Abkhazians - Who are they?
(An Express-Sketch)
Y.N. Voronov
Abkhazia, Apsny – this is a mini-republic
on the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus. Its
native inhabitants are the Abkhazians – Apsua,
representing, although not a numerous but yet
a very ancient, active, mountain nation whose
history is a mystery in many ways. Who are they?
Where did they come from? Whom do the resemble
most? What role did they play and are called
upon to play today in the world community of
people? Science is now already giving fully
synonymous and sufficiently instructive answers
to these and to many other questions.
Abkhazian – a Lingorelic of the West Caucasia
The problems of the origin of the Abkhazians
and their place in the system of the nations
of the world over two centuries draw the attention
of investigators – travellers, ethnographers,
historians, linguists, archaeologists, anthropologists
and representatives of other humanitarian disciplines.
Written pieces of information, from which historians
draw their conclusions, are scanty, and the
times they embrace do not go beyond the 2000-years
boundary from our days on. Archaeology has a
firm basis in ethnogenetic
questions only when there are suitable written
sources. Ethnography and anthropology have still
narrower possibilities. And here the language
plays its decisive role, in whose structure
and vocabulary ancient pages of the history
of the Abkhazian nation are preserved, the most
important information about its sources, the
environment of the primary life of its people,
ties and contacts with other nations, and other
interesting information.
Fame about the many languages of the
Caucasian Mountains has long since spread throughout
the world. The ancient Greek geographer Timosfen
in his days determined the number of nations
gathered in Dioscuriada (today Sukhum, the capital
of the Republic of Abkhazia) to be 300, while
the Roman historian Pliniy Sekund left evidence
according to which Romans conducted their affairs
in this city with the aid of 130 translators.
Masud an Arab author of the 9th century,
wrote: “ Only Allah will be able to count the
different nations living in the mountains of
Caucasia. The mountains of Caucasia are mountains
of languages.” There are few places in the world
able to compete with the Caucasus in the number
of languages; and, as a rule, these are usually
mountain regions- the Himalaya and Hindu-Kush
in Asia, the Andes and Cordillera in America.
It is beyond question that the contact of multilingual
people with
the mountainous conditions that maintain many
relics of the living world, is quickly obliterated
in any conditions of flat lands.
The Abkhazian language, together with
other closely related languages (Abazin, Ubykh,
Adygei and Kabardin) form the West-Caucasian
(Abkhaz-Adygei) language group, today numbering
over 700 000 people and connected with each
other according to the following diagram:
parent – Abkhaz-Adygei language
Ubykh
Abazin Abkhazian Adygei Kabardin
West-Caucasian languages are characterised
by their distinctive structure, and their phonetics
system reveals great divergence.
Combined vowels predominate, while there are
very few independent vowels – there are 2 in
the Abkhazian language, 2 with stress in the
Abazin and 1 in the unstressed syllable, and
3 in the Ubykh. The number of consonants varies
much more: in the Ubykh language there are 82
consonants, in the Bzyb dialect of the Abkhazian
language – 67, in the Adygei – 55, in the Kabardin
– 48. P.K. Uslar – the founder of the first
Abkhazian alphabet – wrote the following about
the complications of pronunciation of Abkhazian
words: “Not only Europeans but even a native
of Caucasia considers Abkhazian pronunciation
the most difficult and least accessible for
the non-Abkhazian. This language makes a strange
impression on the one who hears it for the first
time. You can say about the Abkhazian language
that it reminds you of the buzzing of insects”.
Up till recent times West-Caucasian languages
also preserved a special fund of lexicographic
elements that functioned in the hunting environment
(the “forest language” of the Abkhazians, the
“hunting” language in the Adygeis). Linguists
succeeded in revealing over 250 of them, inherited
from the parent language state of stems and
affixes that were from time immemorial common
for these languages and including appellations
of cosmic phenomena, terms of relationship the
name of parts of the body, a number of animals
and plants, personal pronouns, numbers and several verb.
Linguists consider the time of the existence
of the Abkhaz-Adygei parent-language to be the
3rd century B.C., i.e., its break-up
into three main branches (Abkhazian-Ubykh-Adygei)
began approximately 4000 years ago. The well-known
Russian linguist N.S. Trubetskoy formed an hypothesis
over half a century ago according to which the
West-Caucasian languages in their origin were
related to the East-Caucasian languages (Chechen,
Ingush, Batsbi, Avar, Lezgin, Dargin, Tabassari,
etc.), forming with them a single “North-Caucasian”
language family. As it is becoming ever more
obvious, representatives of this family occupied
a much wider territory in ancient times than
today. On the one hand, the hypothesis on the
relationship of the Abkhaz-Adygei languages
with the Khat, whose bearers lived 4-5 thousand
years ago in Asia Minor, has received wide acknowledgement
in modern science. On the other hand, proof
has been established about the common roots
of the proximity of the modern Nakh-Dagestan
languages to the extinct languages of the Khurr
and the Urart, living 5-3 thousand years ago
on the territories of the present Armenian uplands
and contiguous regions of East Transcaucasia
and Near East. Therefore, the North Caucasian
languages today represent a special relic of
the one time extensive language community that
existed, according to specialists, about 7 centuries
ago, enveloping the whole Caucasus and wide
regions southwards. In the thirties-sixties
of the 20th century an hypothesis
was energetically propagated in Soviet science
according to which the Abkhaz-Adygei, Chechen-Ingush
and Dagestan languages were related to the Kartvel
(Georgian) and form a single “Iberi-Caucasian
family” of languages with them; however, this
hypothesis has been acknowledged as scientifically
groundless today.
The people speaking in the parent-Abkhaz-Adygei
language, were occupied, as the data of linguists
affirms, with agriculture, animal husbandry,
the production of various handicrafts and the
processing of metal. In favour of the idea that
the bearers of the parent-language lived approximately
in the same natural conditions in which the
present Abkhaz-Adygeis live and shaped within
the West-Caucasian region is proved by their
common lexicon (“sea”, “coast”, “fish”, “mountain
(wooded)”, “ice”, “hoarfrost”,
“cold”, “frost”, “forest (leaf-hearing)”, “forest
(coniferous)”, “silver fox”, “fir”, “beech”,
“cornel”, “chestnut”,
“wolf”, “bear”, etc.). Toponymical data given
by N.Y. Marr, I.A. Javakhisvili, S.N. Janashia,
S.D. Inal-ipa, etc., were used for confirmation
of this idea.
At the same time, successes in lingual
reconstruction
lately has allowed us to glance even more deeply
into the history of the Abkhaz-Adygeis. Today
the fact of the distant relationship (in pronunciation)
has been established (S.A. Starostin and others)
between the North-Caucasian, Sino-Tibetan (Chinese,
Tibet, East-Himalayan, etc.) and the Enisei
(Kat, etc.) languages, on whose basis the Sino-Caucasian
macrofamily was reconstructed, including the
majority of the non-stratum languages of the
Old World, bringing out the depths of relationship
with the Indian (Californian, etc.) languages
of the sub-American continent. At the same time,
language ties have been discovered (through
West-Chad languages) between the Nakh-Dagestan
languages and the Afro-Eurasian macrofamily
that brings up to the epoch of racial formations
and the moment of the origin of Homo Sapiens,
with the African ancestral-homeland in the Middle
East (about 30 centuries ago), from where their
settlement in Europe, in the Caucasus and in
East Asia began.
