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Names of Georgia

Georgia (/ˈɔːrə/ JOR-jə) is the Western exonym for the country in the Caucasus natively known as Sakartvelo (Georgian: საქართველო [sakʰaɾtʰʷelo] ). The Armenian exonym is Vrastan (Armenian: Վրաստան [vəɾɑsˈtɑn]); predominantly Muslim nations refer to it as Gurjistan or its many similar variations; while in mostly Slavic languages it is Gruziya.

The first mention of the name spelled as "Georgia" was recorded in Italian on the mappa mundi of Pietro Vesconte dated AD 1320.[1] In early appearances in the Latin world, the name was not always written in the same transliteration, the first consonant originally being spelt with J, as Jorgia.[2]

Both endonym and exonym for the country are derived from the same state-forming core and central Georgian region of Kartli (known as Iberia to the Classical and Byzantine sources) around which the early medieval cultural and political unity of the Georgians was formed.

All external exonyms are likely derived from gorğān (گرگان), the Persian designation of the Georgians, evolving from Parthian wurğān (𐭅𐭓𐭊𐭍) and Middle Persian wiručān (𐭥𐭫𐭥𐭰𐭠𐭭), rooting out from Old Persian vrkān (𐎺𐎼𐎣𐎠𐎴) meaning "the land of the wolves". This is also reflected in Old Armenian virk (վիրք), it being a source of Ancient Greek ibēríā (Ἰβηρία), that entered Latin as Hiberia. The transformation of vrkān into gorğān and alteration of v into g was a phonetic phenomenon in the word formation of Proto-Aryan and ancient Iranian languages. All exonyms are simply phonetic variations of the same root vrk/varka (𐎺𐎼𐎣) meaning wolf.[3]

The full, official name of the country is simply "Georgia", as specified in the Georgian constitution which reads "Georgia is the name of the state of Georgia."[4] Before the 1995 constitution came into force the country's name was the Republic of Georgia. Since 2005[5] the Georgian Government works actively to remove the Russian-derived exonym Gruziya from usage around the world.[6]

Endonym edit

 
The front cover of a Georgian passport showing the official name of the country in Georgian as Sakartvelo and English as Georgia.

The native Georgian name for the country is Sakartvelo (საქართველო). The word consists of two parts. Its root, kartvel-i (ქართველ-ი), first attested in the Old Georgian inscription of Umm Leisun in Jerusalem, originally referred to an inhabitant of the core central Georgian region of KartliIberia of the Classical and Byzantine sources. By the early 9th century, the meaning of "Kartli" was expanded to other areas of medieval Georgia held together by religion, culture, and language. The Georgian circumfix sa-X-o is a standard geographic construction designating "the area where X dwell", where X is an ethnonym.[7]

The earliest reference to "Sakartvelo" occurs in the c. 800 Georgian chronicle by Juansher Juansheriani.

და ვითარცა შევლო ყრუმან კლისურა, რომელი მას ჟამსა იყო საზღვარი საბერძნეთისა და საქართველოსა, და შემუსრა ქალაქი აფშილეთისა ცხუმი. და მოადგა ციხესა ანაკოფისასა.
And when that deaf man [i.e. Umayyad Caliph Marwan II (Georgians named him as "Marwan the Deaf" during his invasion of Georgia)] destroyed Klisura, which was the border of Saberdzneti and Sakartvelo, and he destroyed the city of Tskhumi of Apshileti, and came over the Anacopia Fortress.[8]

— Life of King of Kings Vakhtang Gorgasali

Within the next 200 years, this designation was reconfigured so that it came to signify the all-Georgian realm which came into existence with the political unification of Kartli and Apkhazeti under Bagrat III in 1008. However, it was not until the early 13th century that the term fully entered regular official usage.[7]

The memory and dream of a united Georgia – Sakartvelo – persisted even after the political catastrophe of the 15th century when the Kingdom of Georgia fell apart to form three separate kingdoms: Kartli, Kakheti, and Imereti, and five principalities: Samtskhe-Saatabago, Mingrelia, Guria, Svaneti, and Abkhazia. Thus, the later kings did not relinquish the titles of the all-Georgian monarchs whose legitimate successors they claimed to be. The idea of all-Georgian unity also dominated history-writing of the early 18th-century Georgian scholar and a member of the royal family, Prince Vakhushti, whose Description of the Kingdom of Georgia (agtsera sameposa sakartvelosa) had a noticeable influence on the latter-day conception of Sakartvelo. Although Georgia was politically divided among competing kingdoms and principalities during Vakhushti's lifetime, the scholar viewed the past and present of these breakaway polities as parts of the history of a single nation.[7]

