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Ancient
Georgia
In the fourth century BCE, Georgian principalities found
themselves involved in the whirlwind of Alexander the Great’s campaign in
the east. There is no historical evidence that Alexander or his generals
campaigned in the Caucasus, but Georgian chronicles describe ‘Greek’
troops reaching Iberia/Kartli, which they occupied and placed under the
governorship of Azo (Azon). Greek authorities proved to be harsh and
uncompromising which caused the local population to rebel. According to
Georgian historical tradition, young Parnavaz, a nephew of the last ruler of
Iberia who was assassinated by the Greeks, contacted Eristavi Quji of Egrisi
and, with his support, launched a successful rebellion against Azo. Parnavaz,
who married the daughter of Quji, thus controlled both the eastern and western
Georgian principalities. He founded the Parnavazid dynasty and divided the
kingdom into seven regions under governorship of eristavis and established
Shida Kartli as a special region ruled by a spaspet. Despite the lack of
tangible proof, King Parnavaz is often credited with the spreading of the
Georgian alphabet throughout the kingdom and introducing the cult of Armazi
and the goddess of fertility Zadeni. Archaeological evidence revealed the
Iberian capital of Mtskheta as an advanced city with its own acropolis, baths
and other amenities.
Under later Parnavazid kings, the kingdoms of Iberia and Colchis/Egrisis found
themselves facing major change in the balance of power in Asia Minor. In 190
BCE, the Seleucid Empire fell to the Romans while the weakened Persia was
unable to prevent the rise of the powerful Armenian kingdom under Artashes (Artaxias).
Armenian rulers greatly expanded their territory that also incorporated some
Georgian regions. After the death of King Parnajom of Iberia, the Armenian
king Arshak took over his throne, establishing an Armenian hegemony over
eastern Georgia. In the first century, Armenia reached its zenith under King
Tigran II the Great, who allied himself to his father-in-law Mithradates
Eupator of Pontus (111-63 BCE) against Rome. Western Georgians were also
allied with Pontus, where Georgian tribes (Laz/Chan, Colchians, Chalybes, etc)
constituted a large part of the population and served in the armies of King
Mithradates in Greece and Asia Minor. In 65 BCE, the Roman General Gnaeus
Pompeius Magnus defeated Pontus and marched against Iberia, where King Artag
was forced to recognize Roman sovereignty, sending lavish gifts of gold and
his children as hostages. Meanwhile, Pompeius crossed the mountains into
Colchis, where he campaigned in search of the mythical Golden Fleece and
chained titan Prometheus. Thus, Colchis-Egrisi and Kartli-Iberia were
recognized as client states of Rome. The wealth and might of these
principalities were attested by famous Greek scholar Strabo, who described
eastern and western Georgian lands in his Geography.
Roman power was never firm in eastern Georgia, which remained under the
Persian sphere of influence for the greater part of its existence. In 37-36
BCE, Iberians refused to participate in Emperor Marc Antony’s campaigns
against Parthia and a large anti-Roman rebellion began in 36. The punitive
expedition of Publius Canidus Crassus was the last Roman effort to conquer
eastern Georgia. However, the western Georgian principality of Colchis/Egrisi
remained under direct Roman administration and struggled for its independence.
In 69 CE, a powerful insurrection, led by a former slave Anicetus, succeeded
in temporarily driving the Romans out of Colchis but was later defeated. By
the second century, several principalities (Lazica, Abasgia, etc.) emerged in
western Georgia and recognized the sovereignty of Rome.
In the first-second centuries CE, the Kingdom of Kartli (Iberia) emerged as a
relatively strong state as its rulers took advantage of the struggle between
Rome and Parthia. King Parsman (Pharasmenes) actively interfered in the
affairs of the neighboring Armenian kingdom, placing his brother Mithradates
(35-51 CE) on the Armenian throne in the mid-first century, and skillfully
maneuvering between the powerful empires of Rome and Parthia. The Iberian
presence in Armenia weakened after the Treaty of Rhandeia of 63 CE between
Rome and Parthia allotted the privilege of nomination to the Parthian Arsacids
and the right of investiture to the emperor of Rome. The Roman emperors sought
to gain the support of the kings of Kartli (Iberia) against the Parthians.