In absolute figures, the division of
the North-Caucasian languages according to the
suppositions of linguists, took place somewhere
in the 4th century B.C. From that
time on the Abkhaz-Adygeis could confidently
be localised in the East Black Sea area. The
disintegration of the Sino-Caucasian macrofamily,
whose cradle was located to the south of Caucasia,
is dated from one single hypothetical parent
–language, out of which all the presently known
live and dead languages had sprung, is considered
beyond the boundaries of the 13th-14th
centuries B.C., i.e., to the higher paleolithic times. In that epoch, as anthropological
material proves, discovered in Kholodny Grot
(Central Abkhazia), the local population was
still characterised by mark Negroid features.
The constant infiltration of Indo-Europeans
from the south and north during the following
centuries changed in a relevant manner of anthropological
image of the local population; however, the
languages maintained their amazing archaic and
original pure structure and sound, presenting
a boundless source of information on the ancient
history of the nations of the Caucasus.
Ecological Recesses in the Ethnogenesis
of the Abkhazians
Since man and all his creations are part
of the biosphere and landscape of our Mother
Earth an account of appropriate natural peculiarities
(reliefs), hydrography,
etc. could be of great help in the decision
of complex questions on the lineage of nations.
In the given case, it is necessary to turn the
attention of the reader to the conserving and
differentiating role of the West-Caucasian ravines
and mountain passes in the history of the Abkhaz-Adygeis.
In discussing the question of the lineage
of the Abkhazians, investigators have named
two directions that the ancestors of this nation
took to their present place of abode: from the
North Caucasia, where the Abazins, Adygeis and
Kabardins, akin to the Abkhazians, live today,
and from the south, from Asia Minor, by way
of Colchis. It is known that language disintegrations
are realised through the intermingling of parts
of the bearers of a parent-language into the
other, geographically isolated regions – ecological
recesses (mountains, rivers, etc.). The structure
(besides later subdivisions of the Abazins)
of the West-Caucasian language community is
3-dimensional. That is why it surmises no less
than three stages of emigration, connected with
full or partial departure from the recesses
– parent-homeland that had existed in the 3rd
century B.C. Let us glance briefly into the
more possible variants of such emigrations,
taking the geographical peculiarities of West
Caucasia into account.
In conformance with the first variant,
the cradle of the Abkhaz-Adygeis should have
been localised on the northern slopes of West
Caucasia, in the Transkuban recess (G.A. Melikishvili,
M.D. Lordkipanidze, esc.), from where in the
span up to the 1st century A.D.
(and in the opinion of such enthusiastic
authors as P. Ingorokva, also after 16th
century A.D.) part of the population there intermingled
with that of the Black Sea coast area, filling
three ecological recesses – the north-west Bzyb
mountain range (Zikhs, later Ubykhs) between
the Gagra and Aj-Amgra ranges (Abazgs, later
bearers of the Bzyb dialect of the Abkhazian
language), and the south-eastern of the last
range up to the river Ingur (Apsils and Misimians,
later bearers of the Tsebeldian and the Abjui
dialects of the Abkhazian language). Not having
any other real proof, some investigators strive
to find confirmation of this hypothesis in archaeological
materials that would prove penetration of elements
of the Maikop and dolmen cultures in the 3rd
–first half of the 2nd centuries
B.C. on the territory of the present Great Sochi
and north-western Abkhazia (up to the Kodor),
of bearers who hypothetically made room for
and assimilated ancient population (the conjectural
parent-Kartvel) of the region. However, seeing
as from the second half of the 2nd
century B.C. the southern cultural sources predominated
absolutely in West Caucasia, then the hypothesis
about the migration of the forebears of the
Abkhazians from the north at the turn of our
era and, the more so, in the 17th
century, is deprived of any kind of archaeological
grounds.
The result of the second, southern variant,
is that the parent-homeland of the Abkhaz-Adygeis
was the Colchis ecological recess and the north-eastern
regions of Asia Minor adjoining it, where already
at the turn of the 2nd –1st
centuries B.C. supposedly related Adygei-Apsils
Kashki-Abeshls lived (O.M: Japaridze, G.A: Melikishvili, V.G.
Ardzinba, etc.). In this case it is necessary
to allow for the intermingling (along the coastline
through the east Black Sea area corridor and
through the passes) of direct language forebears
of the Adygeis during the 2nd-early
1st century B.C. on the northern
slopes of West-Caucasia. The ancestors of the
Zikhs-Ubykhs then occupied the recess between
the Gagra range and Tuapse, connecting the neighbouring
territories with quite difficult seasonal paths.
The parent-Abkhazian tribes as the initial part
of the community, continued to live in Colchis,
where they were found by authors of ancient
times, as Apsils, Abazgs and Sanigs. The wide
cultural “expansion” from Colchis along the
Black Sea coast (up to the modern Gelenjik to
East Transcaucasia and to the northern slopes
of the Central and West Caucasus reached its
apogee in the 9th-7th
centuries B.C. (“Colchis-Koban metallurgical
province”). The last important migrations on
review were already made through the written
sources of a 2000-anniversary range of some
of the Adygeis migrating to the east (Kabardins)
and some of the Abkhazians to North Caucasia
(Abazins), while a return migration on serious
scale was not observed. On the other hand, what
was quite indicative was the migration of the
names: the name of Abkhazians – “Abaza” removed
from the territory of the present Gudauta region
(historical Abazgia) onto an extensive region
of North-West Caucasia, while the ancient name
of Ubykhs (“Zikhs”) in the developed and late
Middle Ages detoned
also the Adygei population of the Kuban area.
The basic conclusion of the primary biologically
conditioned direction of ethnic migrations to
West Caucasia from the south-east to the north-west
is stressed by the process of historical differentiations
of the Kartvel (Georgian) language groups, which
is also 3-dimensional. The Kartvel languages
belong, together with Indo-European, as well
as the Ural, Altai and other Eurasian languages
in the stratum macrofamily, whose disintegration
began approximately 12-13 centuries ago. In
its turn, the disintegration of the parent-Kartvel
language community, existing from the 3rd
century B.C., began (according to Morris Svodesh)
about the 19th century B.C. through
the division of the Kartvel-Zan parent language.
