDF). National Statistics Office of Georgia. 28 April 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  6. ^ a b c Rezvani, Babak (Winter 2009). "The Fereydani Georgian Representation". Anthropology of the Middle East. 4 (2): 52–74. doi:10.3167/ame.2009.040205.
  7. ^ Rayfield, pp. 18—19
  8. ^ Suny, p. 21
  9. ^ Rayfield, p. 39
  10. ^ Suny, p. 32
  11. ^ Rayfield, p. 71
  12. ^ Eastmond, p. 39
  13. ^ Rapp (2016), location: 453
  14. ^ W.E.D. Allen, location: 1157
  15. ^ W.E.D. Allen, location: 337
  16. ^ W.E.D. Allen, location: 1612
  17. ^ W.E.D. Allen, location: 344
  18. ^ Suny, pp. 63-65-88
  19. ^ Rayfield, p. 259
  20. ^ Suny, p. 59
  21. ^ Suny, pp. 64-66
  22. ^ Suny, pp. 71-72
  23. ^ Statistics 13 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine 22.04.2015
  24. ^ Rayfield, p. 12
  25. ^ Khintibidze, Elguja (1998), The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology, pp. 77-78, Tbilisi State University Press, ISBN 5-511-00775-7
  26. ^ Tchekhanovets, Y. (2014). Iohane, bishop of Purtavi and Caucasian Albanians in the Holy Land. In G. C. Bottini, L. D. Chrupcała, & J. Patrich (Eds.), Knowledge and Wisdom: Archaeological and Historical Essays in Honour of Leah Di Segni (Studium Biblicum Franciscanum, Collectio Maior; Vol. 54). Edizioni Terra Santa, p. 305, ISBN 978-88-6240-274-3
  27. ^ Rapp & Crego, 2, pp. 1-2
  28. ^ Rapp & Crego, I, pp. 1-3
  29. ^ Rapp & Crego, 12-I, pp. 4-5
  30. ^ Suny, p. 3
  31. ^ Rapp (2016), location: 656
  32. ^ a b c d e Mikaberidze, Alexander (2015). Historical Dictionary of Georgia (2 ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-4422-4146-6.
  33. ^ Rayfield, p. 13
  34. ^ Braund, David. Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia, 550 BC-AD 562, pp. 17–18
  35. ^ Peradze, Gregory. "The Pilgrims' derivation of the name Georgia". Georgica, Autumn, 1937, nos. 4 & 5, 208–209
  36. ^ Hock, Hans Henrich; Zgusta, Ladislav (1997). Historical, Indo-European, and Lexicographical Studies. Walter de Gruyter. p. 211. ISBN 978-3-11-012884-0.
  37. ^ Mikaberidze, Alexander (2015). Historical Dictionary of Georgia (2 ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-4422-4146-6. However, such explanations are rejected by the scholarly community, who point to the Persian gurğ/gurğān as the root of the word (...)
  38. ^ Boeder; et al. (2002). Philology, typology and language structure. Peter Lang. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-8204-5991-2. The Russian designation of Georgia (Gruziya) also derives from the Persian gurg.
