Kingdom of the Iberians,First Kingdom of Kakheti,Kingdom of Lori
Dey replace
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic
Hashtag
Georgia
Top-level Internet domain
.ge
Main regulatory text
Constitution of Georgia
Flag
flag of Georgia
Coat of arms
Coat of arms of Georgia
Geography of topic
geography of Georgia
Get characteristic
partly free country
History of topic
history of Georgia
Patron saint
Saint George
Railway traffic side
right
Open data portal
opendata.ge
Economy of topic
economy of Georgia
Demographics of topic
demographics of Georgia
Mobile country code
282
Country calling code
+995
Trunk prefix
0
Emergency phone number
112,111,113,122
GS1 country code
486
Licence plate code
GE
Maritime identification digits
213
NCI Thesaurus ID
C16634
Unicode character
🇬🇪
Category for honorary citizens of entity
Category:Honorary citizens of Georgia
Category for maps or plans
Category:Maps of Georgia
Georgia be a country insyd Eastern Europe den West Asia.[1][2][3] Ebe part of de Caucasus region, bound by de Black Sea to de west, Russia to de north den northeast,Turkey to de southwest,Armenia to de south, denAzerbaijan to de southeast. Georgia dey cover an area of 69,700 square kilometres (26,900 sq mi).[4] E get a population of 3.7 million,[5] of wich over a third live insyd de capital den largest city, Tbilisi. Georgians, wey be native to de region, constitute a majority of de country ein population wey be ein titular nation.
Map of Georgia wey dey highlight de disputed territories of Abkhazia den Tskhinvali Region (South Ossetia), both of wich be outsyd de control of de central government of Georgia
↑Encyclopedic World Atlas, George Philip & Son, Oxford University Press: 2002, p.104
↑Histories 4.38. C.f. James Rennell,The geographical system of Herodotus examined and explained, Volume 1, Rivington 1830,p. 244
↑Encyclopedia Britannica",Caucasus, June 2021: "One widely accepted scheme draws the dividing line along the crest of the Greater Caucasus range, putting the portion of the region north of the line in Europe and the portion south of it in Asia. Another puts the western portion of the Caucasus region in Europe and the eastern part (the bulk of Azerbaijan and small portions of Armenia, Georgia, and Russia's Caspian Sea coast) in Asia..."
↑Nana Bolashvili, Andreas Dittmann, Lorenz King, Vazha Neidze (eds.): ``National Atlas of Georgia``, 138 pages, Steiner Verlag, 2018,ISBN978-3-515-12057-9
Asatiani, Nodar (2009).History of Georgia. Tbilisi: Publishing House Petite.ISBN978-9941-9063-6-7.
Asmus, Ronald (2010).A Little War that Shook the World: Georgia, Russia, and the Future of the West. NYU.ISBN978-0-230-61773-5.
Avalov, Zurab (1906).Prisoedinenie Gruzii k Rossii. S.-Peterburg: Montvid.
Boeder, W. (2002). "Speech and thought representation in the Kartvelian (South Caucasian) languages". In Güldemann, T.; von Roncador, M. (eds.).Reported Discourse. A Meeting-Ground of Different Linguistic Domains. Typological Studies in Language. Vol. 52. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: Benjamins. pp. 3–48.
Eastmond, Antony (2010).Royal Imagery in Medieval Georgia. Penn State Press.ISBN978-0-271-01628-3.
Fähnrich, H.; Sardzhveladze, Z. (2000).Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
"The Transcaucasian Soviet Federation".Russian Review.3 (24). Washington, D.C.: The Russian Information Bureau:496–499. 15 December 1925. Retrieved2022-04-20.