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Gagra

 
 
Gagra ('grə) or Gagry ('grē), city (1989 pop. 26,636), W Georgia, on the Black Sea and at the foot of the Greater Caucasus. It is a subtropical health resort.


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Gagra
გაგრა
—  Town  —
Old Gagra
de facto independent country (internationally recognised as part of Georgia) Abkhazia
Government
 - Mayor
Population (1989)
 - Total 26,636
Time zone MSK (UTC+3)
Gagra, View from the Black Sea

Gagra (Abkhaz and Russian: Гагра, Georgian: გაგრა) is a town in Abkhazia, the breakaway republic of Georgia, sprawling for 5 km on the northeast coast of the Black Sea, at the foot of the Caucasus Mountains. Its subtropical climate made Gagra a popular health resort in Imperial Russian and Soviet times.

It had a population of 26,636 in 1989 but this has certainly fallen considerably due to ethnic-cleansing and mass expulsion of ethnic Georgians from Abkhazia.

Gagra is the centre of the district of the same name. It is located in the western part of Abkhazia and river Psou serves as a border with Krasnodar Kray of Russia.

Contents

Etymology

According to the Georgian scholars, Gagra is derived from Gakra meaning walnut in the Svan language.[1] According to the Soviet sports tourism master Bondaryev, the name of the city originates from the local Gagaa clan.[2] According to V. Kvarchija, Gagra (< *ga-kʼə-ra) means ‘the holder of the coast’ in Abkhaz (Gagra was mentioned as Kakara, Kakkari on old maps).[3]

History

The town was established as a Greek colony called Triglite, inhabited by Greeks and Colcians. It came under the control of the kingdom of Pontus in the 1st century BC before being absorbed by the Roman Empire, which renamed the town as Nitica. Its geographical position led the Romans to fortify the town, which was repeatedly attacked by Goths and other invaders. After the fall of Rome, its successor, the Byzantine Empire, took control of the town. Along with the rest of Abkhazia, Gagra was incorporated into the Georgian kingdom of Imereti from the 9th century onwards. It became a major trading settlement in which Genoan and Venetian merchants were prominent, trading in the town's main exports - wood, honey, wax and slaves. The name "Gagra" appears for the first time on a map of 1308 made by the Italian Pietro Visconti, which is now in the Library of Saint Mark in Venice.

Gagra within the Russian Empire

Palace of the Prince of Oldenburg

In the 16th century, Gagra and the rest of Abkhazia was conquered by the Ottoman Empire. The western merchants were expelled and the town entered a prolonged period of decline, with much of the local population fleeing into the mountains. By the 18th century the town had been reduced to little more than a village surrounded by forests and disease-ridden swamps. Its fortunes were restored in the 19th century when the Russian Empire expanded into the region, annexing Abkhazia. The swamps were drained and the town was rebuilt around a new military hospital. Its population, however, was still small: in 1866, a census recorded that 336 men and 280 women, mostly local families or army officers and their dependents, lived in Gagra. The town suffered badly in the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878, when Turkish troops invaded, destroyed the town and expelled the local population. Russia won the war, however, and rebuilt Gagra again.

View of Gagra's wharf sometime between 1905 and 1915.

After the war, the town was "discovered" by Prince Peter of Oldenburg, a member of the Russian royalty. He saw the potential of the region's subtropical climate and decided to build a high-class resort there. Having raised a large sum of money from the government, he built himself a palace there and constructed a number of other buildings in an eclectic variety of styles from around Europe. A park was laid out with tropical trees and even parrots and monkeys imported to give it an exotic feel. Despite the expensive work, the resort was not initially a success, although it did later attract a growing number of foreign tourists visiting on cruises of the Black Sea.

Gagra under the Soviet Union

In the Russian Revolution of 1905, a local uprising produced a revolutionary government in the town, which founded a short-lived Republic of Gagra. This was soon defeated and the revolutionaries arrested en masse. The First World War a few years later was a disaster for Gagra, destroying the tourist trade on which it depended. The Russian Revolution shortly afterwards saw the Bolsheviks take over the town; despite a brief French attempt to repel them during the Russian Civil War, the town was firmly incorporated into the new Soviet Union.

The Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Lenin, issued a decree in 1919 establishing a "worker's resort" in Gagra, nationalising the resort that had been built by Oldenburg. It became a popular holiday resort for Soviet citizens and during World War II gained a new role as a site for the rehabilitation of wounded soldiers. After the war, various state-run sanatoriums were built there. The resort grew and was developed intensively as part of the "Soviet Riviera".

Gagra in post-soviet Abkhazia

Gagra Colonnade

In the late 1980s, tensions grew between the Georgian and Abkhazian communities in the region. All-out war erupted between 1992-1993 which ended in a defeat of the Georgian government's forces. Hundreds of thousands of ethnic Georgians were expelled from their homes in Abkhazia in an outbreak of mass ethnic cleansing in which tens of thousands Georgian civilians were massacred.[4][5] Gagra and the Abkhazian capital Sukhumi were at the centre of the fighting and suffered heavy damage.

The conflict has still not been resolved, although ongoing skirmishes are confined to the Abkhazian/Georgian administrative border well to the east of the town.

Monuments

An early medieval church of the Protection of the Virgin

The chief landmarks of Gagra are:

  • ruins of the Abaata fortress (4th-5th cent. AD Built by Anchabadze dynasty- Ruling Georgian dynasty);
  • 6th-century church, said to be the oldest in Abkhazia, built by Anchabadze dynasty;
  • Marlinsky defensive tower (1841);
  • 19th-century palace of the Prince of Oldenburg.

See also

References

  1. ^ Topchishvili, Roland (2005), History of Georgian Mountain Regions: Svaneti and Its Inhabitants (Ethno-historical Studies). National Parliamentary Library of Georgia
  2. ^ БОНДАРЕВ, Н.Д. (1981) (in Russian). В ГОРАХ АБХАЗИИ (In Abkhazian mountains). Moscow: Физкультура и спорт. http://wkavkaz.narod.ru/book/abhazia/index.html. 
  3. ^ Кәарҷиа В. Е. Аҧсны атопонимика — Аҟәа. 2002. P. 92
  4. ^ Murphy, Paul J. (2004), The Wolves of Islam: Russia and the Faces of Chechen Terror. Brassey's, ISBN 1574888307.
  5. ^ Human Rights Watch Arms Project. Human Rights Watch/Helsinki. March 1995 Vol. 7, No. 7. Georgia/Abkhazia: Violations of the Laws of War and Russia’s Role in the Conflict

External links

Coordinates: 43°20′N 40°13′E / 43.333°N 40.217°E / 43.333; 40.217


 
 
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