  39. ^ Rapp (2016), location: 1086
  40. ^ Lang, p. 19
  41. ^ Lang, p. 66
  42. ^ Georgia A Sovereign Country of the Caucasus, Roger Rosen, p 18
  43. ^ Suny, p. 4
  44. ^ Rayfield, pp. 13-14
  45. ^ a b c d Toumanoff, p. 80
  46. ^ Toumanoff, p. 58
  47. ^ The Complete Works, Jewish Antiquities, Josephus, Book 1, p 57
  48. ^ Suny, p. 11
  49. ^ Suny, p. 6
  50. ^ Lang, p. 58
  51. ^ Lang, p. 59
  52. ^ Charles Burney and David Marshal Lang, The Peoples of the Hills: Ancient Ararat and Caucasus, p. 38
  53. ^ Toumanoff, p. 57
  54. ^ Toumanoff, pp. 69—84
  55. ^ "FamilyTreeDNA - Georgian DNA Project". www.familytreedna.com. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  56. ^ Toumanoff, Cyril, "Iberia between Chosroid and Bagratid Rule", in Studies in Christian Caucasian History, Georgetown, 1963, pp. 374–377. Accessible online at . Archived from the original on 8 February 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  57. ^ Rapp, Stephen H. Jr (2007). "7 – Georgian Christianity". The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity. John Wiley & Sons. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-4443-3361-9. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  58. ^ "GEORGIA iii. Iranian elements in Georgian art and archeology". Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  59. ^ Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994). The Making of the Georgian Nation. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20915-3. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  60. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 October 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  61. ^ Thomas Liles, "Islam and religious transformation in Adjara", ECMI Working Paper, February 2012, [1] 5 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 4 June 2012
  62. ^ Caucasus Analytical Digest No.20, Heinrich Böll Stiftung, 11 October 2010
  63. ^ Mack, Glenn R.; Surina, Asele (2005). Food Culture in Russia And Central Asia. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-313-32773-4.
  64. ^ (in Russian) Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г.
  65. ^ (in Russian) ССР ГРУЗИЯ (1926 г.)
  66. ^ "Dr Mathijs Pelkmans". Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  67. ^ Pelkmans, Mathijs. Defending the border: identity, religion, and modernity in the Republic of Georgia. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2006, pg. 80
  68. ^ a b Extra, Guus; Gorter, Durk (2001). The Other Languages of Europe. Multilingual Matters. ISBN 978-1-85359-509-7. Retrieved 26 May 2014. About 91,000 Muslim Georgians living in Turkey. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  69. ^ "Türkiye'deki Yaşayan Etnik Gruplar Araştırıldı". Milliyet (in Turkish). 6 June 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2008.
  70. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P. (1989). Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-8223-0891-1.
  71. ^ Friedrich, Paul (1994). Encyclopedia of World Cultures: Russia and Eurasia, China (1. publ. ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: G.K. Hall. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-8161-1810-6. A part of the Ingilo population still retains the (Orthodox) Christian faith, but another, larger segment adheres to the Sunni sect of Islam.

Bibliography edit

georgians, this, article, about, caucasian, ethnic, group, inhabitants, georgia, demographics, georgia, country, inhabitants, state, demographics, georgia, state, other, uses, georgian, disambiguation, kartvelians, ɑːr, georgian, ქართველები, romanized, kartvel. This article is about the Caucasian ethnic group For the inhabitants of Georgia see Demographics of Georgia country For the inhabitants of the US state see Demographics of Georgia U S state For other uses see Georgian disambiguation The Georgians or Kartvelians d k ɑːr t ˈ v ɛ l i e n z Georgian ქართველები romanized kartvelebi pronounced kʰaɾtʰʷelebi are a nation and indigenous Caucasian ethnic group native to present day Georgia and surrounding areas historically associated with the Georgian kingdoms Significant Georgian diaspora communities are also present throughout Russia Turkey Greece Iran Ukraine the United States and the European Union Georgians ქართველები