Emperor Vespasian (69-79) had a wall erected in Mtskheta with inscription that
King Mithridates (Mihrdat) of Kartli (Iberia) was “the friend of the
Caesars” and the ruler “of the Roman-loving Iberians.” Another King
Parsman (mid-second century) openly defied Rome and refused to pay homage to
the Roman Emperor Hadrian (117-138) during the latter’s visit of Roman
provinces in Asia Minor, although the Roman emperor presented him with a war
elephant and 500 troops. With the help of the Alans, Parsman attacked the
Roman and Parthian vassal states in Albania, Armenia and Cappadocia. Under
Hadrian’s successor, Emperor Antoninus Pius (138-161), the relations between
the Roman Empire and Kartli (Iberia) significantly improved and King Parsman,
accompanied by a large retinue, visited Rome where he received a royal
welcome; according to the Roman historian Cassius Dio, he was given the
special privilege of offering a sacrifice on the Capitol and having his
equestrian statue placed in the Temple of Bellona.
The fortunes of Kartli changed with the rise of the Sassanid kingdom in Persia
in the third century CE, when the Iberian kings were forced to recognize the
Sasanid supremacy; the Sasanid rulers appointed their viceroys (pitiaxæ/vitaxae)
to keep watch on Georgian lands. The office of pitiaxæ eventually became
hereditary in the ruling house of Lower Kartli, thus inaugurating the Kartli
pitiaxæat, which brought an extensive territory under Sasanid control. In the
third century, the Roman Empire briefly regained Kartli under Emperor Aurelian
(270-275) but lost it a decade later. The Persians placed their candidate
Mirian (Meribanes, 284-361) on the throne of eastern Georgia. Mirian’s reign
proved decisive since he became the first Georgian ruler to adopt
Christianity.
The rise and spread of Christianity, which continued for several centuries,
had a profound effect on the Georgian principalities. Georgian tradition holds
that two members of the Jewish community of Mtskheta were present at the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ and brought back a number of holy relics,
including Christ’s chiton that was buried near Mtskheta. The Christian
tradition also claims the allotment of the “Iberian” lands to Virgin Mary,
who is, thus, considered the main protector and intercessor of Georgia.
Georgian Orthodox Church credits the introduction of Christianity to Apostles
Andrew the First Called, Simon the Canaanite, Mathias, Bartholomew and
Thaddeus, who preached in western and southwestern Georgia in the first
century.
The Sasanid Empire and its Zoroastrian religion had a firm hold in eastern
Georgia and delayed the spread of Christianity for another three centuries. In
the early fourth century, Saint Nino of Cappadocia preached the Christian
message in Iberia and succeeded in persuading King Mirian and his consort,
Queen Nana, to proclaim it a state religion in Eastern Georgia around 337;
although technically marking the start of conversion only in Iberia, this
event is now considered as the official conversion of all of Georgia. However,
Christianity was already well established in western Georgia and Bishop
Stratophilus of Bichvinta had attended the first Ecumenical Council held in
Nicea in 325. Sixty years later, western Georgian bishops were joined by
Bishop Pantophilus of Kartli at the second Ecumenical Council in
Constantinople in 381. The Georgian Orthodox Church was initially under the
jurisdiction of the Apostolic See of Antioch, but became autocephalous
(independent) in 466 when the Bishop of Mtskheta was elevated to the rank of
Catholicos of Kartli. Another important development took place in the sixth
century, when Georgian church leaders rejected Monophysitism (Armenia accepted
it in 506 and the split with the Georgian church was complete by 607) and
supported the Chalcedonian creed, drawing Georgia closer to the Byzantine
Empire, and later to the Christian Europe, and further from SasanianPersia,
that was more tolerant of the Monophysites.
Conversion to Christianity had long-lasting consequences for Georgia. Situated
at the crossroads of the West and the East, Georgia now took political
orientation towards the West/Europe and firmly tied its future and culture to
Western civilization. The introduction of Christianity stimulated a vigorous
development of arts and letters. Although pre-Christian Georgian literature
seems to have been destroyed in the process, Georgia underwent a cultural
transformation. Monasticism flourished and many important religious works were
translated into Georgian. One of the earliest surviving examples of Georgian
original hagiographic literature re the fifth century Martyrdom of the Holy
Queen Shushanik and Life of Saint Nino. The widespread construction of
churches promoted rapid improvement in architecture and gradually a unique
cruciform style of church architecture was developed, evident in the
basilica-type churches of Bolnisi and Urbnisi (fifth century) and the
cruciform domed Jvari Church (late sixth century).
Christianity in Georgia was put to severe tests from the very beginning.
