The Caucasus (/ˈkɔːkəsəs/) or Caucasia (/kɔːˈkeɪʒə/), is a region spanning Eastern Europe and Western Asia. It is situated between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, mainly comprising Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and parts of Southern Russia. The Caucasus Mountains, including the Greater Caucasus range, have conventionally been considered as a natural barrier between Europe and Asia, bisecting the Eurasian landmass.
Caucasus | |
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Topography of the Caucasus | |
Coordinates | 42°15′40″N 44°07′16″E / 42.26111°N 44.12111°E |
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Autonomous republics and federal regions |
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Demonym | Caucasian |
Time Zones | UTC+03:00, UTC+03:30 and UTC+04:00 |
Highest mountain | Elbrus (5,642 metres (18,510 ft)) |
Mount Elbrus, Europe's highest mountain, is situated in the Western Caucasus area of Russia. On the southern side, the Lesser Caucasus includes the Javakheti Plateau and the Armenian highlands, part of which is in Turkey.
The Caucasus is divided into the North Caucasus and South Caucasus, although the Western Caucasus also exists as a distinct geographic space within the North Caucasus. The Greater Caucasus mountain range in the north is mostly shared by Russia and Georgia as well as the northernmost parts of Azerbaijan. The Lesser Caucasus mountain range in the south is occupied by several independent states, mostly by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, but also extends to parts of northeastern Turkey, and northern Iran.
The region is known for its linguistic diversity: aside from Indo-European and Turkic languages, the Kartvelian, Northwest Caucasian, and Northeast Caucasian language families are indigenous to the area.
Origin of the name
Pliny the Elder's Natural History (77–79 AD) derives the name of the Caucasus from a Scythian name, Croucasis, which supposedly means 'shimmering with snow'. German linguist Paul Kretschmer notes that the Latvian word kruvesis also means 'frozen mud'.
Isidore of Seville's Etymologies (c. 625 AD) also says the name means shining white like snow:
Thus, toward the east, where it rises to a greater height, it is called the Caucasus, due to the whiteness of its snow, for in an eastern language, caucasus means "white," that is, shining white with a very thick snow cover. For the same reason the Scythians, who live next to this mountain range, call it Croacasim, for among them whiteness or snow is called casim. 3. The Taurus range is likewise called the Caucasus by many.
In the Tale of Past Years (1113 AD), it is stated that Old East Slavic Кавкасийскыѣ горы (Kavkasijskyě gory) came from Ancient Greek Καύκασος (Kaúkasos), which, according to M. A. Yuyukin, is a compound word that can be interpreted as the 'mountain of the seagull(s)' (καύ-: καύαξ, καύηξ, -ηκος, κήξ, κηϋξ 'a kind of seagull' + the reconstructed *κάσος 'mountain' or 'rock' richly attested both in place and personal names).
In Georgian tradition, the term Caucasus is derived from Caucas (Georgian: კავკასოსი Ḳavḳasosi), the son of the Biblical Togarmah and legendary forefather of the Nakh peoples.
According to German philologists Otto Schrader and Alfons A. Nehring, the Ancient Greek word Καύκασος (Kaukasos) is connected to Gothic hauhs 'high' as well as Lithuanian kaũkas 'hillock' and kaukarà 'hill, top', Russian куча 'heap'. British linguist Adrian Room claims that *kau- also means 'mountain' in Pelasgian, though this is speculative given that Pelasgian is so poorly known.
Toponyms
The term Caucasus is not only used for the mountains themselves but also includes Ciscaucasia (which is part of the Russian Federation) and Transcaucasia. According to Alexander Mikaberidze, Transcaucasia is a "Russo-centric" term.
The Transcaucasus region and Dagestan were the furthest points of Parthian and later Sasanian expansions, with areas to the north of the Greater Caucasus range practically impregnable. The mythological Mount Qaf, the world's highest mountain that ancient Iranian lore shrouded in mystery, was said to be situated in this region. The region is also one of the candidates for the location of Airyanem Vaejah, the apparent homeland of the Iranians of Zoroaster. In Middle Persian sources of the Sasanian era, the Caucasus range was referred to as Kaf Kof. The term resurfaced in Iranian tradition later on in a variant form when Ferdowsi, in his Shahnameh, referred to the Caucasus mountains as Kōh-i Kāf. "Most of the modern names of the Caucasus originate from the Greek Kaukasos (Lat., Caucasus) and the Middle Persian Kaf Kof".
"The earliest etymon" of the name Caucasus comes from Kaz-kaz, the Hittite designation of the "inhabitants of the southern coast of the Black Sea".
It was also noted that in Nakh Ков гас (Kov gas) means "gateway to steppe".
