Batumi Botanical Garden Explained

Official Name:Batumi Botanical Garden
Pushpin Map:Georgia Adjara#Georgia (country)#Caucasus mountains
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Batumi Botanical Garden
Coordinates:41.6458°N 41.6417°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Georgia
Website:Official website

The Batumi Botanical Garden (Georgian: ბათუმის ბოტანიკური ბაღი) is a 108 hectare area of land 9 km north of the city of Batumi, capital of Autonomous Republic of Adjara, Georgia. Located at the place called Mtsvane Kontskhi ("The Green Cape") on the Black Sea shore, it is one of the largest botanical gardens in the former Soviet Union.[1]

History

The Batumi Botanical Garden was started by the Russian botanist Andrey Nikolayevich Krasnov (1862-1914), brother of General Pyotr Krasnov, in the 1880s and officially opened on November 3, 1912. He was aided by two skilled gardeners and decorators – the French D’Alphonse and the Georgian Yason Gordeziani. Krasnov died in 1914 and was interred at the garden which still houses his grave and statue.[2]

Under the Soviet Union, the garden was further expanded and developed, since 1925, into a principal institution for the study of Caucasian maritime subtropical cultures.

Currently, the garden consists of nine floristic sectors, those of Caucasian humid subtropics, East Asia, New Zealand, South America, the Himalayas, Mexico, Australia, and of the Mediterranean. The garden collection comprises 2037 taxonomic units of woody plants, including 104 of Caucasian origin.[3]

The Batumi Botanical Garden had formerly been operated by the Georgian Academy of Sciences. Since 2006, it is an independent institution.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Батумский ботанический сад. The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd edition (1969–1978). Accessed on September 23, 2007.
  2. Official website of Batumi. Accessed on September 23, 2007.
  3. http://www.apsny.ge/upload/Invest_in_Adjara.pdf Invest in Adjara