Georgia fell under successive Ottoman, Iranian (Safavid, Afsharids, Qajars), and Russian rule during the 15th to 19th centuries. It was re-united as the short-lived Democratic Republic of Georgia (საქართველოს დემოკრატიული რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos demokratiuli respublika) on May 26, 1918, transformed into the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic (საქართველოს საბჭოთა სოციალისტური რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos sabchota socialisturi respublika) in 1921, and eventually gaining independence as the Republic of Georgia (საქართველოს რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos respublika) on November 14, 1990. According to the 1995 constitution, the nation's official name is საქართველო sakartvelo.[9]

In other Kartvelian languages, like Mingrelian, Georgia is referred as საქორთუო sakortuo, in Laz it's ოქორთურა okortura, when in Svan it uses the same name as Georgian does, საქართველო sakartvelo. This same root is also adopted in Abkhaz and Georgia is referred as Қырҭтәыла Kyrţtwyla (i.e. Sakartvelo).

Exonyms edit

 
IBHPΩN, Iviron i.e. Iberia, an Ancient Greek inscription on the Stele of Serapeitis, AD 150.
 
Hiberia i.e. Iberia on Tabula Peutingeriana.
 
First mention of the country spelled as Georgia, the world map of Pietro Vesconte, AD 1320.
 
Gorgania i.e. Georgia on Fra Mauro map, AD 1450.
 
Georgiani on the Map of Europe by Abraham Ortelius, AD 1572.
 
Iberia and Georgia, detail from The Ambassadors, painting of Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533.
 
"Map of Russia" commissioned by Feodor II of Russia and published by Hessel Gerritsz in Amsterdam mentions "Iveria sive Grusinæ Imperium" i.e. Iberia or the Empire of Georgia.

Iberia edit

One theory on the etymology of the name Iberia, proposed by Giorgi Melikishvili, was that it was derived from the contemporary Armenian designation for Georgia, Virkʿ (Վիրք, and Ivirkʿ Իվիրք and Iverkʿ Իվերք), which itself was connected to the word Sver (or Svir), the Kartvelian designation for Georgians.[10] The letter "s" in this instance served as a prefix for the root word "Ver" (or "Vir"). Accordingly, in following Ivane Javakhishvili's theory, the ethnic designation of "Sber", a variant of Sver, was derived the word "Hber" ("Hver") (and thus Iberia) and the Armenian variants, Veria and Viria.[10]

The Armenian name of Georgia is Վրաստան Vrastan, Վիրք Virk (i.e. Iberia). Ethnic Georgians are referred in Armenian as Վրացիներ (Vratsiner) literally meaning Iberians.

Georgia edit

The European "Georgia" probably stems from the Persian designation of the Georgians – gurğ (گرج), ğurğ – which reached the Western European crusaders and pilgrims in the Holy Land who rendered the name as Georgia (also Jorgania, Giorginia, etc.) and, erroneously,[11] explained its origin by the popularity of St. George (Tetri Giorgi) among the Georgians. This explanation is offered, among others, by Jacques de Vitry and Franz Ferdinand von Troilo.[12] Another theory, popularized by the likes of Jean Chardin, semantically linked "Georgia" to Greek γεωργός ("tiller of the land"). The supporters of this explanation sometimes referred to classical authors, in particular Pliny and Pomponius Mela. The "Georgi" mentioned by these authors (Pliny, IV.26, VI.14; Mela, De Sita Orb. i.2, & 50; ii.1, & 44, 102.) were merely agricultural tribes, so named to distinguish them from their unsettled and pastoral neighbors on the other side of the river Panticapea (in Taurica).[13] In the 19th century, Marie-Félicité Brosset favored the derivation of the name Georgia from that of the river Mtkvari via Kuros-Cyrus-Kura-Djurzan.[14]