Endonyms and exonyms
The modern endonym for the region is usually similar in many languages, and is generally between Kavkaz and Kaukaz.
- Abkhaz: Кавказ Kavkaz
- Adyghe: Къаукъаз/с Kʺaukʺaz/s
- Arabic: القوقاز al-Qawqāz
- Armenian: Կովկաս Kovkas
- Avar: Кавказ Kawkaz
- Azerbaijani: Qafqaz
- Chechen: Кавказ Kawkaz
- Georgian: კავკასია K'avk'asia
- German: Kaukasien
- Greek: Καύκασος Káfkasos
- Ingush: Кавказ Kawkaz
- Karachay-Balkar: Кавказ Kavkaz
- Kumyk: Къавкъаз Qawqaz
- Kurdish: Qefqasya, Qefqas
- Lak: Ккавкказ Kkawkkaz
- Lezgian: Къавкъаз K'awk'az
- Mingrelian: კავკაცია K'avk'atsia
- Ossetian: Кавказ/Каукази Kavkaz/Kaukazi
- Persian: قفقاز Qafqāz
- Russian: Кавказ Kavkaz
- Rutul: Qawqaz Kavkaz
- Turkish: Kafkas/Kafkasya
- Ukrainian: Кавказ Kavkaz
Political geography
The North Caucasus region is also known as the Ciscaucasus, whereas the South Caucasus region is alternatively known as the Transcaucasus.
The North Caucasus contains most of the Greater Caucasus mountain range. It consists of Southern Russia, mainly the North Caucasian Federal District's autonomous republics and the Krais in Southern Russia, and the northernmost parts of Georgia and Azerbaijan. The North Caucasus lies between the Black Sea to its west, the Caspian Sea to its east, and borders the Southern Federal District to its north. The two Federal Districts are collectively referred to as "Southern Russia".
The South Caucasus borders the Greater Caucasus range and Southern Russia to its north, the Black Sea and Turkey to its west, the Caspian Sea to its east, and Iran to its south. It contains the Lesser Caucasus mountain range and surrounding lowlands. All of Armenia, Azerbaijan (excluding the northernmost parts), and Georgia (excluding the northernmost parts) are in the South Caucasus.
The watershed along the Greater Caucasus range is considered by some sources to be the dividing line between Europe and Southwest Asia. According to that, the highest peak in the Caucasus, Mount Elbrus (5,642 meters) located in western Ciscaucasus, is considered the highest point in Europe. The Kuma-Manych Depression, the geologic depression that divides the Russian Plain from the North Caucasus foreland is often regarded by classical and non-British sources as the natural and historical boundary between Europe and Asia. Another opinion is that the rivers Kura and Rioni mark this border, or even that of the river Aras.
The Caucasus is a linguistically, culturally and geographically diverse region. The nation states that compose the Caucasus today are the post-Soviet states Georgia (including Adjara and Abkhazia), Azerbaijan (including Nakhchivan), Armenia, and the Russian Federation. The Russian divisions include Dagestan, Chechnya, Ingushetia, North Ossetia–Alania, Kabardino–Balkaria, Karachay–Cherkessia, Adygea, Krasnodar Krai, and Stavropol Krai, in clockwise order.
Two territories in the region claim independence but are recognized as such by only a handful of entities: Abkhazia, and South Ossetia. Abkhazia and South Ossetia are largely recognized by the world community as part of Georgia.
Demographics
This section needs additional citations for verification.(July 2018) |
The region has many different languages and language families. There are more than 50 ethnic groups living in the region. No fewer than three language families are unique to the area. In addition, Indo-European languages, such as East Slavic, Armenian and Ossetian, and Turkic languages, such as Azerbaijani, Kumyk language and Karachay–Balkar, are spoken in the area. Russian is used as a lingua franca most notably in the North Caucasus.
The peoples of the northern and southern Caucasus mostly are Shia Muslims, Sunni Muslims, Eastern Orthodox Christians or Armenian Christians.
History
Located on the peripheries of Turkey, Iran, and Russia, the region has been an arena for political, military, religious, and cultural rivalries and expansionism for centuries. Throughout its history, the Caucasus was usually incorporated into the Iranian world. At the beginning of the 19th century, the Russian Empire conquered the territory from Qajar Iran.
Prehistory
The territory of the Caucasus region was inhabited by Homo erectus since the Paleolithic Era. In 1991, early Hominini fossils dating back 1.8 million years were found at the Dmanisi archaeological site in Georgia. Scientists now classify the assemblage of fossil skeletons as the subspecies Homo erectus georgicus.
The site yields the earliest unequivocal evidence for the presence of early humans outside the African continent; and the Dmanisi skulls are the five oldest hominins ever found outside Africa.
