Samegrelo

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The historic region of Samegrelo in Georgia.
The historic region of Samegrelo in Georgia.

Mingrelia or Samegrelo (Georgian: სამეგრელო Samegrelo) is an historic province in the western part of Georgia, formerly also known as Odishi. Mingrelia is bordered by the secessionist region of Abkhazia to the north-west, Svanetia to the north, Imeretia to the east, Guria to the south and the Black Sea to the west.

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Administratively, the historic province of Mingrelia is incorporated joined with the northern part of the neighboring mountainous province of Svanetia to form the Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti region, the capital of which is Mingrelia's main city, Zugdidi.

Mingrelian prince, by Grigory Gagarin. 1840s.
Mingrelian prince, by Grigory Gagarin. 1840s.

The Mingrelians are an ethnic subgroup of the Georgians who speak both the Mingrelian language and Georgian, but use only the Georgian written language.

In ancient times Mingrelia was a major part of the kingdom of Colchis (Kolkha) (9th-6th centuries BC) and the kingdom of Egrisi (4th century BC-6th century AD). In the 11th-15th centuries, Mingrelia was a part of the united Georgian Kingdom. From the 16th century to 1857, the independent Principality of Mingrelia was under the rule of a Georgian dynasty Dadiani and was a vassal of the Ottoman Empire.

In December 1803, the principality came under the patronage of the Russian Empire by an agreement between the Tsar and the Mingrelian Prince Grigol Dadiani. In 1857, the principality was abolished officially by the Tsarist Russian Empire. From 1918 to 1921, Mingrelia was part of the Democratic Republic of Georgia (DRG). In 1921, Georgia became part of the Soviet Union, as the Georgian SSR. In April 9, 1991, independence was restored to Georgia, of which Mingrelia is now part.

The first President of an independent Georgia, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was a Mingrelian. After the violent Coup d'etat of December 21, 1991-January 6, 1992, Mingrelia became the centre of a civil war, which ended with the defeat of Gamsakhurdia's Mingrelian supporters. Even so, this region was unmanageable by the central government throughout the presidency of Eduard Shevardnadze (1992-2003). Stability in the region is further deteriorated by the fact that the Georgian refugees from the Abkhazian war zone (who are considered by Georgians as victims of ethnic cleansing) are mostly Mingrelians. After the Rose Revolution of November, 2003, in 2004, newly elected Georgian President, Mikheil Saakashvili, who vowed to resolve the conflict with the breakaway region of Abkhazia solely by peaceful means, disarmed groups of Mingrelians who tried to fight a guerrilla war against the Abkhazians by incursions from Mingrelia.

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