Tsikhisdziri, Kobuleti Municipality
Tsikhisdziri ციხისძირი | |
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Village | |
Tsikhisdziri and its ruined fortress | |
Tsikhisdziri Location of Tsikhisdziri | |
Coordinates: 41°45′43″N 41°45′14″E / 41.76194°N 41.75389°ECoordinates: 41°45′43″N 41°45′14″E / 41.76194°N 41.75389°E | |
Country | Georgia |
Autonomous Republic | Adjara |
Municipality | Kobuleti |
Elevation | 440 m (1,440 ft) |
Population (2014)[1] | |
• Total | 2,472 |
Tsikhisdziri (Georgian: ციხისძირი) is a village in the Kobuleti Municipality, Autonomous Republic of Adjara, Georgia, on the Black Sea coast, 8 km south of the town of Kobuleti. Tsikhisdziri is home to a archaeological site and ruins of a Late Antique fortified town, which is identified by mainstream scholarship with the Roman-built city-fortress of Petra.
Archaeology
Artifacts
The Tsikhisdziri site is located on a rocky coastline of the Black Sea, at the modern-day village. Systematic archaeological study of the site began in 1962 and yielded several layers of human settlement and various artifacts, the earliest of which date to the Late Bronze Age, when the area fell within the Colchian culture area. North of Tsikhisdziri, at Bobokvati, some 200 m from the coastline, dune-settlements, dating to the 8th century BC, were uncovered.[2] In the following centuries, a series of ancient Greek colonies were established along the eastern Black Sea littoral. There is no literary evidence that a Greek colony existed at Tsikhisdziri, but archaeological excavations revealed the 5th-century BC burials of adults and of children in amphorae, set down into levels of earlier dune-settlement. Artifacts unearthed there include an Attic skyphos of Corinthian type and lekythos of the Haimon painter, dated to c. 470.[3]
A collection of the 3rd-century AD items—gold jewelry, silver and bronze vessels, beads, and coins—and now known as the Tsikhisdziri treasure was found there in 1907 and then acquired by the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia.[4] Part of this collection is a rock crystal intaglio depicting a bearded man identified as the Roman emperor Lucius Verus: the design was gilded and the stone was polished to allow the image to be seen through the transparent material.[5] The Roman presence in this area is also evidenced by a large brick found in the ruins of Tsikhisdziri with an inscription that has been interpreted as VEX[illatio]FA[siana], suggesting that that the brick—now in possession of the Janashia Museum of Georgia in Tbilisi—was made in a Roman military workshop in Phasis and shipped south.[2][6]
Architecture
The Tsikhisdziri fortress was situated on two coastal hills, connected to each other through double walls. On the territory of the citadel, the area of which totals around 1.5 h, are the ruins of a 6th-century three-nave basilica with the dimensions of 33X17.80 m, with narthex, projecting apse, and floor mosaic, and remains of two other churches, one from the early Christian period and the other dated to the High Middle Ages. Close to the basilica is a 6th-century bath (9.5X6.5 m) and a water cistern. North to the citadel are the ruins of an urban settlement and hundreds of burials. These structures date from the Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages.[2][7][8]
History
The Tsikhisdziri site is identified by the mainstream scholarly opinion with the Roman city–fortress of Petra, founded at the behest of the emperor Justinian I in 535 and, after a series of battles for the possession of that city during the Lazic War with Sasanid Iran, demolished by the Romans themselves to prevent it again becoming the enemy's target in 551.[9] Later, the locale continued to be home to a stronghold of some importance, namely, the Devils' Fortress, ts'ikhe k'ajet'isa, mentioned by the Georgian scholar Prince Vakhushti in his 1745 geography as situated near the small town of Kobuleti, on "the edge of the sea,...strong, built on a high cliff, possesing a rocky tunnel, curved as a road".[10]
By Vakhushti's time, the village had been under the Ottoman sway. During the Russo-Turkish War (1828–29), Tsikhisdziri, then one of the frontier settlements between the Ottoman-dominated Adjara and the Russian-controlled Guria, saw fighting between the two empires. It was there that, in September 1829, the Ottoman commander of Muslim Georgian background, Ahmed-Pasha, repulsed an invasion by the Russian general Karl Hesse.[11] During the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78), the Ottoman military heavily fortified the heights of Tsikhisdziri, which allowed them to successfully block two Russian attempts to capture Tsikhisdziri and advance towards Batumi on 12 April 1877 and 18 January 1878.[12] However, an eventual defeat in the war forced the Ottomans to cede Adjara to Russia. In the Soviet period, Tsikhisdziri became one of a series of sea resorts in southwestern Georgia and continues to enjoy summertime visitors to this day.[13][14]
Population
As of the 2014 national census, Tsikhisdziri had the population of 2,472.[1] Most of them (94%) are ethnic Georgians.[15]
Population | 2002 census | 2014 census |
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Total | 2,253[15] | 2,472[1] |
Notes
- 1 2 3 "Population Census 2014: Number of Population by Administrative-Territorial Units and sex". National Statistics Office of Georgia. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
- 1 2 3 Gamkrelidze et al. 2013, pp. 589–591.