According to several modern scholars, "Georgia" seems to have been borrowed in the 11th or 12th century from the Syriac gurz-ān/gurz-iyān and Arabic ĵurĵan/ĵurzan, derived from the New Persian gurğ/gurğān, itself stemming from the Middle Persian waručān of unclear origin, but resembling the eastern trans-Caspian toponym Gorgan, which comes from the Old Persian varkâna-, "land of the wolves". This might have been of the same etymology as the Armenian Virk' (Վիրք) and a source of the Greco-Roman rendition Iberi (Ἴβηρες), the ethnonym already known to them as a designation of the Iberian peoples of the Iberian Peninsula.[15][16]

Gruziya edit

The Russian exonym Gruziya (Russian: Грузия, IPA: [ˈɡruzʲɪjə] ) is also of Persian origin, from Persian گرجستان Gorjestân (Turkish Gürcistan, Ossetian: Гуырдзыстон Gwyrdzyston, Mongolian Гүрж Gürj).

The Russian name first occurs in the travel records of Ignatiy Smolnyanin as gurzi (гурзи) (1389).

А въ церковь ту влѣзщи, ино направѣ Гурзійскаа служба, Гурзіи служатъ.
There is a church and there is a Gurz [i.e. Georgian] liturgy, Gurzis [i.e. Georgians] serve there.

—Travels in Jerusalem

Afanasy Nikitin calls Georgia as gurzynskaya zemlya (Гурзыньская земля, "Gurzin land") (1466–72).[17]

Да Севастѣи губѣ, да Гурзынской земли добро обилію всѣм; да Торская земля обилна.
And in Sevastia, and in the Gurzin land [i.e. Georgian land] everything is in abundance, and Torsk land [i.e. Turkish land] is abundant.

A Journey Beyond the Three Seas

As a result of permutation of sounds "Gurz" transformed into "Gruz" and eventually "Gruz-iya". The Russian name was brought into several Slavic languages (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Macedonian, Polish, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Ukrainian) as well as other languages historically in contact with the Russian Empire and/or the Soviet Union (such as Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Hungarian, Yiddish, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Uyghur, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese).[18]

Abandoning the name edit

In August 2005, the Georgian ambassador to Israel Lasha Zhvania asked that the Hebrew speakers refer to his country as Georgia גאורגיה and abandon the name Gruzia. The name entered the contemporary Hebrew as גרוזיה (Gruz-ia). It coexisted with the names גאורגיה (Gheorghia with two hard g's) and גורג'יה (Gurjia), when Gruzia took over in the 1970s, probably due to a massive immigration of bilingual Georgian-Russian Jews to Israel at that time. Georgia's request was approved and now Israel refers to the country as Gheorghia.[19]

In June 2011, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia said South Korea had agreed to refer to the country as 조지아 (Jojia) instead of the Russian-influenced 그루지야 (Geurujiya) and the government of Georgia was continuing talks with other countries on the issue.

In April 2015, Japan changed the official Japanese name for Georgia from Gurujia (グルジア), which derives from the Russian term Gruziya, to Jōjia (ジョージア), which derives from the English term "Georgia".[20][21]

In May 2018, Lithuania switched to Sakartvelas, which is derived from Georgia's original native name Sakartvelo. The new name would be an alternative for Georgia alongside the long-established Gruzija.[22][23] Georgia had initially asked for a change in December 2009 to be called Georgija instead of Gruzija; the request was forwarded to the Commission of the Lithuanian Language and was declined at that time.[24] In 2010, then-Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia Grigol Vashadze during his official visit to Lithuania promised to "destroy the name Gruziya" and asked the Lithuanian authorities for a name switch.[25] Lithuanian authorities made the switch for Independence Day of Georgia and described it as a "great gift to the Georgian people" when Georgia celebrated the 100th anniversary of the declaration of independence of the First Republic of Georgia.[26] As a gesture of appreciation, Georgia also changed Lithuania's Russian-derived name of Litva (Russian: Литва) to its native Lietuva.[27] Accordingly, the Embassy of Georgia in Lithuania changed its name from Gruzijos Ambasada to Sakartvelo Ambasada.[28] However, as of 2019, the traditional name Gruzija was still more popular than the new name in media and on social networks.[29] On December 21, 2020, the State Commission of the Lithuanian Language (VLKK) decided that the name Sakartvelas should be used in all official Lithuanian-language documents.[30]