KartvelebiThe Georgian kings queens consort and the Catholicos Patriarch depicted on a Byzantine influenced fresco a wearing Byzantine dress at the Gelati Monastery UNESCO s World Heritage Site landmark 3 Total populationc 5 million b Regions with significant populations Georgia 3 224 600 4 c For more see list of population and statistical dataLanguagesGeorgian and other Kartvelian languagesReligionPredominant Georgian Orthodoxy 5 Significant Catholicism and Islam 6 Georgians arose from Colchian and Iberian civilizations of classical antiquity Colchis was interconnected with the Hellenic world whereas Iberia was influenced by the Persian Achaemenid Empire until Alexander the Great conquered it 7 In the early 4th century the Georgians became one of the first to embrace Christianity and now the majority of Georgians are Orthodox Christians with most following their national autocephalous Georgian Orthodox Church 8 9 although there are small Georgian Catholic and Muslim communities as well as a significant number of irreligious Georgians Located in the Caucasus on the continental crossroads of Europe and Asia the High Middle Ages saw Georgian people form a unified Kingdom of Georgia in 1008 AD 10 11 12 the pan Caucasian empire 13 later inaugurating the Georgian Golden Age a height of political and cultural power of the nation This lasted until the kingdom was weakened and later disintegrated as the result of the 13th 15th century invasions of the Mongols and Timur 14 the Black Death the Fall of Constantinople as well as internal divisions following the death of George V the Brilliant in 1346 the last of the great kings of Georgia 15 Thereafter and throughout the early modern period Georgians became politically fractured and were dominated by the Ottoman Empire and successive dynasties of Iran Georgians started looking for allies and found the Russians on the political horizon as a possible replacement for the lost Byzantine Empire for the sake of the Christian faith 16 The Georgian kings and Russian tsars exchanged no less than 17 embassies 17 which culminated in 1783 when Heraclius II of the eastern Georgian kingdom of Kartli Kakheti forged an alliance with the Russian Empire The Russo Georgian alliance however backfired as Russia was unwilling to fulfill the terms of the treaty proceeding to annex 18 19 the troubled kingdom in 1801 20 as well as the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti in 1810 21 There were several uprisings and movements to restore the statehood the most notable being the 1832 plot which collapsed in failure 22 Eventually Russian rule over Georgia was acknowledged in various peace treaties with Iran and the Ottomans and the remaining Georgian territories were absorbed by the Russian Empire in a piecemeal fashion through the course of the 19th century Georgians briefly reasserted their independence from Russia under the First Georgian Republic from 1918 to 1921 and finally in 1991 from the Soviet Union The Georgian nation was formed out of a diverse set of geographic subgroups each with its characteristic traditions manners dialects and in the case of Svans and Mingrelians own regional languages The Georgian language with its own unique writing system and extensive written tradition which goes back to the 5th century is the official language of Georgia as well as the language of education of all Georgians living in the country According to the State Ministry on Diaspora Issues of Georgia unofficial statistics say that there are more than 5 million Georgians in the world 23 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Genetics 4 Culture 4 1 Language and linguistic subdivisions 4 2 Religion 4 3 Cuisine 5 Geographic subdivisions and subethnic groups 5 1 Geographical subdivisions 5 1 1 Outside modern Georgia 5 1 2 Extinct Georgian subdivisions 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 BibliographyEtymology edit nbsp nbsp An exonymic term Georgian resulted from the merger of Persian designation gurg wolf with the cult of Saint George popular among the Georgians 24 The saint s name played a definite role in the transformation of gurg gorg into Georgia Georgian 25 nbsp The earliest known example for an endonym kartveli d ႵႠႰႧႥႤႪႨ was found as an archaeological artifact in the neighborhood