Watch
Internet TV
| |
Black
Sea News
| |
Otoman
Empire
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
|

Colchis
Colchis, or Aea-Colchis
(Georgian form - Kolkheti), in ancient geography district of
Asia Minor, at the
eastern extremity of the Black Sea, bounded on the N. by the Caucasus. The name
of Colchis first appears in Aeschylus and Pindar. It was inhabited by a number
of tribes whose settlements lay chiefly along the shore of the Black Sea.
Colchis (Kolkha, Kolkheti) is old name of Western Georgia.
Ancient countries of Caucasus: Armenia, Iberia, Colchis and Albania
Since ancient Colchian tribes maintained very close, in some cases even genetic,
contacts with the ancient inhabitants of the Aegean Basin (Pelasgians) and Asia
Minor. Homer was well aware not only of the myth of the Argonauts, he knew about
the existence of Aea-Colchis and ancient Colchian tribes. In the Iliad (II,
856), Halysones, a Pelasgo-Colchian tribe is mentioned for the first time. "Halysones
came from the eastern silver-making town Halyb". Strabo identifies the tribe of
Halysones with the ancient west-Georgian (Colchian) tribe of Halybes (or Khalib/Khaldi).
The capital of Colchis was the city Aea (now Kutaisi).
At the end of the 2nd millennium BC and in the first centuries of the 1st
millennium BC, the oldest Georgian Kingdom of Kolkha (Colchis) was located on
the territory of Western Georgia, in the 6th century BC-7th century AD Georgian
Kingdom Egrisi. The other ancient Georgian State was Diaokhi (end of the 2nd
millennium BC-4th century BC. Later Kingdom of Iberia). In the 7th-9th centuries
AD Kolkheti was under ruling of the Byzantine Empire. In the 10th-15th centuries
this territory was a part of the united Georgian Kingdom, in the 15th-16th
centuries part of the Westgeorgian Kingdom of Imereti. In the 16th
century-1860's, a major part of this territory was ruled by the autonomous
Principality of Samegrelo (Mingrelia). In the 1860's this Principality was
abolished by the Tsarist Russian Empire. In 1918-1921 Kolkheti was a part of the
Democratic Republic of Georgia. On February 25, 1921, Georgia was occupied by
Soviet Russia. From 1921 to 1991 Kolkheti was part of the Georgian Soviet
Socialist Republic. On April 9, 1991, the independence of Georgia was restored
by the authority of the first President of the Republic of Georgia, Dr. Zviad
Gamsakhurdia.
Colchis was celebrated in Greek mythology as the destination of the Argonauts,
the home of Medea and the special domain of sorcery. The legend of the Argonauts
relates that once upon a time in Aea-Colchis there ruled the mighty King Aeetes,
son of Helios, father of Medea. Alongside with other numerous riches he
possessed the Golden Fleece (Okros Satsmisi in Georgian) - the skin of a sheep
with golden fleece.
Ancient authors (Palephatus, Dionysius of Miletus, Strabo, Appian, Charaxes of
Pergamon and others) give a different interpretation of the Golden Fleece.
Evidently, by this notion we should mean a whole complex of cultural
achievements of ancient tribes, and mainly sheep-breeding which was widespread
among the ancient west-Georgian tribe of Tibareni (Tibaren) and highly developed
metallurgy among the Halybs (Khalib/Khaldi) and Mossynici (Mosiniks). Ancient
Greeks considered Halybes to be "the inventors of iron". Materials of material
culture discovered in Georgia dating back to the 3rd-2nd millennia BC speak of
the high level of development of metal processing, gold in particular, thus
corroborating the reality of the historic basis of the myth of the Golden
Fleece.
At the time of the Roman invasion it seems to have paid a nominal homage to
Mithradates the Great and to have been ruled over by Machares, his second son.
On the defeat of Mithradates by Pompey, it became a Roman province. After the
death of Pompey, Pharnaces, the son of Mithradates, rose in rebellion against
the Roman yoke, subdued Colchis and Armenia, and made head, though but for a
short time, against the Roman arms. After this Colchis was incorporated with
Pontus (64 BC).
|
|
| |