In June 2019, during the 2019 Georgian protests, former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko called upon the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine to change Gruziya for Sakartvelo.[31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rouben Galichian (2007) Countries South of the Caucasus in Medieval Maps: Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. pp. 188—189
  2. ^ Boeder; et al. (2002). Philology, typology and language structure. Peter Lang. p. 65. ISBN 978-0820459912
  3. ^ Khintibidze, Elguja (1998), The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology, pp. 85-86-87, Tbilisi State University Press, ISBN 5-511-00775-7
  4. ^ "Article 2.1", Constitution of Georgia, Legislative Herald of Georgia, 'Georgia' is the name of the state of Georgia.
  5. ^ Mikaberidze, Alexander (2015) Historical Dictionary of Georgia (2 ed.). p.4, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-1-4422-4146-6
  6. ^ , The Japan Times, April 15, 2015, archived from the original on 2015-04-18
  7. ^ a b c Rapp, Stephen H. (2003), Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts, pp. 419-423. Peeters Publishers, ISBN 90-429-1318-5
  8. ^ Rapp, Stephen H. (2003) Corpus scriptorum christianorum orientalium: Subsidia, Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts and Eurasian Contexts, Peeters Publishers, pp. 425-426
  9. ^ Constitution of Georgia. Chapter 1. Article 1.3. Parliament of Georgia. Retrieved on June 28, 2009
  10. ^ a b (in Armenian) Yeremyan, Suren T. «Իբերիա» (Iberia). Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia. vol. iv. Yerevan, Armenian SSR: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1978, p. 306.
  11. ^ GEORGIA i. The land and the people
  12. ^ Peradze, Gregory. "The Pilgrims' derivation of the name Georgia". Georgica, Autumn, 1937, nos. 4 & 5, 208-209
  13. ^ Romer, Frank E. (ed., 1998), Pomponius Mela's Description of the World, p. 72. University of Michigan Press, ISBN 0-472-08452-6
  14. ^ Allen, William Edward David (1932), A History of the Georgian People: From the Beginning Down to the Russian Conquest in the Nineteenth Century, p. 369. Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0-7100-6959-6
  15. ^ Lang, David Marshall (1966), The Georgians, pp. 5-6. Praeger Publishers
  16. ^ Khintibidze, Elguja (1998), The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology, pp. 29-30. Tbilisi State University Press, ISBN 5-511-00775-7 (A New Theory on the Etymology of the Designations of the Georgians (Excerpt from the book) 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine) ()
  17. ^ (in Russian) Vesmer, MAx (trans. Trubachyov, Oleg, 1987), «Этимологический словарь русского языка» (Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language), vol. 1, p. 464. Progress: Moscow (Online version)
  18. ^ . Civil Georgia. June 27, 2011. Archived from the original on 2020-02-16.
  19. ^ . Haaretz.com. 2005-08-08. Archived from the original on 2012-10-22. Retrieved 2009-06-28.
  20. ^ Government changing official pronunciation of Georgia The Japan Times
  21. ^ 国名呼称の変更(グルジア). Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan (in Japanese). 22 April 2015. from the original on 29 August 2019.
  22. ^ Lithuania Moves to Stop Calling Georgia by its Russian Name
  23. ^ "Lithuania Adopts Sakartvelas as Alternative Name for Georgia". Civil Georgia. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  24. ^ Jackevičius, M. Gruzija nori būti vadinama "Georgija"
  25. ^ "Георгийский" министр пообещал уничтожить "Грузию" Lenta
  26. ^ Lithuania Moves To Change Official Name For Georgia To Sakartvelo From Gruzia
  27. ^ Samantha Guthrie Lithuania Gets a New Name in Georgian Georgia Today, 25 May 2018
  28. ^ . Georgia First Channel. May 3, 2018. Archived from the original on 21 November 2020.
  29. ^ "Sakartvelo catching on – Georgia's historic name growing in popularity in Lithuania". LRT. 19 August 2019.
  30. ^ "Lithuania approves Sakartvelo as official name for Georgia". LRT English. 11 January 2021.
  31. ^ "Порошенко закликає МЗС України "перейменувати" Грузію на Сакартвело". www.ukrinform.ua (in Ukrainian). 2019-06-24. Retrieved 2023-12-16.