of Umm Leisun nearby Jerusalem 26 Further information Names of the Georgians Georgians call themselves Kartveli d ქართველი pl Kartvelebi ქართველები their land Sakartvelo საქართველო and their language Kartuli ქართული 30 31 According to The Georgian Chronicles the ancestor of the Kartvelian people was Kartlos the great grandson of the Biblical Japheth However scholars agree that the word is derived from the Karts the latter being one of the proto Georgian tribes that emerged as a dominant group in ancient times 32 Kart probably is cognate with Indo European gard and denotes people who live in a fortified citadel 33 Ancient Greeks Homer Herodotus Strabo Plutarch etc and Romans Titus Livius Cornelius Tacitus etc referred to western Georgians as Colchians and eastern Georgians as Iberians 34 The term Georgians is derived from the country of Georgia In the past lore based theories were given by the medieval French traveller Jacques de Vitry who explained the name s origin by the popularity of St George amongst Georgians 35 while traveller Jean Chardin thought that Georgia came from Greek gewrgos tiller of the land as when the Greeks came into the region in Colchis 32 they encountered a developed agricultural society 32 However as Alexander Mikaberidze adds these explanations for the word Georgians Georgia are rejected by the scholarly community who point to the Persian word gurg gurgan wolf 36 as the root of the word 37 Starting with the Persian word gurg gurgan the word was later adopted in numerous other languages including Slavic and West European languages 32 38 This term itself might have been established through the ancient Iranian appellation of the near Caspian region which was referred to as Gorgan land of the wolves 39 32 History edit nbsp nbsp A Georgian woman by Teramo Castelli and a man by Cesare Vecellio Further information History of Georgia country and Prehistoric Georgia Most historians and scholars of Georgia as well as anthropologists archaeologists and linguists tend to agree that the ancestors of modern Georgians inhabited the southern Caucasus and northern Anatolia since the Neolithic period 40 Scholars usually refer to them as Proto Kartvelian Proto Georgians such as Colchians and Iberians tribes 41 The Georgian people in antiquity have been known to the ancient Greeks and Romans as Colchians and Iberians 42 43 East Georgian tribes of Tibarenians Iberians formed their kingdom in 7th century BCE However western Georgian tribes Colchian tribes established the first Georgian state of Colchis c 1350 BCE before the foundation of the Kingdom of Iberia in the east 44 45 According to the numerous scholars of Georgia the formations of these two early Georgian kingdoms of Colchis and Iberia resulted in the consolidation and uniformity of the Georgian nation 46 According to the renowned scholar of the Caucasian studies Cyril Toumanoff the Moschians also were one of the early proto Georgian tribes which were integrated into the first early Georgian state of Iberia 45 The ancient Jewish chronicle by Josephus mentions Georgians as Iberes who were also called Thobel Tubal 47 David Marshall Lang argued that the root Tibar gave rise to the form Iber that made the Greeks pick up the name Iberian in the end for the designation of the eastern Georgians 48 nbsp Georgians presenting gifts to the Byzantine emperor The Skylitzes Chronicle Diauehi in Assyrian sources and Taochi in Greek lived in the northeastern part of Anatolia This ancient tribe is considered by many scholars as ancestors of the Georgians 49 Modern Georgians still refer to this region which now belongs to present day Turkey as Tao Klarjeti an ancient Georgian kingdom Some people there still speak the Georgian language 50 Colchians in the ancient western Georgian polity of Colchis were another proto Georgian tribe They are first mentioned in the Assyrian annals of Tiglath Pileser I and in the annals of Urartian king Sarduri II and also included western Georgian tribe of the Meskhetians 45 51 Iberians also known as Tiberians or Tiberanians lived in the eastern Georgian kingdom of Iberia 45 Both Colchians and Iberians played an important role in the ethnic and cultural formation of the modern Georgian nation 52 53 According to the scholar of the Caucasian studies Cyril