In spite of this linguists surmise that the
Svan language, longer than other Kartvel languages,
remained on a level of basic language. A new
segmentation from approximately the 8th
century B.C. brought about the divisions of
the youngest language in this system, the Zan
(Megrelo-Chan). The historical differentiation
of the Kartvel languages can be expressed in
the following diagram:
parent-Kartvel language







Svan
Kartvel Zan Megrel
(Chan)
As
in the case of the Abkhaz-Adygeis, investigators
reconstructed two variants of migration, which
brought about the disintegration of the parent-Kartvel
community. The first variant orientates us again
to the Colchis ecological recess and offers
an examination of its place in the adjoining
north eastern region of Asia Minor as a universal
Kartvel parent-homeland. For an explanation
of the present existing situation, we have to
acknowledge that the Svans remained on the territory
which was once occupied by bearers of the common
parent-Kartvel language, and its Kartvel-Zan
part on the boundary of the 3rd –2nd
centuries B.C., and migrated, let’s say, to
the eastern Transcaucasian recess through the
present Likh mountain range; there, after a
thousand years one more disintegration took
place, resulting in the ancestors of the Megrel-Chans
returning to the Colchis recess again and driving
the Svans away into the mountains. This sufficiently
illogical and
so far not provable
variant is faced by another, a more grounded
one, as it seems, and concludes that the parent-homeland
of the Kartvels was not within the limits of
West Transcaucasia in the north-eastern regions
of Asia Minor, from where the region under examination
the Svans had migrated to in the beginning (either
directly through the ravine of Chorokh and along
the seacoast to present-day Colchis, or, which
is more logical, along the Kura gorge and the
region of East Transcaucasia adjoining it, and
further to the west). At the start of the 1st
century B.C. a disintegration took place of
the parent-Kart-Zan community and their intermingling
to the north along two roads – the Karts drove
the Svans into the mountains north-east of Colchis,
and the Zan tribes advanced to the Colchis ecological
recess, having driven the parent-Abkhazians
away to the north. Both the common situation
(the primary “parent North-Caucasian” Khurrito-Urart
element in Transcaucasia up to the early 1st
century B.C., the localisation of the ancient
Kartvel tribes of Kardu - Kartys, Kulkha-Kolkhovs,
Lusha-Lazovs, etc., to the north-eastern regions
of Asia Minor point to the historical reality
of such a variant; significant traces of Kartvel-Indo-European
ties, which come only from a non-stratum macrofamily,
but which can also explain the locality of the
Kartvel parent-homeland in the sphere of action
of the Khettsk-Luvi language world, and so on),
as well as the direction of major natural migrations,
experiences by the population of the region
during the last two centuries. It is indicative
in relation with this that the Svans, between
6th and 11th centuries
migrated from the upper reaches of the river
Rion to the west to the upper reaches of the
Ingur, and today have reached (in separate groups)
the region of Gagra and Sochi. An important
linguistic indication on the difficulties of
connecting the Svans with the ancient population
of the Colchis lowlands, whose economy from
time immemorial was characterised by an expressive
agricultural-animal husbandry mode of life and
a developed metallurgy, is the absence of terms
in the Svan language, common with other Kartvel
languages, connected with a settled agricultural
culture, and also those denoting “copper-bronze”,
“flax”, “iron”, “horse”, etc. It was namely
the Karts-Kartvels who, in the 8th-11th
centuries of our era, having forced the Likh
mountain range, split the Megrel-Chan (Lazs)
community, forming on its territory the Kart-language
Imeretia, Guria and Ajaria. A return migration
of human masses to Colchis on such a scale and
with such results was not noted. What was particularly
indicative was that the mentioned migrations
of Kartvels to the Colchis recess conceded with the Abkhazian Kingdom of the 8th-10th
centuries in time, when most favourable conditions
had taken shape for a return migration of the
Abkhazians – to the south-east. However, that
did not happen.
All that has been said stresses the validity
for the supposition of an advantageous north-western
direction of the natural migratory
streams of population in this region
during the ancient era and the Middle Ages.
From the moment man had settled in West Caucasia,
the southern influence predominated – from the
side of Asia Minor and the Middle East. It was
from there that in the old, old days, bearers
of the parent-Abkhaz-Adygei language had moved
to the West Transcaucasian valleys, descendants
who like many other relics of live nature up
to this day (thanks, I repeat, to the conservation
traits of the mountains) quite firmly maintain
their population here. The Apsils, who had given
the Abkhazians their name (Apsua), and their
direct descendants – bearers of the Abjui dialect
in this chain – comprise one of the most important
protective links, taking upon itself for over
many centuries the main burden of opposing assimilatory-migratory
influences from the south east.
The History of the Abkhazians
Narrow Territorially and General
Just as the biography of every person
is formed as a result of his interrelations
with people and objects surrounding him, the
history of every nation is shaped from facts
of its interrelations with neighbouring nations.
The history of the Abkhazians is no exception
here. The territory they had settled on always
served as a sort of bridge for them between
North Caucasia and the coast of the Black Sea.
The second direction of contact was determined
by the sea – from time immemorial ships sailed
towards Asia Minor and the Crimea. No small
role was also played by the fact that the founding
of the triangle, occupied by the Abkhazians,
was open to influence from the south-east, from
where a lowland road led (“Abkhazian Road”),
used by the conquerors and merchants. The economy,
politics, culture of the population of the area
took shape in this quite intricate system of
contact, reacting sensitively to all outside
changes, and restructuring in accordance with
them.
It is characteristic for every territory
to have its own set of archaeological and architectural
monuments. An idea of the national culture is
formed through their originality. The linking
of natural ancient regional traits with concrete
modern ethnology
received dissemination in a domestic national-administrative
state system, resulting in a situation when
articles and equipment began to be used for
the founding of the rights of representatives
of one or another nationality to power over
a given territory, i.e., items began to be allotted
a concrete language (!). In the meanwhile, most
of the works made by man are the fruit of diverse
attempts and interactions of multilingual individuals
and collectives. Ethnographers (on the example
of the North American Indians) have not accidentally
noted regularity, according to which accumulation
of characteristic substantial sings were observed
not in the centre of the settlement of one or
another tribe, but in the region of intertribal
ties. The Abkhazians were never an exception
in this.
From the moment of the settlement of
this territory by man during the whole of the
Stone Age, roads were of chief importance along
which an infiltration of groups of people came
here from the south-east, pertinent to experience
in working on stone, on an ancient import –
the volcanic glass, obsidian. In the Bronze
Age West Caucasia represented a remote periphery
of the Asia Minor variant of a Middle East cultural
community. The Transcaucasian pass roads were
conductive to the spreading of the monumental
tomb-dolmens on both sides of the Main Ridge.
The idea of the dolmen creations, in the opinion
of a number of authoritative investigators,
was brought into West Caucasia by sea through
the Mediterranean already at the end of the
3rd century B.C. In the early Iron
Age, besides the influence from Asia Minor,
the state of Urarta played a decisive part in
the formation of the local material culture.
From the 8th century B.C. onwards
the influence of the Aegean world (through the
Hellens) increased.
Thanks to the Greeks, cities and state structures
connected with them began to appear on the Caucasian
shores. By the 3rd century B.C. the
entire lives of the local population, including
the mountain valleys, were imbued with the elements
of Greek culture. The marketplace in Dioscuriada
(Sebastopol, now the capital of the Abkhazian
Republic, Sukhum) won world fame. Sources inform
us that during the Hellenic epoch (3rd
–1st centuries B.C.) representatives
of up to 300 tribes and nations concluded business
deals here. Industrial winemaking progressed,
amphoras with the Dioscuriada trade mark
were manufactured, and they even minted their
own coins. Ancient Abkhazia on the Black Sea
preserved its decisive role in the economy,
politics and culture up to the epoch of the
Iran and the Arab conquests in Colchis (6th-8th
centuries B.C.), periodically returning to that
role also in subsequent times (up to the beginning
of the 20th century).
