Chazhashi Explained

Official Name:Chazhashi
Native Name:ჩაჟაში
Native Name Lang:geo
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Georgia (country)
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Chazhashi
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name: Georgia
Subdivision Name1:Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Subdivision Name2:Mestia
Population As Of:2014
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:28
Utc Offset:+4
Coordinates:42.915°N 43.0086°W
Elevation M:2,160
Footnotes:
Child:yes
Official Name:Upper Svaneti
Criteria:(iv)(v)
Id:709
Year:1996
Area:1.06ha
Buffer Zone:19.16ha

Chazhashi (Georgian: ჩაჟაში) is a village in the Mestia Municipality, Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti, Georgia. It is located in the southern foothills of the Greater Caucasus mountains, in the upper Enguri River valley, at the elevation of 2,160 m above sea level. The village is part of the historical region of Svaneti and center of the Ushguli community. Its medieval fortified structures are inscribed on the registry of Georgia's Immovable Cultural Monuments of National Significance and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Upper Svaneti entity.[2]

Geography

Chazhashi is the main settlement of Ushguli, a conglomeration of four villages and one of the highest inhabited places in Europe. Under Georgia's current subdivision, it is part of the Mestia Municipality, located some 45 km west of the municipal center, the town of Mestia, at the confluence of the Enguri and Shavtskala rivers.[3]

Cultural heritage

Chazhashi is home to dozens of structures dating from the medieval and early modern periods of the history of Georgia, namely, its northwestern highland province of Svaneti. Of these are 13 well-preserved Svanetian tower houses—a typically three- to five-floor structures attached to the family houses—as well as four medieval castles, including one called Tamar's Castle in reference to the queen-regnant Tamar of Georgia (r. 1184–1213), who is believed by local folk tradition to have used it as her summertime residence. There are also two stone churches and several accessory buildings. The churches, one named St. George (Jgrag) and the other named the Lamaria (after the goddess Lamaria in Savneti mythology), date from the 10th and 11th–12th centuries, respectively.[4] The former is part of the Tamar Castle; the latter is frescoed.[3] [4] Several monuments of Chazhashi were damaged by a massive avalanche in January 1987. Beginning in 2000, the Georgian government and the National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS Georgia), presided over multidisciplinary research of the village's cultural heritage and restoration and conservation projects.[2]

Population

Chazhashi is a village, with the permanent population of only 28 persons, all Svans, an ethnic Georgian subgroup, as of the 2014 nationwide census.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Population Census 2014: Number of Population by Administrative-Territorial Units and sex. National Statistics Office of Georgia. 27 September 2016.
  2. Web site: Upper Svaneti. UNESCO World Heritage List. 27 September 2016. en.
  3. Book: Abashidze. Irakli. Irakli Abashidze. ქართული საბჭოთა ენციკლოპედია, ტ. 11 [Georgian Soviet Encyclopaedia, vol. 11]. 1987. Metsniereba. Tbilisi. 82–83. Georgian. ჩაჟაში (Chazhashi).
  4. World Heritage List: Upper Svaneti -- No 709 (ICOMOS Report) . ICOMOS . 28 October 1993 . 26 March 2022.
  5. Web site: საქართველოს მოსახლეობის 2002 წლის პირველი ეროვნული საყოველთაო აღწერის შედეგები, ტომი II [Results of the first national census of the population of Georgia in 2002, volume II]]. National Statistics Office of Georgia. 15 August 2016. Georgian. 2003. https://web.archive.org/web/20160328200054/http://geostat.ge/cms/site_images/_files/georgian/census/2002/II%20tomi%20.pdf. 28 March 2016. dead.