Toumanoff Colchis appears as the first Caucasian State to have achieved the coalescence of the newcomer Colchis can be justly regarded as not a proto Georgian but a Georgian West Georgian kingdom It would seem natural to seek the beginnings of Georgian social history in Colchis the earliest Georgian formation 54 Genetics editFurther information Genetic history of the Caucasus An FTDNA collection of Georgian Y DNA suggests that Georgians have the highest percentage of Haplogroup G 39 9 among the general population recorded in any country Georgians Y DNA also belongs to Haplogroup J 32 5 R1b 8 6 L 5 4 R1a 4 2 I2 3 8 and other more minor haplogroups such as E T and Q 55 Culture edit nbsp Georgian language is written in its own unique alphabet since the early 5th century Main article Culture of Georgia country Language and linguistic subdivisions edit Main article Georgian language Georgian is the primary language for Georgians of all provenance including those who speak other Kartvelian languages Svans Mingrelians and the Laz The language known today as Georgian is a traditional language of the eastern part of the country which has spread to most of the present day Georgia after the post Christianization centralization in the first millennium CE Today Georgians regardless of their ancestral region use Georgian as their official language The regional languages Svan and Mingrelian are languages of the west that were traditionally spoken in the pre Christian Kingdom of Colchis but later lost importance as the unified Kingdom of Georgia emerged Their decline is largely due to the capital of the unified kingdom Tbilisi being in the eastern part of the country known as Kingdom of Iberia effectively making the language of the east an official language of the Georgian monarch All of these languages comprise the Kartvelian language family along with the related language of the Laz people which has speakers in both Turkey and Georgia Georgian dialects include Imeretian Racha Lechkhumian Gurian Adjarian Imerkhevian in Turkey Kartlian Kakhetian Ingilo in Azerbaijan Tush Khevsur Mokhevian Pshavian Fereydan dialect in Iran in Fereydunshahr and Fereydan Mtiuletian Meskhetian and Javakhetian dialect Religion edit nbsp Gelati Monastery one of the most significant religious structures in Georgia located near the former capital city of Kutaisi Main articles Religion in Georgia country and Secularism and irreligion in Georgia According to Orthodox tradition Christianity was first preached in Georgia by the Apostles Simon and Andrew in the 1st century It became the state religion of Kartli Iberia in 337 56 57 At the same time in the first centuries A D the cult of Mithras pagan beliefs and Zoroastrianism were commonly practiced in Georgia 58 The conversion of Kartli to Christianity is credited to St Nino of Cappadocia Christianity gradually replaced all the former religions except Zoroastrianism which become a second established religion in Iberia after the Peace of Acilisene in 378 59 The conversion to Christianity eventually placed the Georgians permanently on the front line of conflict between the Islamic and Christian world Georgians remained mostly Christian despite repeated invasions by Muslim powers and long episodes of foreign domination As was true elsewhere the Christian church in Georgia was crucial to the development of a written language and most of the earliest written works were religious texts Medieval Georgian culture was greatly influenced by Eastern Orthodoxy and the Georgian Orthodox Church which promoted and often sponsored the creation of many works of religious devotion These included churches and monasteries works of art such as icons and hagiographies of Georgian saints Today 83 9 of the Georgian population most of whom are ethnic Georgian follow Eastern Orthodox Christianity 60 A sizable Georgian Muslim population exists in Adjara This autonomous Republic borders Turkey and was part of the Ottoman Empire for a longer amount of time than other parts of the country Those Georgian Muslims practice the Sunni Hanafi form of Islam Islam has however declined in Adjara during the 20th century due to Soviet anti religious policies cultural integration with the national Orthodox majority and strong missionary efforts by the Georgian Orthodox