So if this Golden Fleece thing was just a smash and grab job, why is Georgia so important?
It would seem that Georgia has been a crucible for mankind since before we were mankind. As related in an earlier edition, multiple Pre-Homo Sapien specimens have been found in the region of Dmanisi. Under present anthropological understanding, the importance of this find would have been meaningless - or worse, mis-interpreted - were they not found in such close proximity to each other, as in Dmanisi. As I understand it from reading in the Georgian National Museum, this has never been found before. Why were our earliest humanoid species discovered together outside Africa in Georgia? A distance of at least 1,600 kilometres (1000 miles). Could they have been at the meeting with God (entry 24 February 2020)?
Skull, Homo-erectus(Author's collection) |
As noted in the last several entries, evidence of contact between Hellenic Greece and western Georgia was effected in approximately1200BC through Jason and his Argonauts but their knowledge of the Golden Fleece in Greece begs the question: who told them about it?
In Greek Mythology we encounter Prometheus. A demi-god of the heroic nature but one that ran afoul of his full-blooded cousins by stealing the secret of fire and giving it to mankind. For this transgression, he was chained to a mountain top where an eagle pecked his liver out by day and it re-constituted itself by night. That mountaintop was non other than Mount Kazbegi located in Georgia on the border with Russia along the Georgian Military Highway. Georgian mythology has a similar character who suffered the same fate named Amirani. Did Jason return with that bit of information too?
Mount Kazbegi centre image (Author's collection copyright 2020) |
The concentration of unique languages is prolific in the Caucasus as well. It seems that every mountaintop speaks a different language (not dialect) and most are too old to have an alphabet. The Georgian alphabet itself is among the oldest in the world. Interestingly, mythology comes to the rescue here as well. Local legend has it that while distributing languages to the world’s people, God placed all the languages in large panniers and mounted them on a donkey for easier transport. While walking over the Greater Caucasus Mountains, the high, jagged peaks tore the bottom of the panniers and many languages fell across that small area before the holes were patched.
Georgian village in Svaneti Region of Georgia (Author's collection copyright 2020) |
Life in the Caucasus has never been easy and it takes a hearty breed to survive. It stands to reason that anyone standing out in a crowd like that would be legendary in their exploits. This holds true for Georgia. Many larger-than-life characters have existed throughout time. King Vakhtang Gorgasali was said to have been deer hunting one day in the fifth century AD. He was in an unfamiliar region, a bog-ridden area next to the Mtkvari River when he wounded a stag with an arrow. King Vakhtang chased the wounded deer into the bogs where it disappeared from site through the morning mist but he heard it fall into the marshy waters. So sure was he that the animal was dead that he ran forward unprepared, only to see the stag emerge from the waters unharmed and run away unscathed. Bewildered by this, he investigated the reason for it and is credited with discovering the curative waters which gave rise to the city of Tbilisi: the capital of today’s Georgia.
Hamams in Old Towne Tbilisi (Author's collection, copyright 2020) |
Later, after a war with the Ottoman Empire, Tsarist Russia was trying to “Tame” their recent acquisition called Georgia and many a hard man was drawn to the Caucasus to test his mettle and make his fame. In fact, a large body of Russian literature is linked to the wars of oppression in the Caucasus and one of the greatest insurgencies ever fought took place there: driven by the unbending will of its best known leader, Imam Shamil, an Avar from today's Daghestan. With drive in mind, history would soon recognise another Georgian: Ioseb Dzhugashvshvili. We remember him as Josef Stalin and he killed millions of people trying to impose his will on the world under the guise of communism.
Perhaps, unbending will is the true mystery of the land God reserved for himself. Each individual I met there, over decades of interaction, was a force to be reckoned with - men and women both. So if the region's mystery is, indeed, the unbending will of men, Caucasians most likely created the circumstances from which myth emerged and with this en-ending supply of wilful people, the Caucasus has remained prominent in the development of mankind since the dawn of time.
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