Located at the crossroads of Western Asia and Eastern Europe, Georgia is a country of rainforests and swamps, snow and glaciers, and semi-arid plains. It has ski resorts and mineral springs, monuments and an oil pipeline. It also has one of the longest and most turbulent histories in the Christian or Near Eastern world, but no comprehensive, up-to-date account has been written about this little-known country—until now. Remedying this omission, Donald Rayfield accesses a mass of new material from recently opened archives to tell Georgia’s absorbing story.
Beginning with the first intimations of the existence of Georgians in ancient Anatolia and ending with the volatile presidency of Mikheil Saakashvili, Rayfield deals with the country’s internal politics and swings between disintegration and unity, and divulges Georgia’s complex struggles with the empires that have tried to control, fragment, or even destroy it. He describes the country’s conflicts with Xenophon’s Greeks, Arabs, invading Turks, the Crusades, Genghis Khan, the Persian Empire, the Russian Empire, and Soviet totalitarianism. A wide-ranging examination of this small but colorful country, its dramatic state-building, and its tragic political mistakes, Edge of Empires draws our eyes to this often overlooked nation.
Beginning with the first intimations of the existence of Georgians in ancient Anatolia and ending with the volatile presidency of Mikheil Saakashvili, Rayfield deals with the country’s internal politics and swings between disintegration and unity, and divulges Georgia’s complex struggles with the empires that have tried to control, fragment, or even destroy it. He describes the country’s conflicts with Xenophon’s Greeks, Arabs, invading Turks, the Crusades, Genghis Khan, the Persian Empire, the Russian Empire, and Soviet totalitarianism. A wide-ranging examination of this small but colorful country, its dramatic state-building, and its tragic political mistakes, Edge of Empires draws our eyes to this often overlooked nation.
Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. The Emergence of the Kartvelians
2. The Origins of the Kingdom of Kartli
3. Conversion
4. The Arab Conquest
5. Unification
6. Davit the Builder
7. Demetre and Giorgi III
8. Queen Tamar
9. Mongol Invasion
10. The Fractured State
11. Timur Lang and the Destruction of Georgia
12. Fratricide
13. King Teimuraz I
14. Teimuraz Dispossessed
15. The Eighteenth Century
16. The Russian Conquest of Kartli-Kakhetia
17. King Solomon’s End
18. Vice-regency
19. Reaction and Revolution
20. Independence
21. Soviet Annexation
22. After Stalin
23. Independence Restored
References
Chronology
Maps and Dynastic Trees
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index