Sasanian Persia promoted the teachings of Zoroaster and helped spread Mazdaism
throughout eastern Georgia. Shah Yazdegerd II (438-457), convinced that a
single religion would enhance the unity of his empire, endeavored to convert
Georgians to Mazdaism and dispatched Zoroastrian magi to Kartli to take charge
of the conversion. Many Georgian nobles submitted, but their commitment to the
new faith proved shallow. Efforts to convert the common people were less
successful since Christianity appeared to have struck deep roots among them.
In the fifth-sixth centuries, Christian Kartli (Iberia) struggled against
Persian domination. This period produced King Vakhtang Gorgasali (452-502),
one of the most colorful personalities in the history of Georgia. The son of
King Mihrdat V, he was nicknamed Gorgasali (“wolf headed,” from the
Persian Gorg-a-sar) because of the shape of his helmet. Married to a Persian
princess, he extended his authority to the Byzantium-held Egrisi (Lazica) and
Abasgia, subdued the warlike tribes of Alans (Oss, Ossetes) and secured the
autocephalous status for the Georgian Orthodox Church. Married to an Iranian
princess, Vakhtang participated in the Persian campaigns against the Byzantine
Empire between 455 and 458 but later grew irritated with the Persian
interference in his affairs. In 482, he, in alliance with the Armenians, led
an uprising against Persia, but internal dissension and the failure to secure
help from Byzantine Emperor Justinian doomed the rebellion; Georgia was
ravaged by the Persian punitive expeditions in 483 and 484. In 502, Vakhtang
led another uprising that proved to be more successful. The Georgians defeated
Shah Kavad’s army on the Samgori Plains in Kartli, but King Vakhtang himself
was mortally injured when one of his renegade servants betrayed him and
wounded him through an armpit defect of his armor. One of his lasting legacies
was the transferring of the capital from Mtskheta to the nearby small fortress
of Tbilisi.
The death of King Vakhtang seriously weakened Kartli (Iberia) and exposed it
to Persian encroachment. In 523, King Gurgen rose in rebellion but was
defeated; Kartli was occupied and the Iberian monarchy was later abolished.
Persian officials introduced heavy taxation and Mazdaizing policies. Having
subdued Kartli, Persia moved into Western Georgia, where it clashed with the
Byzantine Empire. In the mid-520s, King Tsate of Lazica broke his alliance
with Persia and supported the Byzantine rulers, who deployed their forces at
Tskhisdziri (Petra). The rulers of Egrisi/Lazica tried to use the hostility
between Byzantium and Persia to their own advantage, but the war devastated
western Georgia. Persia invaded Lazica several times but the alliance between
the rulers of Lazica and Constantinople endured. However, in 554, King Gubaz
of Egrisi was assassinated by Byzantine officials on the Khobistskali River.
In response, the dismayed population of Egrisi summoned a national assembly,
where two notables, Aietes and Phartazes, gave their famed speeches on whether
to continue supporting Byzantium or turn to Persia. In the end, Egrisi sided
with the Byzantine Empire, feeling cultural and religious affinity with it. By
562, the joint efforts of Egrisi and Byzantium culminated in the expulsion of
Persia from western Georgia. Lazica became a province of the Byzantine Empire.
The Byzantine-Persian rivalry had serious consequences for Iberia. Sasanid
rulers held eastern Georgian under their suzerainty while local princes led by
mamasakhlisi (prince-regent) of Kartli/Iberia) ran the government. When the
Byzantine Emperor Maurice attacked Persia in 582, Georgian nobles supported
him in hopes of restoring the kingdom of Iberia. Iberian autonomy was restored
in 588, but Emperor Maurice appointed a curopalates (presiding prince) instead
of a king. The first curopalates, Guaram (588-602) and his heirs were
caught between the warring Persia and Byzantium. In 591, Constantinople and
the Sasanid Empire agreed to divide Iberia between them, with Tbilisi
remaining in Persian hands and Mtskheta, the old capital, under Byzantine
control. In the early seventh century, the truce between Byzantium and Persia
collapsed and Erismtavari Stepanoz I of Iberia (ca. 590-627) succeeded
in reuniting the eastern Georgian territories. As the war between the
Byzantine and Sasanid empires continued, Georgian principalities were often
turned into battlegrounds. In 627-628, the campaigns of Byzantine Emperor
Heraclius ensured Byzantine predominance in western Georgia and significantly
weakened Iberia/Kartli, exposing it to the arrival of the new conqueror.
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