Special significance was acquired by
the Transcaucasian pass roads in the 6th-8th
centuries B.C., thanks to which a branch of
the Great Silk Route went through the territory
of Abkhazia, connecting the Mediterranean Sea
with India and China. The burial vaults of representatives
of the ancient Abkhazian tribes of Apsils and
Abazgs contain wide assortments of crockery,
arms, items of clothing, adornments, coins,
etc., connected by provenance with dozens of
centres of Europe, Asia and Africa and with
particular obviousness stressing the predominance
of the innovative possibilities of Her Highness
Dame Fashion before all manifestations of traditionalism.
The pass roads played an important role in the
establishment of early-feudal Abkhazian Kingdom,
when at the end of the 8th century
with Byzantine weakening, the Khazar Kingdom
took a hand in the matter, including by that
time North Caucasia within its limits. The subsequent
history of the Abkhazian Kingdom was again connected
with Byzantine, stimulating its flowering in
the 10th century and bearing influence
on the life in the area up to its very decline
in the 15th century. From the end
of the 11th and up to the mid-13th
centuries, the Abkhazian provincial government,
on autonomous grounds, entered the composition
of the “Kingdom of the Abkhazians and Kartvels”,
and later partially (“Upper Abkhazia”) was annexed
to Megrelia, its neighbour of the east.
The 14th-17th centuries
are characterised in the area’s history by a
revival and deepening of the Mediterranean Sea
ties. Trading stations of Genoa on the coastline
of Abkhazia played a special part in this, leaving
a deep trace in the local economy, political
history and culture. In this period the pass
roads became enlivened once again, connecting
the maritime centres with North Caucasia and
Povolzhje (the Golden Horde), and in multilingual
Sebastopol (modern Sukhum) the mint began to
function again. Imported clay and glass (including
the Venetian), crockery, arms sets of belts,
adornments and other overseas articles began
to widespread in local life. It became customary
among soldiers in the mountain valleys to wear
earrings in one or in both ears (like the European
sailors).
The increasing Turkish presence weakened
towards the end of the 15th century,
and then, in general, traditional ties broke
off with Europe. The 18th century
passed under the sign of advantageous influences
in the Osman (Ottoman) Empire area, using Abkhazia
as their main launching pad in the conquest
of West Caucasia. In this period firearms, the
characteristic Caucasian daggers, a certain
cut of dress (Cherkess, Bashlyk, etc.), pipes
for smoking, became widespread in the region,
and an original Abkhazian style of cooking was
created, inimitably uniting the fruits of overseas
countries – corn, beans, pepper, etc. Since
1810 a process of Europeanization began intensively
in Abkhazia, in the main through Russia. The
Caucasian war turned into a horrendous misfortune
for the Abkhazians and particularly the mahadzhir
period directly after it (1866-1877), when thousands
of Abkhazians were forced to migrate to Turkey,
from where they scattered all over the world.
On their hearths, in the second half of the
19th century, appeared the farmsteads
of Greeks, Bulgarians, Armenians, Russians,
Ukrainians, Megrels, Germans, Estonians and
other emigrants, imparting to the rural area
and urban cultures, features of compound
and variety.
Abkhazia is a country of a vivid language
culture, whose sources go back to the upper
paleolithic epoch. Characteristic traits of this culture
are the ritual hues of the body in multicoloured
tattoos, traces to the early Iron Age; idolisation
of groves,
trees, animals, the natural elements, that drew
the attention of the travellers also in those
olden times and later in the Middle Ages; the
rite of the second burial in dolmens and jugs;
known from monuments of the Bronze and early
Iron Age, and again receiving prevalence in
the late Middle Ages in the form of the hanging
of the dead from trees; the custom of cremation
of the dead and burying them on special public
squares or in jugs was noted from the early
Iron Age and the late epoch of antiquity; the
variety of signs (over 80) of heathen burial
customs of the Apsils from the 3rd
century B.C. to the 7th century A.D.;
the place for idolisation of mountain spirits
on the passes and on mountain paths, where varied
offerings accumulated (the tips of arrows and
other items) in the 11th-15th
centuries and later; facts of the revival of
heathenish in the 18th century
and its original and diverse survival in the
everyday life of Abkhazians today.
At the same time, Abkhazia is also a
country of the oldest Orthodox Christianity
in thCaucasus. Here, already at the end of the
3rd century A.D., communities of
exiled Christians formed, and in the year 325
the Pitiunt Bishop Stratofil placed his signature
under protocols of the Vselensky Nikeisk Cathedral.
Officially, Abkhazians (Apsils, Abazgs, etc.)
adopted Christianity in the 6th century
during Emperor Justian’s time, when in the littoral
and mountain zone many early-Christian churches
were built. From the 4th up to the
10th centuries the Abkhazian church
was administratively subject to Byzantine (Constantinople,
Antioch, etc.), while the territory of Abkhazia
itself was within the bounds of the Abkhazian
kingdom autonomous – the main temples of the
10th century were constructed not
in the capital of the kingdom, Kutaisi, but
in the zone nearest to the sea and Byzantine,
between Pitsunda and Bedia. This status was
maintained also in the Byzantine occupation
period in the 11th century, after
which, supposedly, for some time the local church
was dependent on the East Caucasian (Mtskhet)
Catholicity and the Alany Metropolitanate. From
the mid-13th to the 17th
centuries Abkhazian Catholicity preserved its
independence, sustaining close ecclesiastical
ties with Kartlia, Byzantine, Asia Minor, Syria
and Palestine. It is not by chance that it was
namely the Antioch Patriarch who arrived in
Abkhazia to displace the bishops-slave-traders
in the 17th century, and the Greek
written language that predominated undivided
up to the 10th century on the territory
of Abkhazia and was used one parallel with the
Georgian language from the end of the 10th
up to the 16th century. In the 19th
– early 20th centuries, Christian
religion again put forth sufficiently deep roots
in this area.
Besides the Orthodox religion, Catholicism
in its time also played a definite role. At
the beginning of the 14th century,
for example, there was a Catholic episcopal
faculty in Sebastopol, and there was
also a Catholic cemetery functioning there.
The local population became acquainted in the
6th century with particulars of the
religion of the Iran fire-worshippers.
The stone icons in the second half of
the 6th-7th centuries
have to mitre symbol from Tsebelda on them.
Abkhazians came into contact very early with
other world religions – Judaism and Islam. Jewish
people had settled in local cities already in
the period of antiquity. Their communities existed
in the period of the Middle Ages in Gagra (11th
century) and in Sebastopol-Sukhum (14th
century). Abkhazians first came into close contact
with their Islamic ancestors in the first half
of the 8th century. A Muslim community
existed in Sebastopol-Sukhum at the beginning
of the 14th century. The Islam influence
in the area grew stronger from the end of the
16th century (tombs with inscriptions,
names of princes, etc.). In the 18th
– beginning of the 19th centuries
several wooden mosques functioned in Abkhazia,
but pigs were still bred in every village. Survivals
of Islam are preserved even today in the everyday
life of the Abkhazians.