Antiquity
Kura–Araxes culture from about 4000 BC until about 2000 BC enveloped a vast area of approximately 1,000 km by 500 km, and mostly encompassed, on modern-day territories, the Southern Caucasus (except western Georgia), northwestern Iran, the northeastern Caucasus, eastern Turkey, and as far as Syria.
Under Ashurbanipal (669–627 BC), the boundaries of the Assyrian Empire reached as far as the Caucasus Mountains. Later ancient kingdoms of the region included Armenia, Albania, Colchis and Iberia, among others. These kingdoms were later incorporated into various Iranian empires, including Media, the Achaemenid Empire, Parthia, and the Sassanid Empire, who would altogether rule the Caucasus for many hundreds of years. In 95–55 BC, under the reign of the Armenian king Tigranes the Great, the Kingdom of Armenia included Kingdom of Armenia, vassals Iberia, Albania, Parthia, Atropatene, Mesopotamia, Cappadocia, Cilicia, Syria, Nabataean kingdom, and Judea. By the time of the first century BC, Zoroastrianism had become the dominant religion of the region; however, the region would go through two other religious transformations. Owing to the strong rivalry between Persia and Rome, and later Byzantium. The Romans first arrived in the region in the 1st century BC with the annexation of the kingdom of Colchis, which was later turned into the province of Lazicum. The next 600 years was marked by a conflict between Rome and Sassanid Empire for the control of the region. In western Georgia the eastern Roman rule lasted until the Middle Ages.
Middle Ages
As the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia (an eponymous branch of the Arsacid dynasty of Parthia) was the first nation to adopt Christianity as state religion (in 301 AD), and Caucasian Albania and Georgia had become Christian entities, Christianity began to overtake Zoroastrianism and pagan beliefs. With the Muslim conquest of Persia, large parts of the region came under the rule of the Arabs, and Islam penetrated the region.
In the 10th century, the Alans (proto-Ossetians) founded the Kingdom of Alania, that flourished in the Northern Caucasus, roughly in the location of latter-day Circassia and modern North Ossetia–Alania, until its destruction by the Mongol invasion in 1238–39.
During the Middle Ages, Bagratid Armenia, Kingdom of Tashir-Dzoraget, Kingdom of Syunik and Principality of Khachen organized local Armenian population facing multiple threats after the fall of antique Kingdom of Armenia. Caucasian Albania maintained close ties with Armenia and the Church of Caucasian Albania shared the same Christian dogmas with the Armenian Apostolic Church and had a tradition of their Catholicos being ordained through the Patriarch of Armenia.
In the 12th century, the Georgian king David the Builder drove the Muslims out of the Caucasus and made the Kingdom of Georgia a strong regional power. In 1194–1204 Georgian Queen Tamar's armies crushed new Seljuk Turkish invasions from the southeast and south and launched several successful campaigns into Seljuk Turkish-controlled Southern Armenia. The Georgian Kingdom continued military campaigns in the Caucasus region. As a result of her military campaigns and the temporary fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1204, Georgia became the strongest Christian state in the whole Near East area, encompassing most of the Caucasus stretching from Northern Iran and Northeastern Turkey to the North Caucasus.
The Caucasus region was conquered by the Ottomans, Turco-Mongols, local kingdoms and khanates, as well as, once again, Iran.
Modern period
Up to and including the early 19th century, most of the Southern Caucasus and southern Dagestan all formed part of the Persian Empire. In 1813 and 1828 by the Treaty of Gulistan and the Treaty of Turkmenchay respectively, the Persians were forced to irrevocably cede the Southern Caucasus and Dagestan to Imperial Russia. In the ensuing years after these gains, the Russians took the remaining part of the Southern Caucasus, comprising western Georgia, through several wars from the Ottoman Empire.
In the second half of the 19th century, the Russian Empire also conquered the North Caucasus. In the aftermath of the Caucasian Wars, the Russian military perpetrated an ethnic cleansing of Circassians, expelling this indigenous population from its homeland. Between the 1850s and World War I, about a million North Caucasian Muslims arrived in the Ottoman Empire as refugees.
Having killed and deported most of the Armenians of Western Armenia during the Armenian genocide, the Turks intended to eliminate the Armenian population of Eastern Armenia. During the 1920 Turkish–Armenian War, 60,000 to 98,000 Armenian civilians were estimated to have been killed by the Turkish army.
In the 1940s, around 480,000 Chechens and Ingush, 120,000 Karachay–Balkars and Meskhetian Turks, thousands of Kalmyks, and 200,000 Kurds in Nakchivan and Caucasus Germans were deported en masse to Central Asia and Siberia by the Soviet security apparatus. About a quarter of them died.