Church 61 In the early modern period converted Georgian recruits were often used by the Persian and Ottoman Empires for elite military units such as the Mameluks Qizilbash and ghulams The Iranian Georgians are all reportedly Shia Muslims today while Ingiloy indigenous to Azerbaijan Laz indigenous to Turkey Imerkhevians indigenous to Turkey and Georgians in Turkey who descend from Georgian immigrants are mostly Sunni Muslim There is also a small number of Georgian Jews tracing their ancestors to the Babylonian captivity In addition to traditional religious confessions Georgia retains irreligious segments of society as well as a significant portion of nominally religious individuals who do not actively practice their faith 62 nbsp Peter the Iberian Hilarion the Iberian Shio of Mgvime John the Iberian Euthymius the Athonite George the Hagiorite and David of Gareji on the 14th century triptych titled as the Radiant Georgians kept at the Saint Catherine s Monastery on Mount Sinai Cuisine edit nbsp Georgian Supra by Niko Pirosmani The Georgian cuisine is specific to the country but also contains some influences from other European culinary traditions as well as those from the surrounding Western Asia Each historical province of Georgia has its own distinct culinary tradition such as Megrelian Kakhetian and Imeretian cuisines In addition to various meat dishes Georgian cuisine also offers a variety of vegetarian meals The importance of both food and drink to Georgian culture is best observed during a Caucasian feast or supra when a huge assortment of dishes is prepared always accompanied by large amounts of wine and dinner can last for hours In a Georgian feast the role of the tamada toastmaster is an important and honoured position In countries of the former Soviet Union Georgian food is popular due to the immigration of Georgians to other Soviet republics in particular Russia In Russia all major cities have many Georgian restaurants and Russian restaurants often feature Georgian food items on their menu 63 Geographic subdivisions and subethnic groups edit nbsp Svan peasant in Mestia c 1888 Geographical subdivisions edit The Georgians have historically been classified into various subgroups based on the geographic region which their ancestors traditionally inhabited Even if a member of any of these subgroups moves to a different region they will still be known by the name of their ancestral region For example if a Gurian moves to Tbilisi part of the Kartli region he will not automatically identify himself as Kartlian despite actually living in Kartli This may however change if substantial amount of time passes For example there are some Mingrelians who have lived in the Imereti region for centuries and are now identified as Imeretian or Imeretian Mingrelians Main article Georgian surname Last names from mountainous eastern Georgian provinces such as Kakheti etc can be distinguished by the suffix uri ური or uli ული Most Svan last names typically end in ani ანი Mingrelian in ia ია ua უა or ava ავა and Laz in shi ში Name Name in Georgian Geographical region Dialect or Language Adjarians აჭარელი achareli Adjara Adjarian dialect Gurians გურული guruli Guria Gurian dialect Imeretians იმერელი imereli Imereti Imeretian dialect Javakhians ჯავახი javakhi Javakheti Javakhian dialect Kakhetians კახელი kakheli Kakheti Kakhetian dialect Kartlians ქართლელი kartleli Kartli Kartlian dialect Khevsurians ხევსური khevsuri Khevsureti Khevsurian dialect Lechkhumians ლეჩხუმელი lechkhumeli Lechkhumi Lechkhumian dialect Mingrelians მეგრელი megreli Samegrelo Mingrelian language Meskhetians მესხი meskhi Meskheti Samtskhe Meskhian dialect Mokhevians მოხევე mokheve Khevi Mokhevian dialect Pshavians ფშაველი pshaveli Pshavi Pshavian dialect Rachians რაჭველი rachveli Racha Rachian dialect Svans სვანი svani Svaneti Svan language Tushs თუში tushi Tusheti Tushetian dialect The 1897 Russian census which accounted people by language had Imeretian Svan and Mingrelian languages separate from Georgian 64 During the 1926 Soviet census Svans and Mingrelians were accounted separately from Georgian 65 Svan and Mingrelian languages are both Kartvelian languages and are closely related to the national Georgian language Outside modern Georgia edit Main article Georgian diaspora Laz people