Abkhazians – Blood-Relatives
of All Nations on Earth
The history of man offers a whimsical twining
of territorial, economic, language, cultural
and psychological reality on which one more
important nation-forming layer is built, connected
with the genetics of the human factor, on which
politicians and the historians hired by them,
for some reason prefer not to linger. At the
same time, fixation of Negroids
in the upper paleolithical
strata of Kholodny Grot and a language
proximity to the Mongoloids directly indicate
true genetic ties with representatives of these
ancient human races. Today, however, Abkhazians
are a clearly expressed European type. This
is explained by the constant penetration of
bearers of a relevant anthropological type into
their territory.
Without touching on the compulsory, but
badly documented, ties up to the period of the
written language, I will stop at proof of those
epochs which are already sufficiently elucidated
through written and archaeological sources.
In Gienos (modern Ochamchira), founded over
2500 years ago on the Abkhazian seacoast by
the Miletsys, local household utensils were
found in houses of the first settlers, brought
in the homes of Greeks by their wives, who willingly
welcomed the colonisers into the native environment.
Greek-Abkhazian marriage ties increased in the
Hellenic epoch (end of the 4th -
1st centuries B.C.). In the 1st-3rd
centuries A.D., in the course of wide political
and cultural contacts with Rome, the foundation
of an Abkhaz-Italian blood relationship was
laid. In the 4th-5th centuries
A.D., during the Roman-Byzantine rule (Sebastopol,
Pitiunt, etc.), suburbs were erected – the kanabas
– in which the demobilised-soldiers
lived with their families. Undoubtedly, quite
a few men and women of the local population
made up hose families. In the 6th
century A.D., Prokopi Kesariisky, in relations
with the Abazgs – forebears of the Bzyb Abkhazians
– stressed forthwith that “the Roman soldiers…
long ago” had settled “among them in many ways”.
Evidently such settlements were accompanied
also by similar marriage ties. The interrelations
between the garrison and the people of Greek-Roman
cities servicing them and then settling among
the inhabitants of the foothills and mountain
valleys, often turned into punitive expeditions
and pogroms (such an episode, vividly written
by Ksenofont, took place in the outskirts of
Trapezunta at the end of the 5th
century B.C.). The result was always violence
and the birth of “war children”. The kidnapping
of women by mountain dwellers was common, too.
Living jointly for 1200 years on one territory
with the Greeks could not but leave a serious
imprint in the genetics of the Abkhazians (like
their neighbours – Ubychs, Adygeis, Megrels,
etc.), making practically all of them blood
relatives with the Hellens.
Abkhazian contacts with the North-Caucasian
tribes were long and varied, in the first place
(1st-12th centuries A.D.)
with the Alanys, the forebears of present-day
Ossets. The presence of the Alany element in
Abkhazia is documented through sources from
the 1st to the 2nd century
A.D., and in the archaeological – from the 4th
to the 6th century. The result of
the Abkhaz-Alany ties was not only the spread
of conformable elements of material culture
(ceramics, arms, etc.) and the transference
of Narty legends, but also in the appearance
of many half-breeds who later infused (depending
on the situation) into the father’s or the mother’s
environment. A definite contribution to the
genetics of the Abkhazians was made in the 6th
century by the Persians, through whose actions,
pertaining to the Apsil women of the gently,
turned into catastrophe for the Iranian garrison
of Tsibilium in the year 550 A.D.
In the 6th century A.D., for
the first time in the internal regions of Abkhazia,
the Lazys were formalised in written sources
– forebears of the contemporary Megrels, with
whom (marrimonial)
relations were particularly intensive in the
contact zone along the Ingur. Infiltration of
the Megrels into the south-eastern regions of
Abkhazia was to have increased from the end
of the 19th century, when the Bedia’s
episcopacy was founded there, whose rule spread
also along the left bank of the Ingur. At the
turn of the 13th-14th
centuries Megrelia annexed the eastern regions
of the Abkhazian (Tskhumsk) provincial government
up to Anakopia. This battle lasted up to the
17th century, when Italian and Georgian
sources placed the western political boundary
of Megrelia at first of Kelasur, then up to
the Kodor and, finally, to the Ingur river.
In the late Middle Ages, as a result of the
assimilationary
processes in
the territories conquered by the Megrels (“Upper
Abkhazia”), an intermingling of the peasants,
as a result of church gifts and the endless
wars between the Abkhazians and the Megrels,
drew them quite closely together in the genetic
sense. Not so intensive but also resultative
were sporadic contacts between the Kartvels-Georgians
(the battle at Anakopia in the 8th
century, contacts in the 11th-13th
centuries, etc.), and the Svans. This process
continues to this day.
Apart from the indicated nations representatives
of many other languages and cultures have lived
and worked on the territory of Abkhazia during
the last two thousand years. Here we should
mention Jews, Germans, Armenians, Arabs, Khazars,
Turks, Mongols, Italian and even Chinese among
them. The first mention in sources of information,
for example, of representatives of Slav tribes,
arriving on the territory of Abkhazia, goes
back to the middle of the 6th century.
The roads and blood of Russians and Abkhazians
intertwined closely also during the period of
the neighbouring Tmutarakan and Abkhazian states,
and on the Middle Ages slave-trade roads of
the Mediterranean, the Black Sea area and Povolzhje,
during the Cossak forays along the eastern Black
Sea shore area. Not only the cultural but also
the kinship of the Abkhaz-Russian contacts that
took shape in the 19th-20th
centuries are sufficiently deep. One expressive
example – 27 years after the annexing of Abkhazia
to Russia there were 120 fugitive Russian soldiers
who had married Abkhazian women and coped with
the Abkhazian language in only the one mountain
village of Abkhazia – Tsebelda. In that same
19th century the Abkhazian Negroes
aroused great interest among those who happened
to arrive here…
Class-dynastic marriages were of particular
significance in the local history of the feudal
epoch. A Kartvel woman – the wife of Leon I
and a Khazar woman – the mother of Leon II were
at the cradle of the Abkhazian kingdom in the
8th century A.D. In the following
period, up to the beginning of the 19th
century, as a rule, the wives and mothers of
local tsars and princes were Greeks, Ossets,
Armenians, Polovchanins, Kartvels, Megrels,
etc… but very rarely representatives of the
nationality their husbands ruled. The bride
arrived at her new place of residence with a
multiple retinue, comprising relatives, girl
friends, soldiers, handicraftsmen, and other
kinsmen, who then scattered among the local
population and countryside.
However, it was not only the many representatives
of the newly come nations who left an imprint
in the genetic of the Abkhazians. The latter
played a transient role in the formation of
the genetics of many nations of Eurasia, especially
of the Mediterranean Sea region. And here slave-trade
was of basic importance. The Black Sea littoral
of the Caucasus from time immemorial was called
the “mine of slavery”. This “mine” was intensively
developed from the 6th century B.C.
era up to the 19th century A.D. For
2500 years dozens, hundreds and at times thousands
of people were annually taken away from here,
mostly young people. During the Hellenic period
slave-trade made up an important profitable
part of the economy of the natives of the area
– the Geniokhys. In the 6th century
A.D. the rulers of Abazgs earned quite well
on the markets of Byzantine by selling emasculated
boys from among their kinsmen. During this period,
as a result of only one raid of the Persians,
40 Abazg boys were collected as hostages and
drove to Iran. Slave-trade reached a particularly
high scale in the late Middle Ages. At he beginning
of the 19th century Keleshbei Chachba
(Shervashidze), in discussing points of an agreement
with Russia, requested the preservation of his
right to trade in people. Slave labour from
Abkhazia and related territories played an important
role in the economic and cultural blossoming
of the Black Sea and Mediterranean areas. Everywhere
– from Damascus to Paris – the labour of Caucasian
emigrants was evident: cities were built with
their participation, temples and castles erected,
roads laid, ships built, and sown lands were
widened… The fate of the slaves was not always
tormenting and unfruitful, however. Having settled
down all over the civilised world, they forgot
their own language and became familiar with
foreign ones, changed their religions, set up
families and reared children and grandchildren.