Bibliography edit

  • (in Georgian) Paichadze, Giorgi (ed., 1993), საქართველოსა და ქართველების აღმნიშვნელი უცხოური და ქართული ტერმინოლოგია (Foreign and Georgian designations for Georgia and Georgians). Metsniereba, ISBN 5-520-01504-X

names, georgia, etymology, state, list, state, territory, name, etymologies, united, states, georgia, ɔːr, western, exonym, country, caucasus, natively, known, sakartvelo, georgian, საქართველო, sakʰaɾtʰʷelo, armenian, exonym, vrastan, armenian, Վրաստան, vəɾɑsˈ. For the etymology of the US state see List of state and territory name etymologies of the United States Georgia ˈ dʒ ɔːr dʒ e JOR je is the Western exonym for the country in the Caucasus natively known as Sakartvelo Georgian საქართველო sakʰaɾtʰʷelo The Armenian exonym is Vrastan Armenian Վրաստան veɾɑsˈtɑn predominantly Muslim nations refer to it as Gurjistan or its many similar variations while in mostly Slavic languages it is Gruziya The first mention of the name spelled as Georgia was recorded in Italian on the mappa mundi of Pietro Vesconte dated AD 1320 1 In early appearances in the Latin world the name was not always written in the same transliteration the first consonant originally being spelt with J as Jorgia 2 Both endonym and exonym for the country are derived from the same state forming core and central Georgian region of Kartli known as Iberia to the Classical and Byzantine sources around which the early medieval cultural and political unity of the Georgians was formed All external exonyms are likely derived from gorgan گرگان the Persian designation of the Georgians evolving from Parthian wurgan 𐭅𐭓𐭊𐭍 and Middle Persian wirucan 𐭥𐭫𐭥𐭰𐭠𐭭 rooting out from Old Persian vrkan 𐎺𐎼𐎣𐎠𐎴 meaning the land of the wolves This is also reflected in Old Armenian virk վիրք it being a source of Ancient Greek iberia Ἰbhria that entered Latin as Hiberia The transformation of vrkan into gorgan and alteration of v into g was a phonetic phenomenon in the word formation of Proto Aryan and ancient Iranian languages All exonyms are simply phonetic variations of the same root vrk varka 𐎺𐎼𐎣 meaning wolf 3 The full official name of the country is simply Georgia as specified in the Georgian constitution which reads Georgia is the name of the state of Georgia 4 Before the 1995 constitution came into force the country s name was the Republic of Georgia Since 2005 5 the Georgian Government works actively to remove the Russian derived exonym Gruziya from usage around the world 6 Contents 1 Endonym 2 Exonyms 2 1 Iberia 2 2 Georgia 2 3 Gruziya 2 3 1 Abandoning the name 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyEndonym edit nbsp The front cover of a Georgian passport showing the official name of the country in Georgian as Sakartvelo and English as Georgia The native Georgian name for the country is Sakartvelo საქართველო The word consists of two parts Its root kartvel i ქართველ ი first attested in the Old Georgian inscription of Umm Leisun in Jerusalem originally referred to an inhabitant of the core central Georgian region of Kartli Iberia of the Classical and Byzantine sources By the early 9th century the meaning of Kartli was expanded to other areas of medieval Georgia held together by religion culture and language The Georgian circumfix sa X o is a standard geographic construction designating the area where X dwell where X is an ethnonym 7 The earliest reference to Sakartvelo occurs in the c 800 Georgian chronicle by Juansher Juansheriani და ვითარცა შევლო ყრუმან კლისურა რომელი მას ჟამსა იყო საზღვარი საბერძნეთისა და საქართველოსა და შემუსრა ქალაქი აფშილეთისა ცხუმი და მოადგა ციხესა ანაკოფისასა And when that deaf man i e Umayyad Caliph Marwan II Georgians named him as Marwan the Deaf during his invasion of Georgia destroyed Klisura which was the border of Saberdzneti and Sakartvelo and he destroyed the city of Tskhumi of Apshileti and came over the Anacopia Fortress 8 Life of King of Kings Vakhtang Gorgasali Within the next 200 years this designation was reconfigured so that it came to signify the all Georgian realm which came into existence with the political unification of Kartli and Apkhazeti under Bagrat III in 1008 However it was not until the early 13th century that the term fully entered regular official usage 7 The memory and dream of a united Georgia Sakartvelo persisted even after the political catastrophe of the 15th century when