- ↑ Braund 1994, p. 117.
- ↑ Tsetskhladze 1999, p. 80.
- ↑ Odisheli 2013, p. 150.
- ↑ Odisheli 2013, p. 149.
- ↑ Khoshtaria 2013, p. 367.
- ↑ Mania & Natsvlishvili 2013, pp. 279–280.
- ↑ Gamkrelidze et al. 2013, pp. 588–589.
- ↑ Gamkrelidze et al. 2013, p. 588.
- ↑ Allen & Muratoff 1953, p. 42.
- ↑ Allen & Muratoff 1953, pp. 153, 214.
- ↑ "The Castle of Devils - An unconquerable citadel and a strategic trade hub in western Georgia". Georgian Journal. 21 July 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
- ↑ "Tsikhisdziri – Georgian sea resort at the foot of fortress". Georgian Journal. 20 July 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
- 1 2 "საქართველოს მოსახლეობის 2002 წლის პირველი ეროვნული საყოველთაო აღწერის შედეგები, ტომი II [Results of the first national census of the population of Georgia in 2002, volume II]" (PDF) (in Georgian). National Statistics Office of Georgia. 2003. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
References
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- Allen, William Edward David; Muratoff, Paul (1953). Caucasian Battlefields: A History of the Wars on the Turco-Caucasian Border 1828–1921. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Braund, David (1994). Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia, 550 BC–AD 562. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814473-3.
- Gamkrelidze, Gela; Mindorashvili, Davit; Bragvadze, Zurab; Kvatsadze, Marine, eds. (2013). "ციხისძირი [Tsikhisdziri]". ქართლის ცხოვრების ტოპოარქეოლოგიური ლექსიკონი [Topoarchaeological dictionary of Kartlis tskhovreba (The history of Georgia)] (PDF) (in Georgian) (1st ed.). Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum. pp. 588–592. ISBN 978-9941-15-896-4.
- Khoshtaria, David (2013). "The Basilica at Petra (Tsikhisdziri)". In Flora, Karagianni. Medieval ports in North Aegean and the Black Sea: links to the maritime routes of the East; International Symposium, Thessalonike, 4–6 December 2013; Proceedings. Thessalonike. pp. 367–376. ISBN 978-960-9677-01-1.
- Mania, Irina; Natsvlishvili, Natia (2013). "Littoral fortifications in South-West Georgia". In Flora, Karagianni. Medieval ports in North Aegean and the Black Sea: links to the maritime routes of the East; International Symposium, Thessalonike, 4–6 December 2013; Proceedings. Thessalonike. pp. 276–283. ISBN 978-960-9677-01-1.
- Odisheli, Manana (2013). "Georgia in Roman Times (1st to 4th Centuries AD)". In Opper, Thorsten. Hadrian: Art, Politics & Economy (PDF). British Museum Research Publication #175. pp. 148–165. ISBN 978-0-86159-175-6. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
- Tsetskhladze, Gocha R. (1999). Pichvnari and its environs. Paris: Presses Univ. Franche-Comté. ISBN 2-913322-42-5.