Some perished doing backbreaking work, many
became military leaders, while the girls became
the wives of magnates and sultans. Today, innumerable
descendants of those who had once been forcibly
taken away from the Black Sea coast, including,
undoubtedly, Abkhazians, live among the Turks
and Arabs. Jews and Greeks, Yugoslavs and Italians,
French and Spanish, Iranians and Armenians,
Russians and Tatars, without being aware of
their origin. Mahadzhir period made its contribution
to this process, too.
Abkhazia – a Country with a 2500-year Statehood
Early-class social relations in Abkhazia
were formed already at the end of the 3rd-2nd
centuries B.C., when an increase of additional
products liberated social forces able to co-operate
in the building of monumental stone tomb-dolmens.
The community gentry of the following period
were significantly represented in the burials
of the 8th-6th centuries
B.C., where many bronze and iron items were
found, indicating the intensive contacts with
that ancient state of Transcaucasia, Urart,
and also with the early-class formations of
Iran, Asia Minor and Balkan, the Kimmeriisk-Seythian
world.
Statehood as a system of survival, based
on a centralised concentration and distribution
of products, was brought to Abkhazia by the
Greeks-Miletsys, who founded here the city-states
of Dioscuriada (modern Sukhum), Gienos (modern
Ochamchira) already at the beginning of the
6th century B.C. These and a number
of other maritime centres (Eshera, Pitiunt)
were for the following 600 years decisive seats
of political life in the area. The “Colchis
Kingdom” in the 6th –1st
centuries B.C., within whose boundaries the
territory of modern Abkhazia supposedly was,
relates to the number of historical myths, designed
by scientists and politicians from the end of
the thirties of the current century (“epoch
of Lavrenty Beria”). At the turn of the 4th-3rd
centuries B.C. (on the basis of the symbiosis
of the Hellenisized military-agricultural
native summit and “the new aristocracy” in the
visage of the trade-handicraft elite of Dioscuriada)
in the maritime area of central Abkhazia a Hellenic
state (“kingdom”) sprang up with a tyrannical
ruling system. At the end of the 2nd
century B.C. the examined territory was included
in the composition of the Pontiisk kingdom of
Mitridat VI Eupator. He aided the organisation
of the Dioscuriada mint, whose products where
current all over the Black Sea area.
The oldest early-class states of Abkhazians
were the “kingdoms” of Sanigia, Apsilia and
Abazgia, noted in sources of information since
the 1st century A.D. and enveloping
the entire territory of the present Republic
of Abkhazia. This state was politically dependent
on the Roman Emperors, who affirmed the local
tsars and controlled them through the maritime
settlements of Sebastopolis (ancient Dioscuriada)
and Pitiunt, where a garrison of Roman soldiers
was quartered. After the transfer of the capital
of the Empire to Constantinople, the political,
economic and cultural Roman-Byzantine presence
in the area was strengthened. In the first half
of the 6th century A.D., on the eve
of the invasion of the Persians and their North-Caucasian
allies into Colchis, Byzantine attempted to
unite the parent-Abkhazian nationalities (Apsils,
Abazgs, Misimians, etc.) and the West Kartvels
(Lazks, Svans) within the framework of a vassal
buffer formation – the Lazsk kingdom. For two-three
decades a situation took shape in Colchis similar
to that of the mid-20th century –
the Abkhazians, on autonomous principles, entered
the state of the western Kartvels – Lazys, which
in turn became practically part of Byzantine
Empire. After the victory over the Persians,
Byzantine sensibly rejected the “matriarchy”
principle and administratively levelled the
nationalities living here within the framework
of their own imperial borders. During the following
200-odd years the territory of Abkhazia was
included in the eastern Black Sea province of
the Empire and was considered to be a part of
the “Roman land”.
Victory over the Arabs at the walls of
Anakopia (modern Novy Afon), the main fortress
of the Abazgs, was conducive to a new unification
forming of the whole of Colchis under the rule
of the Byzantine protégé Leon I Abazg. The nephew
of the latter, Leon II, at the end of the 8th
century A.D. taking advantage of a weakening
Empire and the strengthening of the Khazar rule,
proclaimed his independence and transferred
the capital of the Abkhazian kingdom to ancient
Kutaisi. The next 200 years were an epoch of
blossoming for the Christian Abkhazian kingdom,
keeping allied relations of Byzantine, and gradually
absorbing the majority of the east Georgian
lands within its political limits. In the 10th
century Abkhazia bordered with Armenia on the
south-east.
From the end of the 10th century
representatives of the South-Georgian Bagratid
family were affirmed on the Abkhazian throne.
They did not leave any telling imprints on the
direction and quality of the state policy and
its name. “The Kingdom of Abkhazians and Kartvles”
acquired a final federal structure during the
time of David IV Stroitel, when the capital
of the kingdom was transferred to Semi-Muslim
Tiflis. Strictly, Abkhazians, as before, presented
a clearly expressed autonomous political structure.
For a big part of the 11th century
it was occupied by Byzantine, and in the 12th-13th
centuries Tskhumi-Sukhum served as the residence
of the ruling princes Chachba (Shervashidze).
The late Middle Ages history (14th-17th
centuries) of the Abkhazian principality is
a chronicle of the desperate struggle of its
administration and people for the preservation
of the independence from the Megrel and Imereti
rulers who repeatedly endured defeat and had
to turn to the Kartlian tsars (modern East Georgia)
for help in suppressing the Abkhazians. The
territory controlled by the Abkhazian princes
now narrowed, now widened again, but not once
were the demonstrative Georgians or others able
to announce that Abkhazia had ended its autonomous
existence. Even the building of the biggest
defensive-delimitation construction of the Caucasus
across the principality during the period of
the 30-years Abkhaz-Megrel war – the 60-kilometre
long Kelasuri (Grand Abkhazian) wall, undertaken
during the second quarter of the 17th
century by the rulers of Megrelia with the aim
of fortifying “Upper Abkhazia” for themselves,
could not subjugate the Abkhazians; they took
this menacing obstacle by storm and restored
their ancient political and ethnic borders up
to the river Ingur.
The 17th – beginning of the
19th centuries was a time of growing
political contacts with the Osman (Ottoman)
Empire, whose government, with the aim of spreading
its influence in the Caucasus, placed its stake
namely on Abkhazia, bearing its special position
in the region in mind. The Turkish Garrison
was quartered in Sukhum-Kale and Anakopia. At
the end of 18th century the Abkhazian
principality was headed by Keleshbei Chachba
comprising 25000 soldiers out of whom 600 were
on military galleys, cruising along the coastline,
keeping the inhabitants from Batumi to Gelenjik
in constant terror.
