Georgians

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Georgians
ქართველები
Top row (left to right)
David the Builder • Queen Tamar of Georgia • Peter the Iberian • Shota Rustaveli • Ilia Chavchavadze •
Bottom row (left to right)
Akaki Tsereteli • Vazha-Pshavela • Sergo Zakariadze • Zviad Gamsakhurdia • Sopho Khalvashi
Total population

c. 6 million

Regions with significant populations
Flag of Georgia (country) Georgia 3,906,314 [1]
Flag of Turkey Turkey 1,500,000 (estimated) [2]
Flag of Russia Russia 198,000(Estimated close to a million) [3]
Flag of the United States United States 150,000 (estimated)
Flag of Iran Iran 50,000 Fereydani Speakers(estimated)300,000 ethnic Georgians; Up to 5 million people of (partial) Georgian descent (estimated) [4]
Flag of Ukraine Ukraine 34,200 (estimated) [5]
Flag of Brazil Brazil 17,752 (estimated)
Flag of Azerbaijan Azerbaijan 14,900 [6]
Western Europe 50,000 (estimated)
Language(s)
Georgian
Religion(s)
Georgian Orthodox Christianity, Georgian Catholicism, Islam[7]
Related ethnic groups
Laz
Svan
Mingrelians

The Georgians (Georgian: ქართველი ერი or ქართველები , Kartveli Eri or Kartvelebi) are a nations and ethnic group, indigenous to the Caucasus.[8] Georgians, known as Iberians and Colchians in classical antiquity, speak the Georgian language, which has a rich literary tradition and the Georgian Alphabet is one of the fourteen unique alphabets which exist in the world today.

Linguistically, Georgian language is a part of the Ibero-Caucasian languages[9] and are classified in the South Caucasian subgroup. It is known that Georgians are an ethnic group indigenous to the Caucasus region.[10] The history of Georgia was marked by the national struggle for self-preservation from numerous invasions by foreign powers for 4,000 years and most of the battles ended with the Georgian victory. Notably, greeting in Georgian language is Gamarjoba, which translates as Be Victorious, or Hail to the Victory.

Contents

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 Asia Minor since the Neolithic period. Scholars usually refer to them as Proto-Kartvelian tribes. Some European historians of the 19th century (eg, Humboldt, Krettschmer) as well as Georgian scholars (R. Gordeziani, S. Kaukhchishvili and Z. Gamsakhurdia) came to the conclusion that Proto-Kartvelians might be related linguistically and culturally to the indigenous (pre-Indo-European) peoples of ancient Europe including the Etruscans, Pelasgians and Proto-Basques. The Georgian people in antiquity have been known to the ancient Greeks and Romans as Colchians and Iberians.

Proto Georgian tribes:

  • Daiaeni in Assyrian sources and Taokhoi in Greek, lived in the northeastern part of Anatolia, a region that once was part of Georgia. The Georgians of today still refer to this region, which now belongs to present-day Turkey, as Tao-Klarjeti. Some people there still speak Georgian.
  • Colchians in the ancient western Georgian Kingdom of Colchis.

Both Colchians and Iberians played an important role in the ethnic and cultural formation of the modern Georgian nation.[11]

Part of the series on
Georgians
ქართველები

Georgian culture
Architecture · Art · Cinema · Cuisine ·
Dance · Dress · Literature · Music ·
Media · Religion · Sport

By country and regions
Georgia,
Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia
Autonomous Republic of Adjara

Religion
Georgian Orthodox Church
Georgian Catholicism · Islam

Languages and dialects
Georgian language
Georgian dialects · Georgian alphabet

Georgian History

v  d  e
Georgian Kingdoms of Colchis and Iberia 600-150 BC. Copyright©2004 Andrew Andersen
Georgian Kingdoms of Colchis and Iberia 600-150 BC. Copyright©2004 Andrew Andersen
Saint Nino is credited for conversion of Georgia to Christianity in 327 A.D
Saint Nino is credited for conversion of Georgia to Christianity in 327 A.D
Queen Tamara of Georgia
Queen Tamara of Georgia