the Kingdom of Georgia fell apart to form three separate kingdoms Kartli Kakheti and Imereti and five principalities Samtskhe Saatabago Mingrelia Guria Svaneti and Abkhazia Thus the later kings did not relinquish the titles of the all Georgian monarchs whose legitimate successors they claimed to be The idea of all Georgian unity also dominated history writing of the early 18th century Georgian scholar and a member of the royal family Prince Vakhushti whose Description of the Kingdom of Georgia agtsera sameposa sakartvelosa had a noticeable influence on the latter day conception of Sakartvelo Although Georgia was politically divided among competing kingdoms and principalities during Vakhushti s lifetime the scholar viewed the past and present of these breakaway polities as parts of the history of a single nation 7 Georgia fell under successive Ottoman Iranian Safavid Afsharids Qajars and Russian rule during the 15th to 19th centuries It was re united as the short lived Democratic Republic of Georgia საქართველოს დემოკრატიული რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos demokratiuli respublika on May 26 1918 transformed into the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic საქართველოს საბჭოთა სოციალისტური რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos sabchota socialisturi respublika in 1921 and eventually gaining independence as the Republic of Georgia საქართველოს რესპუბლიკა sakartvelos respublika on November 14 1990 According to the 1995 constitution the nation s official name is საქართველო sakartvelo 9 In other Kartvelian languages like Mingrelian Georgia is referred as საქორთუო sakortuo in Laz it s ოქორთურა okortura when in Svan it uses the same name as Georgian does საქართველო sakartvelo This same root is also adopted in Abkhaz and Georgia is referred as Қyrҭtәyla Kyrţtwyla i e Sakartvelo Exonyms edit nbsp IBHPWN Iviron i e Iberia an Ancient Greek inscription on the Stele of Serapeitis AD 150 nbsp Hiberia i e Iberia on Tabula Peutingeriana nbsp First mention of the country spelled as Georgia the world map of Pietro Vesconte AD 1320 nbsp Gorgania i e Georgia on Fra Mauro map AD 1450 nbsp Georgiani on the Map of Europe by Abraham Ortelius AD 1572 nbsp Iberia and Georgia detail from The Ambassadors painting of Hans Holbein the Younger 1533 nbsp Map of Russia commissioned by Feodor II of Russia and published by Hessel Gerritsz in Amsterdam mentions Iveria sive Grusinae Imperium i e Iberia or the Empire of Georgia Iberia edit See also Kingdom of Iberia antiquity and Hyrcania One theory on the etymology of the name Iberia proposed by Giorgi Melikishvili was that it was derived from the contemporary Armenian designation for Georgia Virkʿ Վիրք and Ivirkʿ Իվիրք and Iverkʿ Իվերք which itself was connected to the word Sver or Svir the Kartvelian designation for Georgians 10 The letter s in this instance served as a prefix for the root word Ver or Vir Accordingly in following Ivane Javakhishvili s theory the ethnic designation of Sber a variant of Sver was derived the word Hber Hver and thus Iberia and the Armenian variants Veria and Viria 10 The Armenian name of Georgia is Վրաստան Vrastan Վիրք Virk i e Iberia Ethnic Georgians are referred in Armenian as Վրացիներ Vratsiner literally meaning Iberians Georgia edit The European Georgia probably stems from the Persian designation of the Georgians gurg گرج gurg which reached the Western European crusaders and pilgrims in the Holy Land who rendered the name as Georgia also Jorgania Giorginia etc and erroneously 11 explained its origin by the popularity of St George Tetri Giorgi among the Georgians This explanation is offered among others by Jacques de Vitry and Franz Ferdinand von Troilo 12 Another theory popularized by the likes of Jean Chardin semantically linked Georgia to Greek gewrgos tiller of the land The supporters of this explanation sometimes referred to classical authors in particular Pliny and Pomponius Mela The Georgi mentioned by these authors Pliny IV 26 VI 14 Mela De Sita Orb i 2 amp 50 ii 1 amp 44 102 were merely agricultural tribes so named to distinguish them from their unsettled and pastoral neighbors on the other side of the river Panticapea in Taurica 13 In the 19th century Marie Felicite Brosset favored the derivation of the name Georgia from that of the river Mtkvari via Kuros Cyrus Kura Djurzan 14 According to several