The far-seeing politician Keleshbei,
at the cost of his own life, placed the Abkhazian
principality within the bounds of the Russian
state (the manifesto was signed by Alexander
I in 1810) as an autonomy, which it preserved
up to 1864. Later Abkhazia was renamed a Sukhum
military department, with a direct Russian administrative
rule. In 1883 the “department” now as a “province”
entered the composition of the Kutaisi military
region. Cities
were built, roads laid, electric stations, schools,
libraries, hospitals and theatres constructed,
their own Abkhazian written language was compiled
on the basis of Russian graphics, and their
own gifted intelligentsia appeared – teachers,
literary men, artists, military men, officials.
The widowed Empress Maria Fyodorovna entered
into morganatic marriage with Abkhazian Prince
Georgi Chachba. In a special appeal, Emperor
Nicholas II in 1907 lifted the “guilt” of the
Abkhazians, levelling them in rights with all
the citizens in the Empire.
The Abkhazian “hundred” accomplished
many heroic exploits on the fronts of the First
World War. That is how the premises of the national
resurrection of the Abkhazians were formed.
In March 1917 a Provisional Government
of their own was set up in the Sukhum district.
Seven months later the districts entered
the federal foundation in the south-east
union of Cossack soldiers, the mountain dwellers
of the Caucasus and the free people of the steppe.
That is when the declaration on self-government
and the constitution founded on this principle
were adopted. In June 1918 the Sukhum district
was occupied by the Georgian expeditionary detachments
of General Mazniev (Mazniashvili). A year later
the name “Abkhazia” was restored, however subsequent
attempts for a legal registration of the Abkhazian
“autonomy” within the framework of the Georgian
Democratic Republic were unsuccessful.
In March 1921 the Abkhazian “Kiaraz”
detachments, supported by units of 9th
Red Army, liberated their own area, following
which the independence of the Abkhazian SSR
was proclaimed. A year later, under pressure
of Josiph Stalin, the Abkhazian SSR and the
Georgian SSR signed a federal
agreement which, in 1931, was violated (Stalin
was actively aided in this by a native of Abkhazia,
Lavrenty Beria). The result was that Abkhazia,
as an autonomous republic, was included in the
composition of “unitary” Georgia. From the thirties
a forced Georgianization of Abkhazia became one of the chief functions of
the administrative system of Georgia: even during
the heat of battle with the Nazis (World War
II) for the Caucasus, providing for refugees
arriving in Abkhazia from the east was a primary
task. To the same aim was the eviction of the
Greeks from there in 1949. About the unfavourable
changes for the Abkhazians in the demographic
sense in Abkhazia during the last 100 years
can be ascertained from the following table:
|
Years:
|
1886
|
1897
|
1926
|
1939
|
1959
|
1970
|
1989
|
|
Abkhazians
|
58 963
|
58 697
|
55 918
|
56 197
|
61 193
|
83 097
|
93 267
|
|
Georgians
|
4 166
|
25 875
|
67 494
|
91 967
|
158 221
|
213 322
|
239 872
|
|
Russians
|
971
|
5 135
|
20 456
|
60 201
|
86 715
|
79 730
|
74 913
|
|
Armenians
|
1 049
|
6 552
|
30 048
|
49 705
|
64 400
|
73 000
|
76 541
|
|
Greeks
|
2 149
|
5 393
|
27 085
|
34 621
|
9 111
|
13 000
|
14 664
|
The colonial regime and systematic infringement
on the national dignity aroused repeated mass
protests and demands on the restoration of the
status of the twenties and of the transfer of
Abkhazia into the structure of the Russian Federation.
On August 25, 1990 the Supreme Soviet of Abkhazia
adopted a Declaration on the state sovereignty
of the Abkhazian Soviet Socialist Republic.
In March 1991, at the referendum held on the
future of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,
Abkhazia declared for an equal place in its
structure, while Georgia voted for its disintegration.
* * *
And so, the question: “Abkhazians, who
are they?” can be briefly replied to the following
way: Abkhazians are not biologically or historically
distinct from other people on Earth, comprising
an equal part of human society. But the special
feature of the Abkhazians is in that their language,
not changed during thousand of years, does not
recur anywhere else in the world, and especially
in that they preserve the language that has
long since died out on related territories of
Eurasia … For millions of years nature has gathered
diverse samples of her creations in this reverse
spot. These are deposits of ancient oceans –
limestone in whose compactness the deepest and
widest caves in Eurasia are hidden, and the
unique flora of over 60 varieties of plants
that have not been preserved anywhere else,
and containing the biggest beech and fir trees
in the whole world, and the Abkhazian bee with
the world’s longest proboscis. In line of these
relics is the Abkhazian language, a lingo
relic of West Caucasia. In a moment of
the profound fragility of the socio-economic
system of life on an enormous scale, enveloping
the territory of the former USSR and its satellite,
the multinational population of little Abkhazia
courageously overcomes national bitterness “brewed”
on historical forgetfulness and isolation, trusting
in its prayers to God, its geographical position
and its good sense, common to mankind, which
so far successfully co-operates of our common
survival in this grim and yet so beautiful world.
Be happy, Abkhazia!
Epilogue to the Second Edition
This work was written to the order of
the editorial staff of the international annual
“Science and Humanity” at the end of 1991. But
it was published in Sukhum on the eve of the
invasion of the Shevardnadze formations. The
greater part of the edition was destroyed by
the invaders and the text was subjected to the
ignorant criticism in the newspaper “Democratic
Abkhazia”.
Recognition of all the legislative acts
of the former USSR and the Georgian SSR had
became invalid, back with the realities of the
civil war in Russia of 1918-1920, Abkhazia,
willing to fill the legal vacuum abolished the
corresponding Stalin’s and Berya’s document
of 1931 on the Abkhazia’s enjoyment the rights
of an autonomous republic within Georgia putting
“The country of Apsuaa” (Apsny) beyond the borders
of the later.
The highest spheres of the world community
the disintegration of the USSR had generated
from and the party administrations of Union
Republics took no notice of the former of autonomous
formations beyond the Russian Federation. Consequently,
the Georgian authorities had faced the problem
of “territorial integrity” with two possible
ways: either to recognise the Republic of Georgia
as a federal
state or to conquer again the seceded territory.
Having come to power through the blood
coup the General-Traitor Shevardnadze, instead
of civilised procedures has
chosen the second way – by force. With
a support of the UNO and a number of the leading
states (USA, Germany, Turkey, Russia) thankful
to Shevardnadze for his accomplice of the chaos in the USSR, the later got
his “portion” of the Soviet arms and moved his
stormers to Abkhazia on 14th August
of 1992 for forage and murder.
Autumn, winter, spring and summer of
1992-1993 had turned the recently flourishing
health resort republic – the “All-Union pearl”
into the zone of large scale ecological catastrophe,
having divided the 70 year peaceful Abkhazia
into three parts: Gudauta and Gagra regions,
blockaded mountainous part of the Ochamchira
region including Tkvarchal and the occupied
seaside from Sukhum to Ochamchira.