also may be considered Georgian based on their geographic location and religion According to the London School of Economics anthropologist Mathijs Pelkmans 66 Lazs residing in Georgia frequently identify themselves as first class Georgians to show pride while considering their Muslim counterparts in Turkey as Turkified Lazs 67 Subethnic groups Georgian name Settlement area Language dialect Number Difference s from mainstream Georgians other than location Laz people ლაზი lazi Chaneti Turkey Laz language 1 million Religion Muslim majority Orthodox Minority Fereydani ფერეიდნელი pereidneli Fereydan Iran Pereidnuli dialect 100 000 6 Religion Muslim 6 Chveneburi ჩვენებური chveneburi Black Sea Region Turkey Georgian language 91 000 68 1 000 000 69 Religion Muslim 68 Ingiloy people ინგილო ingilo Saingilo Hereti Zaqatala District Azerbaijan Ingiloan dialect 12 000 Religion Muslim majority 70 Orthodox minority 71 Imerkhevians Shavshians შავში shavshi Shavsheti Turkey Imerkhevian dialect Religion Muslim majority Klarjians კლარჯი klarji Klarjeti Turkey Imerkhevian dialect Extinct Georgian subdivisions edit Throughout history Georgia also has extinct Georgian subdivisions Name Name in Georgian Geographical location Dialect or language Dvals დვალი dvali Georgia Racha and Khevi regions and Russia North Ossetia Dval dialectSee also edit nbsp Georgia country portal List of Georgians Demographics of Georgia country Georgian American Peoples of the CaucasusNotes edit The fresco was a demonstration of the ambitious imperial 1 example on which the Georgian monarchs modeled themselves and competed in magnificence with those of Byzantine Empire 2 The total figure is merely an estimation sum of all the referenced populations only Ethnic Georgians are 86 8 of Georgia s current population of 3 713 800 Data without the Russian occupied territories of Georgia a b c The term Kartveli derived from Old Georgian Kartueli ႵႠႰႧႭႳႤႪႨ originally designated inhabitants of the Kingdom of Iberia and were natively known as Kartvelians 27 that stood at the political cultural religious and economic vanguard of the nation Kartvelians tracing their definitive appearance since post Assyrian times gradually became a dominant element in nation building that would give its name to the whole country and people 28 After the Georgian unification the term would come to signify all Georgian enterprise becoming absolute and universal 29 References edit Rapp 2016 location 8958 Eastmond pp 26 61 62 Eastmond pp 60 28 Census data of National Statistics Office of Georgia საქართველოს მოსახლეობის საყოველთაო აღწერის საბოლოო შედეგები PDF National Statistics Office of Georgia 28 April 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2016 a b c Rezvani Babak Winter 2009 The Fereydani Georgian Representation Anthropology of the Middle East 4 2 52 74 doi 10 3167 ame 2009 040205 Rayfield pp 18 19 Suny p 21 Rayfield p 39 Suny p 32 Rayfield p 71 Eastmond p 39 Rapp 2016 location 453 W E D Allen location 1157 W E D Allen location 337 W E D Allen location 1612 W E D Allen location 344 Suny pp 63 65 88 Rayfield p 259 Suny p 59 Suny pp 64 66 Suny pp 71 72 Statistics Archived 13 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine 22 04 2015 Rayfield p 12 Khintibidze Elguja 1998 The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology pp 77 78 Tbilisi State University Press ISBN 5 511 00775 7 Tchekhanovets Y 2014 Iohane bishop of Purtavi and Caucasian Albanians in the Holy Land In G C Bottini L D Chrupcala amp J Patrich Eds Knowledge and Wisdom Archaeological and Historical Essays in Honour of Leah Di Segni Studium Biblicum Franciscanum Collectio Maior Vol 54 Edizioni Terra Santa p 305 ISBN 978 88 6240 274 3 Rapp amp Crego 2 pp 1 2 Rapp amp Crego I pp 1 3 Rapp amp Crego 12 I pp 4 5 Suny p 3 Rapp 2016 location 656 a b c d e Mikaberidze Alexander 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia 2 ed Rowman amp Littlefield p 3 ISBN 978 1 4422 4146 6 Rayfield p 13 Braund David Georgia in Antiquity A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia 550 BC AD 562 pp 17 18 Peradze Gregory The Pilgrims derivation of the name Georgia Georgica Autumn 1937 nos 4 amp 5 208 209 Hock Hans Henrich Zgusta Ladislav 1997 Historical Indo European and Lexicographical Studies Walter de Gruyter p 211 ISBN 