Tbilisi is the biggest city and the capital of Georgia. It lies on the banks of the Kura River. The city itself has 1,100,000 inhabitants, while the population of the whole urban agglomeration is 1,300,000. The city covers an area of 350 km². Tbilisi is the main centre of Georgian industry, culture and science (the Georgian Academy of Science, the National Library and other key cultural institutions have their seats there.)
The foundation myth of the city takes us back to the reign of Georgia’s mighty fifth century king Vakhtang Gorgasali (452-502). Out hunting with his retainers and his falcon in the wooded Mtkvari valley, not distant from where Tbilisi lies nowadays, the monarch spotted a pheasant. He sent the falcon to retrieve the bird, when he suddenly lost sight of both of them. After searching for a while, he found them in a hot spring. Both birds had been cooked to perfection.
The accident is believed to have convinced the king, surprised with what had occurred, to explore more profoundly the fertile valley of the river, surrounded by picturesque woody hills. The king admitted that the area abounded with numerous springs, many of them hot. Mesmerised with its beauty, Vakhtang ordered to found a city which received the name of “Tbilisi” (Georgian 'tbili' means warm). In fact, the remains of human settlement in the area can be traced back to even more remote epochs. Archaeological excavations confirm its existence in the Copper Age.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Georgians were still an ethnic minority in the city, inhabited mostly by the local Armenian people. Even today, almost 20% of the Tbilisi's inhabitants belongs to one of over 100 different ethnic minorities. The most numerously represented groups are the Russians and the Azerbaijani people. In the modern Tbilisi, the presence of these ethnic groups is significant not only in the field of religion, but also in the one of culture. For instance, there is an Azerbaijani theatre in the Avlabari district as well as other institutions famous for their vigorous cultural activity, such as the Kurdish Cultural Centre.
Tbilisi's key tourist attractions are the following:
Main historical monuments:
Typical food:
Sporting disciplines:
Famous people:
Legends:
the Tbilisi's foundation legend – Vakhtang Gorgasali (452-502), the mighty Georgian ruler, was once out hunting with his retainers and his falcon in the wooded Mtkvari valley, not distant from where Tbilisi lies nowadays. The monarch spotted a pheasant and sent the falcon to retrieve the bird, when he suddenly lost sight of both of them. After searching for a while, he found them in a hot spring. Both birds had been cooked to perfection. That is how the local hot springs were discovered. Their marvellous qualities convinced the king to found a city, which later on received its present name Tbilisi (warm in Georgian).
Festivals:
Tbilisoba Festival – takes place yearly, on the last weekend of October in order to give thanks for an abundant harvest.