Shevardnadze’s envoys – Ioseliani and
Kitovany, like locusts had attacked Abkhazia with a licence to shoot suppress
and rob the
multiethnic population of Abkhazia, the place,
where hundreds were killed, every fiftieth wounded,
exiles and every fourth robbed within 8 months.
Thousands of civilians were tortured
for their convictions, national belonging, weakness
of will, being young or old age. The people
were beaten up, raped, stabbed, burned out,
ignored; gardens and crops destroyed, citizens
were forced to loud their belongings into the
plunderer’s vehicles; ransom was taken for preservation
of the children’s lives and vanished ones. Many
villages were wiped off, the city of Sukhum
was destroyed and looted as well. Dozens of
architectural monuments were destroyed and disfigured;
the Abkhazian State Archives, the Abkhazian
Institute of Language Literature and History,
the Republican Library ruined; the Russian Drama
Theatre burned out; museums, institutes, schools,
libraries, private archives, factories, undertakings
and trade institutions looted; pianos, tape
recorders, pictures, mirrors, books and furniture
shot through.
With the blessings of Shevardnadze the
greatest tragedy had happened in the Dal Gorge,
where on 14th December 1992 the Russian
helicopter MI-8 with more than 60 people on
board: 13 pregnant, 28 children and other ones
perished. The burnt down bodies were rummaged
in search for gold teeth, rings and other “trophies”.
Politicians of Russia and other countries have
forgiven their social ally Shevardnadze this
very crime too.
All this wild rivalry to the Abkhazian
land collapsed, because “Abkhazia is not Georgia”.
Abkhazians, Russians, Georgians, Armenians,
Greeks and other citizens of the republic demonstrated
a rare tolerance and formed a community against
the disintegration of the USSR. Shevardnadze’s
intellect has given birth to monsters, subjecting
the population of Abkhazia to torments.
But Abkasia is alive. In these difficult
conditions shortages the Abkhazians, Armenians,
Kabardins, Adygs, Chechens and other representatives
of ethnic groups side by side with the Abkhazians
resisted the enemy demonstrating heroism and
human solidarity to the country in misfortune.
Collective of staple products is being organised
everywhere. Moral support of the fighting people
of Abkhazia for their freedom and justice is
broadening. There will be a day on this blessed
land of Apsny as soon as the
alliance arose by there current redivision
of the world will be settled down and all over
the arc of instability and calamity will be
restored from the Balkan to the Pamirs.
Epilogue
to the English Edition
Late in April, 1993, the Parliamentary
delegation of the Republic of Abkhazia (consisting
of Mr. S. Lakoba, Mrs. L. Kvarchelia and author
himself) visited the UK with the aim to inform
the governmental organisations on the situation
in Abkhazia and gave a
file in the war communiqué. Meetings were held at the British Parliament,
Foreign Ministry, the London, Oxford and Cambridge
Universities, in the Edinburgh and Kilmarnockas
well with the participation
of intergovernmental and human rights
organisation. Documents witnessing the Shevardnadze
regime, that runs counter to the main principles
of the Universal Human Rights Declaration were
distributed among listeners.
During the talks, it was repeatedly pointed
out that Abkhazia bear the same relation to
the NATO countries as the UK does; that in the
1st century B.C. both Abkhazia and
England were within the borders of the Roman
Empire; that volunteers speaking diverse languages
came into fight in Abkhazia; that they were
on the same mission as the well-known poet Lord
Byron, who died for the liberty of Greece; that
even in 1862 the Abkhazian delegation held talks
with the Prime-Minister of the UK Mr. Lord Palmerson
in London; that in 1919 English General Briggs
not only recognised, the right of Abkhazians
to determine their fate independently, but set
up the British Representation in Sukhum, the
capital of Abkhazia as well.
People everywhere tried to get deep into the
matter and offer something to help the people
of Abkhazia – with kind words, money, medicine
and i.e.
The year of hostilities made the small
coastal republic known to the world and establish
fraternal relationship beyond its bounds with
scholars, politicians, scientists, artists, business people and
ordinary ones.
As an equal member of the UNPO, Abkhazia
de facto joined independent political unitys of the world community.
Joint efforts of the people of good will,
who represent different countries and the ability
to govern had been laid down in the grounds
of the Abkhazian statehood promoted the liberation
of Sukhum,
capital of Abkhazia, on 27th September
1993 and later reach the river Ingur, that borders
neighbouring Mingrelia and Georgia with Abkhazia.
However the victory did not bring peace
to the long-suffering land. Having failed to
suppress people of Abkhazia, Shevardnadze called
his confederates from Russia and UNO for help,
some of them ventured to accuse Abkhazia of
the aggression and occupation of their own capital
and territory. The government of Russia imposed
the blockade having deprived the small Abkhazia
with hundred thousands of old people, women
and children of electricity, bread, water, medicine,
fuel and other means of vital necessity. The
Russian-Abkhazian border on the river Psou was
turned into a dirty business to profit at the
Abkhazians misfortunes; that is temporary closing
of economic structure and preservation of the
conditions of war, criminal and gang’s activity
which is continuation of the acts of Shevardnadze’s
guardsmen in Abkhazia as robbery, violence and
killings.
The government of Abkhazia together with
the citizens of Abkhazia, at the expense of
losses managed to stabilise the situation preventing
people from plunging them into new clashes, convincing
the international missions (JEO, USA, Congress,
CSCE and i.e.) of the necessity to recognise
the Republic of Abkhazia as an equal party at
war, able to join the round table talks. On
the 30th of November the first round
table talks were held in Geneva to find ways
to establish peace in the region.
The negotiations continued in Moscow,
Geneva, New York, Sochi. Vladislav Ardzinba,
head of the Republic of Abkhazia visited Switzerland
and USA held a briefing at the UN headquarters
in Geneva, created a favourable impression with
his European manners and ways of thinking.
In May 1994 in Krasnodar an agreement was signed
on Abkhazia’s entry into the association of
the Republics, Krais and Regions of the North
Caucasus and the South of Russia. At the end
of June the CIS peace-keeping forces were deployed
along the Abkhazian-Georgian border on the Ingur
River.
The Abkhazian side proceed from the very
fact of the existence of the independence from
Georgia, the state that emerged after the collapse
of the USSR – the Republic of Abkhazia gained
the right to self-government as Georgia together
with the world community declared all the legislative
acts and the constitution of the soviet period
invalid having done with the juridical document
that included Abkhazia within the bounds of
Georgia.
The main condition to provide cease fire,
in the region is to recognise the right of Abkhazians
to hold referendum to determine their own fate
and the status and ensures the observation of the Universal Human
Rights Declaration and other international acts
that protect the rights of the states, communities
and people. That might has been a position taken
by the UNO under the influence of the doubtful
charm of Shevardnadze appraising Abkhazia as
illegitimate within the countries of terrestrial
globe, but it does not mean that the country
is to be eliminated. Abkhazia exists, this very
fact is to be recognised in accordance with
moral and cultural standards common to all mankind.
The English speaking countries today
have their particular responsibility and abilities
to get knowledge on the subject, the implementation
of which serve God and the interest of people.