978 3 11 012884 0 Mikaberidze Alexander 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia 2 ed Rowman amp Littlefield p 3 ISBN 978 1 4422 4146 6 However such explanations are rejected by the scholarly community who point to the Persian gurg gurgan as the root of the word Boeder et al 2002 Philology typology and language structure Peter Lang p 65 ISBN 978 0 8204 5991 2 The Russian designation of Georgia Gruziya also derives from the Persian gurg Rapp 2016 location 1086 Lang p 19 Lang p 66 Georgia A Sovereign Country of the Caucasus Roger Rosen p 18 Suny p 4 Rayfield pp 13 14 a b c d Toumanoff p 80 Toumanoff p 58 The Complete Works Jewish Antiquities Josephus Book 1 p 57 Suny p 11 Suny p 6 Lang p 58 Lang p 59 Charles Burney and David Marshal Lang The Peoples of the Hills Ancient Ararat and Caucasus p 38 Toumanoff p 57 Toumanoff pp 69 84 FamilyTreeDNA Georgian DNA Project www familytreedna com Retrieved 19 December 2022 Toumanoff Cyril Iberia between Chosroid and Bagratid Rule in Studies in Christian Caucasian History Georgetown 1963 pp 374 377 Accessible online at Iberia between Chosroid and Bagratid Rule by Cyril Toumanoff Eastern Asia Minor Georgia Georgian History Armenia Armenian History Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2012 Rapp Stephen H Jr 2007 7 Georgian Christianity The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity John Wiley amp Sons p 138 ISBN 978 1 4443 3361 9 Retrieved 11 May 2012 GEORGIA iii Iranian elements in Georgian art and archeology Retrieved 1 January 2015 Suny Ronald Grigor 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20915 3 Retrieved 2 January 2015 2002 census results p 132 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 October 2015 Retrieved 4 June 2012 Thomas Liles Islam and religious transformation in Adjara ECMI Working Paper February 2012 1 Archived 5 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine accessed 4 June 2012 Caucasus Analytical Digest No 20 Heinrich Boll Stiftung 11 October 2010 Mack Glenn R Surina Asele 2005 Food Culture in Russia And Central Asia Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 32773 4 in Russian Pervaya vseobshaya perepis naseleniya Rossijskoj Imperii 1897 g in Russian SSR GRUZIYa 1926 g Dr Mathijs Pelkmans Retrieved 21 August 2015 Pelkmans Mathijs Defending the border identity religion and modernity in the Republic of Georgia Ithaca New York Cornell University Press 2006 pg 80 a b Extra Guus Gorter Durk 2001 The Other Languages of Europe Multilingual Matters ISBN 978 1 85359 509 7 Retrieved 26 May 2014 About 91 000 Muslim Georgians living in Turkey a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Turkiye deki Yasayan Etnik Gruplar Arastirildi Milliyet in Turkish 6 June 2008 Retrieved 7 June 2008 Ramet Sabrina P 1989 Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics Durham Duke University Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 8223 0891 1 Friedrich Paul 1994 Encyclopedia of World Cultures Russia and Eurasia China 1 publ ed Boston Massachusetts G K Hall p 150 ISBN 978 0 8161 1810 6 A part of the Ingilo population still retains the Orthodox Christian faith but another larger segment adheres to the Sunni sect of Islam Bibliography editRapp S H Jr amp Crego P 2018 Languages and Cultures of Eastern Christianity Georgian Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781351923262 W E D Allen 1970 Russian Embassies to the Georgian Kings 1589 1605 Hakluyt Society ISBN 978 1 4094 4599 9 hbk Eastmond Anthony 2010 Royal Imagery in Medieval Georgia Penn State Press Suny R G 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253209153 Nana Bolashvili Andreas Dittmann Lorenz King Vazha Neidze eds National Atlas of Georgia 138 pages Steiner Verlag 2018 ISBN 978 3 515 12057 9 Lang D M 1966 The Georgians Thames amp Hudson Rayfield D 2013 Edge of Empires A History of Georgia Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1789140590 Rapp S H Jr 2016 The Sasanian World Through Georgian Eyes Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature Sam Houston State University USA Routledge Toumanoff C 1963 Studies in Christian Caucasian History Georgetown University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgians amp oldid 1222058049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.