A second Georgian tribal union emerged in the 13 th century BC on the Black Sea coast creating the Kingdom of Colchis in the western Georgia.[12] The ancient Greeks knew western Georgia as Colchis, and it featured in the Greek legend of Jason and the Argonauts, who travelled there in search of the Golden Fleece. Since 2 000 B.C., north-western Colchis was inhabited by the Svan and Zan peoples of the Georgian tribes. In the eastern part of Georgia, there was a struggle for the leadership among the various Georgian confederations during the 6th – 4th centuries BC which was finally won by the Kartlian tribes from the region of Mtskheta in Iberia. According to the Georgian tradition, the Kingdom of Kartli (known as Iberia in the Greek-Roman literature) was founded around 300 BC by Parnavaz I, the first ruler of the Parnavazid dynasty.

Kingdom of Georgia during the reign of Queen Tamar, Copyright©2004 Andrew Andersen
Kingdom of Georgia during the reign of Queen Tamar, Copyright©2004 Andrew Andersen

Between 653 and 333 B.C., both Colchis and Iberia were successfully surviving in fight against Median and later Persian Empire. At the end of the 3d century B.C, southern Iberia saw the armies of Alexander the Great who established a vast Greco-Macedonian empire to the south of the Caucasus.

Between the early 2nd century, B.C. and the late 2nd century A.D., both Colchis and Iberia, together with the neighbor countries, became an arena of long and devastating conflicts between major local powers Rome, Armenia, and the short-lived Kingdom of Pontus. As a result of the brilliant Roman campaigns of Pompey and Lucullus, the Georgian kingdoms of Colchis and Iberia came under direct Roman rule. However, during the reign of the Emperor Trajan, Caucasian Iberia became a long lasting ally of the Roman Empire. The former Kingdom of Colchis was re-organized by the Romans into the province of Lazicum ruled by Roman legati.

Eastern Georgian Kingdom of Iberia became one of the first states in the world to convert to Christianity in 327 AD, when King of Iberia Mirian II established it as the official state religion. In the middle of the 4th century, both Lazica (former Kingdom of Colchis), and Iberia, adopted Christianity as their official religion. At the end of the 5th century, Prince Vakhtang I Gorgasali orchestrated an anti-Persian uprising and restored Iberian statehood proclaiming himself the King. The armies of Vakhtang launched several campaigns against both Persia and the Byzantine Empire.

The first decades of the 9th century saw the rise of a new Georgian state in Tao-Klarjeti. Ashot Courapalate, of the royal family of Bagrationi, liberated from the Arabs the territories of former southern Iberia. The first united Georgian monarchy was formed at the end of the 10th century when Curopalate David invaded the Earldom of Kartli-Iberia. Three years later, after the death of his uncle Theodosius the Blind, King of Egrisi-Abkhazia, Bagrat III inherited the Abkhazian throne. In 1001 Bagrat also included Tao-Klarjeti (Curopalatinate of Iberia) into his domain as a result of David’s death. In 1008-1010 Bagrat King of the Abkhazs and Tao-Klarjeti annexed Kakheti and Ereti thus becoming the first King of the united Georgia both eastern and western. In 1008 all Georgian principalities were united into the unified Kingdom of Georgia (1008-1466) under the Bagrationi dynasty. This dynasty was established by Ashot I (Ashot the Great) in the end of the 8th century.

The struggle against the Seljuk invaders in Georgia was led by the young King David IV of the Bagrationi royal family who inherited the throne in 1089 at the age of 16 after the abdication of his father George II Bagrationi. In 1121, Seljuk Sultan Mahmud declared Jihad on Georgia and sent a strong army under one of his famous generals Al-Ghazee to fight the Georgians. Although significantly outnumbered by the Turks, Georgians managed to defeat the invaders at Didgori battle and in 1122 took over Tbilisi to make it Georgia’s capital. As a result, mostly Christian-populated Ghishi-Kabala area in western Shirvan (relic of once prosperous Albanian Kingdom) was annexed by Georgia while the rest of already Islamized Shirvan became Georgia’s client-state. Same year a big portion of Armenia was liberated by David’s troops and fell into Georgian hands as well. Thus, in 1124 David also became the King of Armenians incorporating Northern Armenia into Georgian Crown lands. In King David died leaving Georgia with the status of a strong regional power. In Georgia, King David is called Agmashenebeli (English: the builder).