modern scholars Georgia seems to have been borrowed in the 11th or 12th century from the Syriac gurz an gurz iyan and Arabic ĵurĵan ĵurzan derived from the New Persian gurg gurgan itself stemming from the Middle Persian warucan of unclear origin but resembling the eastern trans Caspian toponym Gorgan which comes from the Old Persian varkana land of the wolves This might have been of the same etymology as the Armenian Virk Վիրք and a source of the Greco Roman rendition Iberi Ἴbhres the ethnonym already known to them as a designation of the Iberian peoples of the Iberian Peninsula 15 16 Gruziya edit The Russian exonym Gruziya Russian Gruziya IPA ˈɡruzʲɪje is also of Persian origin from Persian گرجستان Gorjestan Turkish Gurcistan Ossetian Guyrdzyston Gwyrdzyston Mongolian Gүrzh Gurj The Russian name first occurs in the travel records of Ignatiy Smolnyanin as gurzi gurzi 1389 A v cerkov tu vlѣzshi ino napravѣ Gurzijskaa sluzhba Gurzii sluzhat There is a church and there is a Gurz i e Georgian liturgy Gurzis i e Georgians serve there Travels in Jerusalem Afanasy Nikitin calls Georgia as gurzynskaya zemlya Gurzynskaya zemlya Gurzin land 1466 72 17 Da Sevastѣi gubѣ da Gurzynskoj zemli dobro obiliyu vsѣm da Torskaya zemlya obilna And in Sevastia and in the Gurzin land i e Georgian land everything is in abundance and Torsk land i e Turkish land is abundant A Journey Beyond the Three Seas As a result of permutation of sounds Gurz transformed into Gruz and eventually Gruz iya The Russian name was brought into several Slavic languages Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Macedonian Polish Serbian Slovak Slovenian Ukrainian as well as other languages historically in contact with the Russian Empire and or the Soviet Union such as Latvian Lithuanian Estonian Hungarian Yiddish Kyrgyz Turkmen Uyghur Chinese Japanese Korean Vietnamese 18 Abandoning the name edit In August 2005 the Georgian ambassador to Israel Lasha Zhvania asked that the Hebrew speakers refer to his country as Georgia גאורגיה and abandon the name Gruzia The name entered the contemporary Hebrew as גרוזיה Gruz ia It coexisted with the names גאורגיה Gheorghia with two hard g s and גורג יה Gurjia when Gruzia took over in the 1970s probably due to a massive immigration of bilingual Georgian Russian Jews to Israel at that time Georgia s request was approved and now Israel refers to the country as Gheorghia 19 In June 2011 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia said South Korea had agreed to refer to the country as 조지아 Jojia instead of the Russian influenced 그루지야 Geurujiya and the government of Georgia was continuing talks with other countries on the issue In April 2015 Japan changed the official Japanese name for Georgia from Gurujia グルジア which derives from the Russian term Gruziya to Jōjia ジョージア which derives from the English term Georgia 20 21 In May 2018 Lithuania switched to Sakartvelas which is derived from Georgia s original native name Sakartvelo The new name would be an alternative for Georgia alongside the long established Gruzija 22 23 Georgia had initially asked for a change in December 2009 to be called Georgija instead of Gruzija the request was forwarded to the Commission of the Lithuanian Language and was declined at that time 24 In 2010 then Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia Grigol Vashadze during his official visit to Lithuania promised to destroy the name Gruziya and asked the Lithuanian authorities for a name switch 25 Lithuanian authorities made the switch for Independence Day of Georgia and described it as a great gift to the Georgian people when Georgia celebrated the 100th anniversary of the declaration of independence of the First Republic of Georgia 26 As a gesture of appreciation Georgia also changed Lithuania s Russian derived name of Litva Russian Litva to its native Lietuva 27 Accordingly the Embassy of Georgia in Lithuania changed its name from Gruzijos Ambasada to Sakartvelo Ambasada 28 However as of 2019 the traditional name Gruzija was still more popular than the new name in media and on social networks 29 On December 21 2020 the State Commission of the Lithuanian Language VLKK decided that the name Sakartvelas should be used in all official Lithuanian language documents 30 In June 2019 during the 2019 Georgian protests former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko