ABOUT GEORGIA

 

 

 

 

Language

 

Georgia is a small, independent country situated at the eastern end of the Black Sea, having Russia, Turkey, Armenia, and Azerbaijan as its neighbours. Perhaps due to the recent Russian domination of Georgia, there is a widespread belief in North America that Georgians are actually Russians. However, Georgians are not Russians, nor is their language a part of the Indo-European family as is Russian and English. In fact, the languages of Georgia (Georgian – also known in Georgian as Kartuli, Megruli and Svanuri) constitute an independent Caucasian language group which has no relationship to any other. They do not use the Cyrillic or the Roman alphabet but rather their own Georgian alphabet which is completely different from that of any other in the world.

 

 

 


 

 

 

Above are two Georgian type fonts which read "Sakartvelo." Georgians do not call their nation "Georgia,” but "Sakartvelo," a name derived from an ancient pagan god named Kartlos. How it came to be known as Georgia to the West is up for debate. Some believe it is derived from "Gurj,” the name by which Georgians are known to Arabs and modern Persians; others believe it is based on the Greek word for farmer, reflecting the skilled agricultural practices of Georgians.

 

 

 

History

 

It is hard to trace the origins of the Georgian race, as there are no migratory legends to recount. Moreover, archaeological evidence from the eastern side of Black Sea demonstrate signs of human settlement since Palaeolithic times. Throughout the centuries, the land’s rich resources have attracted many invaders. Hittites, Assyrians, Scythians, Cimmerians, Greeks, Persians, Romans, Arabs, Seljuk Turks, Mongols, Safavid Persians, Ottoman Turks, and Russians all have left their mark on Georgian civilization. The Georgians and their unique culture, however, have survived to the present day, long after many of their adversaries have disappeared.

Georgia’s geopolitical positioning – surrounded by much larger and more powerful nations and strategically located between the Black and Caspian Seas – resulted in a turbulent history. The lesser Caucasus mountain range – also known as the Likhi range, which separates Kartli and Meskhet-Javakheti from Imereti, Guria and Samegrelo – played a part in a historical east-west divide that fragmented the nation. Christianity was officially declared in 337 C.E. and proved to be a uniting factor for the country, since the Georgian Orthodox version of Christianity replaced the old pagan beliefs, which were based largely on the pantheon of Greek gods in the west (then known as the Kingdom of Colchis), and Iranian Zoroastrian beliefs in the east (then known as the Kingdom of Iberia). Nonetheless, the country continued to struggle amongst invasions and occupations, with the west primarily occupied by the Romans and the Turks and the East by the Arabs and the Persians. Beginning with the expulsion of the Seljuk Turks at the beginning of the 11th century and ending about 130 years later with the invasion of the Mongols, however, Georgia enjoyed a significant yet brief unification. This was known as Georgia’s Golden Age during which Georgian arts and language flourished. Unfortunately, it would be hundreds of years before the country would again be united, and this time it came at the price of independence.

At the beginning of the 19th century, the Russians annexed Georgia. While stability under the Russian Empire led to the a renewed prosperity, it also had devastating results for the Georgian Orthodox church and its sacred musical tradition. The Georgian church, whose antiquated history is often overlooked by scholars and theologians (Georgians had monasteries in Israel, Greece and the Balkans) lost its independence and was absorbed by the Russian Orthodox church in 1811. Unfortunately, a short national revival movement, which preceded the Bolshevik revolution, did not prove strong enough to enable the survival of the sacred singing tradition through the religious intolerance of the Soviet regime. Today, however, Georgian Orthodox Christians, as well as the minority Muslim and Jewish communities, enjoy religious freedom and independence. This has led to a renaissance of sacred and secular musical practices among the Georgian Christian population.

Georgia has a population of about 4.5 million with a negative population growth. Georgians represent approximately 70% of the population. More than 80 other nationalities make up the balance, including Armenians (8.1%), Russians (6.3%), Azeris (5.7%), Ossetes (3%), Greeks (1.9%), and Abkhazians (1.8%).

 

 

 

Geography

 

Despite Georgia's small size, it possesses a variety of geographical and climate zones, a topography of marked contrasts, and a territory which is at the junction of a number of landscapes of differing origins. The Caucasus mountain range runs across the northern provinces, with the hills and plains running across the central area, and the Lesser Caucasus in the south. In one day of travel, it is possible to see swampy lowlands, palm groves, arid semi desert, pine forests, and alpine areas above the tree line.

 

The People

 

Georgians are among the most hospitable and generous people in the world, with strong traditions of chivalry and codes of personal honour. They are proud, passionate and individualistic, yet deeply connected to each other through a feeling of being part of the greater Georgian family. Friendship is extremely important and is held in high reverence.