However, the most glorious sovereign of Georgia of that period was definitely Queen Tamar (David’s great-granddaughter). The reign of Queen Tamar was the peak of Georgia’s might in the whole history of the nation. Trebizond Empire was heavily dependent of Georgia for more than two hundred years. In 1210 Georgian armies invaded northern Persia (modern day Iranian Azerbaijan) putting part of the conquered territory under Georgian protectorate. That was the maximal extent of Georgia throughout her history. Queen Tamar was addressed as “The Queen of Abkhazians, Kartvels, Rans, Kakhs and Armenians, Shirvan-Shakhine and Shakh-in-Shakhine, The Sovereign of the East and West”. Georgian historians often refer to her as “Queen Tamar the Great”. The period between the early 12th and the early 13th centuries and especially, the era of Tamar the Great, can truly be considered as the golden age of Georgia. Besides the political and military achievements, it was marked by the development of Georgian culture including the architecture, literature, philosophy and sciences.

Georgians have been said to be irreverent, good humored, and generally high spirited. A good demonstration of the Georgian character can be seen by a guest in a Georgian home, where you'll be treated like a monarch, and entertained with food and drink until you can take no more. Georgians are proud of their culture, language, history, and traditions.

Georgians are highly gifted in the world of arts, which include: music, cinema, theatre, painting, literature, poetry, and other artistic endeavors. [13] An example of this can be seen throughout Georgian history, with large number of world-renowned poets, musicians, painters, and novelists. Georgians like to identify with their own regions, but they all share a common sense of strong national unity.

The Georgians are among the most hospitable people on Earth, with strong traditions of chivalry and codes of personal honour. They believe that guests come from God. Friendship is prized highest among all the virtues. It is celebrated in the great national epic, The Knight in the Panther's Skin, by Shota Rustaveli and which provides an insight into daily life, in which a person's worth is judged not by how much money he has in bank but how many friends he has. The Georgians are proud, passionate, and fiercely individualistic, yet deeply connected with each other through a shared sense of belonging to a greater Georgian family. Women are highly esteemed in society and are accorded a respect endowed with great courtliness. The statue of Mother of Georgia (kartlis deda) that stands in the hills above Tbilisi perhaps best symbolized the national character: in her left hand she holds a bowl of wine with which she greets her friends and in her right is a sword drawn against her enemies.[14]

The total population of Georgians in the world is estimated to be around 6,000,000.

  • Around 4 million Georgians live in Georgia (where they comprise 83% of the population),
  • In Turkey, Georgians form the majority in parts of Artvin Province east of the Çoruh River in Shavsheti (შავშეთი) region (Upper Machakheli in the north of Borçka district, Imerkhevi in the north of Şavşat district, and Murgul district) and in individual villages along the Çoruh valley of Livana (ლივანა) vicinity in the territory of the ancient Georgian regions of Tao-Klarjeti (Klarjeti (კლარჯეთი) is presently a village renamed officially as Bereket in Ardanuç district), southwards to the district of Yusufeli (Kiskim) in Amier-Tao (ამიერტაო) subregion. They also live as Chveneburi (ჩვენებური) muhajirs in various provinces. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the prime minister of Turkey, pronounced his Georgian origins during a visit to Georgia in 2004.[15] The total population of people of Georgian descent in Turkey is estimated to be more than 1,500,000.
  • 50,000-100,000 (numbers are not totally known) in Iran mainly in Fereydan, Fereydoon Shahr, and Najaf Abad, as well as in many Iranian large cities such as Esfahan, Tehran, Shiraz, and Karaj. Up to 200,000 in and Mazandaran. Moreover there are millions of people with (partial) Georgian descent. (300,000 Georgians were settled in Iran in the 17th century, and there came many later).
  • 14,900 in Azerbaijan, according to official numbers.[16] Most Georgians (known as Ingilos) in Azerbaijan reside in the Kakhi, Belokani and Zakatala districts, which had been known as Hereti until the 15th century and administered by the Georgian kings until the 17th century. These rayons were once part of the Democratic Republic of Georgia and part of Georgia under the Transcaucasian SFSR until 1931 when they were transferred to Azerbaijan.[17] Georgia holds no claims against Azerbaijan over these territories as of present.
  • There are some in Argentina, in the provinces of Mendoza and Rio Negro. In Rio Negro, Georgian people and their descendants are at the hippietown of El Bolson and in the valleys zone (Colonia Rusa in the Alto Valle).