called upon the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine to change Gruziya for Sakartvelo 31 See also editName of Armenia Name of GreeceReferences edit Rouben Galichian 2007 Countries South of the Caucasus in Medieval Maps Armenia Georgia and Azerbaijan pp 188 189 Boeder et al 2002 Philology typology and language structure Peter Lang p 65 ISBN 978 0820459912 Khintibidze Elguja 1998 The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology pp 85 86 87 Tbilisi State University Press ISBN 5 511 00775 7 Article 2 1 Constitution of Georgia Legislative Herald of Georgia Georgia is the name of the state of Georgia Mikaberidze Alexander 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia 2 ed p 4 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 4146 6 Government changing official pronunciation of Georgia The Japan Times April 15 2015 archived from the original on 2015 04 18 a b c Rapp Stephen H 2003 Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts pp 419 423 Peeters Publishers ISBN 90 429 1318 5 Rapp Stephen H 2003 Corpus scriptorum christianorum orientalium Subsidia Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography Early Texts and Eurasian Contexts Peeters Publishers pp 425 426 Constitution of Georgia Chapter 1 Article 1 3 Parliament of Georgia Retrieved on June 28 2009 a b in Armenian Yeremyan Suren T Իբերիա Iberia Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia vol iv Yerevan Armenian SSR Armenian Academy of Sciences 1978 p 306 GEORGIA i The land and the people Peradze Gregory The Pilgrims derivation of the name Georgia Georgica Autumn 1937 nos 4 amp 5 208 209 Romer Frank E ed 1998 Pomponius Mela s Description of the World p 72 University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08452 6 Allen William Edward David 1932 A History of the Georgian People From the Beginning Down to the Russian Conquest in the Nineteenth Century p 369 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 7100 6959 6 Lang David Marshall 1966 The Georgians pp 5 6 Praeger Publishers Khintibidze Elguja 1998 The Designations of the Georgians and Their Etymology pp 29 30 Tbilisi State University Press ISBN 5 511 00775 7 A New Theory on the Etymology of the Designations of the Georgians Excerpt from the book Archived 2007 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Google Cache in Russian Vesmer MAx trans Trubachyov Oleg 1987 Etimologicheskij slovar russkogo yazyka Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language vol 1 p 464 Progress Moscow Online version Tbilisi Wants to Be Referred as Georgia Not Gruzya Civil Georgia June 27 2011 Archived from the original on 2020 02 16 Georgia on his mind Republic s ambassador demands Hebrew name change Haaretz com 2005 08 08 Archived from the original on 2012 10 22 Retrieved 2009 06 28 Government changing official pronunciation of Georgia The Japan Times 国名呼称の変更 グルジア Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan in Japanese 22 April 2015 Archived from the original on 29 August 2019 Lithuania Moves to Stop Calling Georgia by its Russian Name Lithuania Adopts Sakartvelas as Alternative Name for Georgia Civil Georgia 3 May 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Jackevicius M Gruzija nori buti vadinama Georgija Georgijskij ministr poobeshal unichtozhit Gruziyu Lenta Lithuania Moves To Change Official Name For Georgia To Sakartvelo From Gruzia Samantha Guthrie Lithuania Gets a New Name in Georgian Georgia Today 25 May 2018 Authentic name of Georgia Sakartvelas to be officially used in Lithuanian Language Georgia First Channel May 3 2018 Archived from the original on 21 November 2020 Sakartvelo catching on Georgia s historic name growing in popularity in Lithuania LRT 19 August 2019 Lithuania approves Sakartvelo as official name for Georgia LRT English 11 January 2021 Poroshenko zaklikaye MZS Ukrayini perejmenuvati Gruziyu na Sakartvelo www ukrinform ua in Ukrainian 2019 06 24 Retrieved 2023 12 16 Bibliography edit in Georgian Paichadze Giorgi ed 1993 საქართველოსა და ქართველების აღმნიშვნელი უცხოური და ქართული ტერმინოლოგია Foreign and Georgian designations for Georgia and Georgians Metsniereba ISBN 5 520 01504 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Names of Georgia amp oldid 1216238101, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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