 

The Culture

 

Arts, crafts, architecture, and music have all had an important role in the Georgian culture.

Literature developed from a rich oral tradition in Antiquity and had its classical period in the 12th century during the time of Shota Rustaveli, the most celebrated writer in Georgian history.

Painting, since the 11th century, has had a productive history. The most revered Georgian painter was Niko Pirosmanashvili (1862-1918), known as Pirosmani. This self-taught, "naive" painter best expressed the national psyche with his paintings of the celebration of everyday Georgian life. Giorgi Shengelaya's film "Pirosmani", which can still be seen in art cinemas in North America and Europe, is a portrayal of this great painter's life.

 

 

 

Supra by Pirosmani

One of Pirosmani's many paintings of the Georgian supra (please see explanation of the supra below)

 

 

 

Georgia has a unique tradition of polyphonic choral singing. Georgian traditional polyphony (music consisting of two or more related melodic lines) is not the result of any effort to create arrangements for the concert stage. On the contrary, it is the result of a creative process believed to have sprouted naturally and autonomously from the Georgian people before the Middle Ages, well before polyphony was used anywhere else in Europe. It has continued to develop orally from generation to generation and represents something very different from the traditional music of its neighbours, which has remained primarily monophonic (music in which melodic interest is confined to one line). Traces of archaism, which defy the conventions of harmony, counterpoint, and voice leading, are still present in Georgian folk music, and at times make the music seem very modern. Songs are predominantly sung in three-part harmony, in which all parts are of equal importance. The sonic result thus places more importance on the harmony than the melodic line. The folk music of Georgia is as widely varied as the geographical areas from which it sprang, and ranges from the intricate melismatic singing style of the east to the fierce, dissonant, and complex counterpoint of the west. Due to urbanization and displaced populations, however, Georgia's traditional music in the rural regions is being threatened. With the help of NGOs, UNESCO, and a vibrant traditional musical scene in the capital city of Tbilisi, efforts are being made to reinvigorate the rural musical practices.

The traditional songs of Georgia are rooted in a bygone lifestyle of the country’s rural people. Work songs, healing songs, dance songs, lullabies, travelling songs, wedding songs, Christmas and Easter songs, historical songs, etc. were all an intrinsic part of everyday living. Now, however, because of great technological and political/administrative changes that have occurred in Georgia and throughout the world, many of these songs have lost their original meaning. For instance, work songs, whose rhythmic qualities improved productivity, have fallen into disuse today. But the songs have not entirely disappeared. Liturgical songs are once again sung freely in churches, and a vast range of Georgian traditional music can be heard on the concert stage, and also at the lavish Georgian banquets called supra.

If one is describing Georgian culture, attention must surely be given to the traditional Georgian supra. At first glance it would be described as a banquet at which there is much food, wine, toasting, and singing. However, this does not describe the spiritual side of a supra. 

Whenever space allows, the supra is always held at one long table, or a makeshift table of many joined together end to end, running from one room to another, if need be. The table is laden with wine jugs which are always kept full of excellent Georgian wine, and copious amounts of food of all kinds, so much so that the table surface almost disappears.

Each supra has a tamada (the closest English translation is "toastmaster") and is chosen by the host of the supra before the supra begins. Fulfilling one's role as a tamada is an art form in itself. A good tamada is a poet/wit/philosopher/social commentator/orator/singer who creatively improvises a beautiful atmosphere of community, camaraderie and love through his toasts which introduce periods of tranquility and reflection amidst the extroverted energy of table conversation. Through an adroit choice of songs which are sung after every toast, the message of each toast is given more resonance.

The order in which the toasts are given is important. Throughout most of Georgia, the first toast is always to peace, followed by a toast to parents, to brothers and sisters, to those who have passed away (especially to any friend or relative of any person present at the table), to life (especially to the lives of the children of those who have recently passed away), and then to love and friendship.

After all these toasts have been made in this order, the tamada is free to choose his own additional topics, maintaining the established creative flow, usually relating these toasts to the people present or to the occasion which prompted the supra. The topics, to name a few, might be to ancestors, to mothers, to beauty, to creativity, to absent friends who are far away, etc. After any of the evening's toasts, a guest, with the permission of the tamada, can add some thoughts of his or her own with another toast on the same topic. Starting a new topic without the tamada's permission would be a social blunder. One important rule of the supra is that there should be no negative remarks or toasts, and it is the responsibility of the tamada to ensure that this rule is observed. Another rule of the supra is that one must not be drinking one's wine unless a toast has just been made, and so it is the tamada's responsibility to space out the toasts accordingly, so that everyone has a chance to imbibe, but not so often that people might become too intoxicated. In the hands of a good tamada, a supra is a beautiful, moving experience.

 

 

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