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Shekvetili

Coordinates: 41°55′40″N 41°46′05″E / 41.92778°N 41.76806°E / 41.92778; 41.76806
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shekvetili
შეკვეთილი
Village
Shekvetili Park
Shekvetili Park
Shekvetili is located in Georgia
Shekvetili
Shekvetili
Location in Georgia
Shekvetili is located in Guria
Shekvetili
Shekvetili
Shekvetili (Guria)
Coordinates: 41°55′40″N 41°46′05″E / 41.92778°N 41.76806°E / 41.92778; 41.76806
Country Georgia
RegionGuria
MunicipalityOzurgeti
Elevation
2 m (7 ft)
Population
 (2014)
 • Total
175
Time zoneUTC+4 (Georgian Time)

Shekvetili (Georgian: შეკვეთილი) is a village and sea resort in Ozurgeti Municipality, Guria, Georgia, located on the eastern Black Sea coast, at the mouth of the Natanebi river. Shekvetili is home to the popular amusement park Tsitsinatela, large indoor venue Black Sea Arena, the Miniature Park, an open-air exhibition of scale models of Georgia's architectural landmarks,[1] and a dendrological park.[2] The arboretum has been created by the Georgian politician and business oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili, but has met with protests from environmentalists.[3]

Geography

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Shekvetili is a 5 km seaside strip dominated by the forest of pine trees, at 2 m above sea level. It is located midway between the sea resorts of Ureki and Kobuleti, 21 km west of Ozurgeti, the main town of Guria. The resort is traversed by the S2 highway and is also served by the Natanebi railway station.[4]

History

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The Shekvetili Fort in the early 19th century.

Shekvetili served as an important trading locale within the southwestern Georgian Principality of Guria in the 18th century. It was occupied by an Ottoman garrison in 1723 and passed into Russian possession in the Treaty of Bucharest in 1812. The Turks referred to it as Shefketil, while to the Russians it came to be known as the Fort of St. Nicholas. According to a contemporary account, "the stores for Fort St. Nicholas are landed upon an adjoining tongue of land, and transported thither on men's shoulders."[5]

Battle of Limani (1829)

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As a frontier fortress, Shekvetili was a scene of military confrontations between the Russian and Ottoman forces in the course of the Russo-Turkish wars. During the 1828–29 conflict, the Fort of St. Nicholas was one of the bases for Russian operations into "Turkish Guria" (Adjara). On 5 March 1829, Major-General Karl Hesse at the head of a force of 1,200 Russian regulars and some 1,500 Gurian militiamen stormed and destroyed a large fortified Ottoman camp at Limani, close to Shekvetili.[6]

Battle of Shekvetili (1853)

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The Battle of Shekvetili (1853).

During the Crimean War, on the night of 15–16 October 1853, a superior Ottoman force of three or five battalions, including bashi-bazouks, led by Hasan and Ali Beys and Dede Ağa, natives of Çürüksu, stormed Shekvetili, held by two companies of Russian infantry and a local Georgian militia under Captain Shcherbakov, and captured the post after hours of a pitched battle. Atrocities committed by the bashi-bazouks in and around Shekvetili alienated local Muslim Georgians, who had initially welcomed the Ottoman advance. The Russian casualties amounted to nearly 1,000 killed, including Captain Shcherbakov and Georgian militia commander Prince Giorgi Gurieli, and 80 captured, while the Turks lost 32 dead and 59 wounded. The battle opened the Caucasus front of the Crimean War.[7][8]

References

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  1. ^ "Cartu Foundation gifts new miniature park to state". Agenda.ge. 13 August 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  2. ^ Froneman, Anita (18 January 2022). "Georgia's massive park of transplanted trees: paradise or eco-disaster?". Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  3. ^ Lomsadze, Giorgi (19 August 2020). "Georgia's park of runaway trees". Eurasianet. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  4. ^ "შეკვეთილი" [Shekvetili]. ქართული საბჭოთა ენცილოპედია, ტ. 10 [Georgian Soviet Encyclopedia, Vol. 10] (in Georgian). Tbilisi. 1986. p. 706.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ "Account of Ghuria". Asiatic Journal. VIII. London: Parbury, Allen, and Co.: 150 1832.
  6. ^ Potto, Vasily (1889). Кавказская война. Том 4-й. Турецкая война 1828–1829 г. [Caucasian War, Vol. 4: the Turkish War 1828–1829] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: E. Evdokimov Typography. pp. 327–332.
  7. ^ Badem, Candan (2010). The Ottoman Crimean War (1853–1856). Brill. pp. 154–155. ISBN 978-90-04-18205-9.
  8. ^ Zayonchkovski, Andrei M. (2002) [1913]. Восточная война 1853–1856, Т. 2 [The Eastern War 1853–1856]. Poligon. p. 237. ISBN 5891731576.