Kartli

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kingdom of Georgia under Queen Thamar, 12th century
Georgian Statehood

Kartli (Geo.: ქართლი) is the largest and most populated province of Eastern Georgia. It includes the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, and two other major cities, Gori and Rustavi. It is bordered by the mountain-range of the Greater Caucasus to the north, by the province of Kakheti to the east, by Azerbaijan and Armenia to the south, by Turkey and the Samtskhe-Javakheti region to the south-west and by the province of Imereti to the west.

In the 3rd century BC the ancient Eastern Georgian Kingdom of Kartli, also known as Iberia, was established here. Its king declared Christianity as the official religion of Kartli in 337 AD. In the early Middle Ages, Kartli lost its political importance because of the struggle between the King and strong feudal rulers, as well as the aggression of the strong Persian Kingdom. Even so, in a way, it remained Georgia's leader because of the independence of its Church and culture from Byzantine influence. Kartli was part of the united Georgian Kingdom in the central Middle Ages. (Georgia was united at the beginning of the 11th century, but Tbilisi, Kartli's main city, was not liberated until 1122. Immediately afterwards, the Georgian capital moved from Kutaisi to Tbilisi.) After the disintegration of the united Kingdom in the 15th century, Kartli became an independent Kingdom, which suffered from frequent Persian invasions. In 1762, the Kingdom of Kartli was united with the neighboring Kingdom of Kakheti. This Kingdom too was soon weakened by the Persian aggression. In 1801 the Kingdom of Kartl-Kakheti was annexed to the Russian Empire. Kartli was part of the independent Democratic Republic of Georgia in 1918-1921, of the Transcaucasian SFSR in 1922-1936 (whose capital was Tbilisi, the province's and Georgia's main city), and of the Georgian SSR in 1936-1991.

Since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991, Kartli is part of the independent Republic of Georgia, while Tbilisi, Kartli's main city, is the nation's capital. Besides Tbilisi, the province of Kartli is divided into three administrative regions: Kvemo Kartli (Capital of which is Rustavi), Mtskheta-Mtianeti (With Mtskheta as its capital) and Shida Kartli (Capital of which is Gori). The last region officially includes the historical district of Samachablo, the majority of whose population is Ossetian since the 18th century* and which had the status of autonomous district within Georgian SSR during the Soviet period (1922-1991). Since the Georgian-Ossetian civil war in 1991-1992, this district, which is known as South Ossetia, is de facto an independent state, though no nation officially recognizes its sovereignty.

*During the 16th-18th centuries, the Ossetians, who were forced to flee their land in the fields of the Northern Caucasus, migrated southwards to the northern slopes of the Greater Caucasus mountain range. Some of them crossed the mountains to the Southern Caucasus and thus settled in the mountainous region of Kartli (historical district of Samachablo).

Flag of Georgia
Historical regions of Georgia
The Kingdom of Georgia in the early 13th century
Abkhazia | Adjara | Guria | Hereti | Imereti | Javakheti | Kartli | Kakheti | Khevsureti | Lechkhumi | Mtiuleti | Meskheti | Pshavi | Racha | Samegrelo | Tao-Klarjeti | Tusheti
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