The largest ethnic group within the broader Georgian ethnicity is comprised of the ქართველები (transliterated Kartveli, plural: Kartvelebi), which comprises the majority of the population of Georgia. The other major subdivisions within the Georgian ethnicity include: the Mingrelians (მეგრელი), who live predominantly in northwestern Georgia (Samegrelo); the Laz (ლაზი), who live predominantly in southwestern Georgia (Ajara) and in the northeastern Turkey (in the Rize and Artvin regions); and the Svans (სვანი) of the Svaneti region of Georgia. These four ethnic groups within the greater Georgian ethnicity are differentiated by language. The Kartveli speak Kartuli (what the English speaking world calls Georgian), the Mingrelians speak Megrelian, the Laz speak Laz, and the Svans speak Svan. These four related languages comprise the entirety of the Kartvelian language group. The majority of Mingrelians and Svans are bilingual in their native language and in Kartuli, while the majority of the Laz are bilingual in their native language and either Kartuli or Turkish.

Within the group called Kartveli, Georgians further distinguish themselves into regional ethnographic subgroups:

These subgroups, however, exist for historical and geographical reasons; each would consider itself to be Kartveli, the ethnic group which gives the country, Sakartvelo, its name, and would speak the same language.

See List of Georgians for a more complete listing, including notable people with Georgian heritage.

Bagrat III, King of United Georgian Kingdom
Bagrat III, King of United Georgian Kingdom
Queen Tamar of Georgia
Queen Tamar of Georgia

Niko Nikoladze
Niko Nikoladze

George Balanchine (Balanchivadze)
George Balanchine (Balanchivadze)
Sopho Khalvashi
Sopho Khalvashi
Veriko Anjaparidze
Veriko Anjaparidze

Evgen Gvaladze
Evgen Gvaladze

  1. ^ CIA World Factbook
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of the Orient
  3. ^ 2002 Russian census
  4. ^ CRS Brief for Congress: Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia: Political Developments and Implications for US Interests
  5. ^ 2001 Ukrainian census
  6. ^ "Population by ethnic groups" The State Statistical Committee of the Republic of Azerbaijan
  7. ^ Predominant religion among Georgians in Iran and in few villages of Adjara.
  8. ^ Javakhishvili, Ivane. History of Georgian Nation
  9. ^ David Marshal Lang, the Georgians, Frederich A. Praeger Publishers, New York, p 66
  10. ^ Modern Hatreds: The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War By Stuart J. Kaufman, p. 86
  11. ^ Charles Burney and David Marshal Lang, The Peoples of the Hills: Ancient Ararat and Caucasus, p. 38
  12. ^ BRAUND, D., Georgia in antiquity: a history of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia 550 BC – AD 562, Oxford University Press, 1996
  13. ^ The Georgians, by David Marshall Lang, Publisher: Thames & Hudson Ltd
  14. ^ Roger Rosen, Georgia, 2004, p 15
  15. ^ Kimlik Değişimi! December 13, 2005, Milliyet (Turkish)
  16. ^ "Population by ethnic groups" The State Statistical Committee of the Republic of Azerbaijan
  17. ^ Dr. Andrew Andersen, Ph.D. Atlas of Conflicts: Armenia and Karabakh: Territorial Disputes of 1921-22 And Future Territorial Adjustments of 1931

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