The Southern Caucasus region was unified as a single political entity twice – during the Russian Civil War (Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic) from 9 April 1918 to 26 May 1918, and under the Soviet rule (Transcaucasian SFSR) from 12 March 1922 to 5 December 1936. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia became independent nations.
The region has been subject to various territorial disputes since the collapse of the Soviet Union, leading to the First Nagorno-Karabakh War (1988–1994), the East Prigorodny Conflict (1989–1991), the War in Abkhazia (1992–93), the First Chechen War (1994–1996), the Second Chechen War (1999–2009), Russo-Georgian War (2008), and the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War (2020).
Mythology
In Greek mythology, the Caucasus was one of the pillars supporting the world. After presenting man with the gift of fire, Prometheus (or Amirani in the Georgian version) was chained there by Zeus, to have his liver eaten daily by an eagle as punishment for defying Zeus's wish to keep the "secret of fire" from humans.
In Persian mythology, the Caucasus might be associated with the mythic Mount Qaf which is believed to surround the known world. It is the battlefield of Saoshyant and the nest of the Simurgh.[citation needed]
The Roman poet Ovid placed the Caucasus in Scythia and depicted it as a cold and stony mountain which was the abode of personified hunger. The Greek hero Jason sailed to the west coast of the Caucasus in pursuit of the Golden Fleece, and there met Medea, a daughter of King Aeëtes of Colchis.
Later folklore
The Caucasus has a rich folklore tradition. This tradition has been preserved orally—necessitated by the fact that for most of the languages involved, there was no alphabet until the early twentieth century—and only began to be written down in the late nineteenth century. One important tradition is that of the Nart sagas, which tell stories of a race of ancient heroes called the Narts. These sagas include such figures as Satanaya, the mother of the Narts, Sosruquo a shape changer and trickster, Tlepsh a blacksmith god, and Batradz, a mighty hero. The folklore of the Caucasus shows ancient Iranian Zoroastrian influence, involve battles with ancient Goths, Huns and Khazars, and contain many connections with ancient Indian, Norse Scandinavian, and Greek cultures.
Links between Greek mythology and subsequent folklore
Caucasian folklore contains many links with the myths of the ancient Greeks. There are resemblances between the mother goddess Satanaya and the Greek goddess of love Aphrodite. The story of how the trickster Nart Sosruquo, became invulnerable parallels that of the Greek hero Achilles. The ancient Greek Amazons may be connected to a Caucasian "warrior Forest-Mother, Amaz-an".
Caucasian legends include stories involving giants similar to Homer's Polyphemus story. In these stories, the giant is almost always a shepherd, and he is variously a one-eyed rock-throwing cannibal, who lives in a cave (the exit of which is often blocked by a stone), kills the hero's companions, is blinded by a hot stake, and whose flock of animals is stolen by the hero and his men, all motifs which (along with still others) are also found in the Polyphemus story. In one example from Georgia, two brothers, who are being held prisoner by a giant one-eyed shepherd called "One-eye", take a spit, heat it up, stab it into the giant's eye, and escape.
There are also links with the ancient Greek myth of Prometheus. Many legends, widespread in the Caucasus, contain motifs shared with the Prometheus story. These motifs include a giant hero, his conflict with God or gods, the stealing of fire and giving it to men, being chained, and being tormented by a bird who pecks at his liver (or heart). The Adyge/Circassian Nart Nasran, the Georgian Amirani, the Chechen Pkharmat, and the Abkhazian Abrskil, are examples of such Prometheus-like figures.
Ecology
The Caucasus is an area of great ecological importance. The region is included in the list of 34 world biodiversity hotspots. It harbors some 6400 species of higher plants, 1600 of which are endemic to the region. Its wildlife includes Persian leopards, brown bears, wolves, bison, marals, golden eagles and hooded crows. Among invertebrates, some 1000 spider species are recorded in the Caucasus. Most of arthropod biodiversity is concentrated on Great and Lesser Caucasus ranges.
The region has a high level of endemism and several relict animals and plants, the fact reflecting the presence of refugial forests, which survived the Ice Age in the Caucasus Mountains. The Caucasus forest refugium is the largest throughout the Western Asian (near Eastern) region. The area has multiple representatives of disjunct relict groups of plants with the closest relatives in Eastern Asia, southern Europe, and even North America. Over 70 species of forest snails of the region are endemic. Some relict species of vertebrates are Caucasian parsley frog, Caucasian salamander, Robert's snow vole, and Caucasian grouse, and there are almost entirely endemic groups of animals such as lizards of genus Darevskia. In general, the species composition of this refugium is quite distinct and differs from that of the other Western Eurasian refugia.
The natural landscape is one of mixed forest, with substantial areas of rocky ground above the treeline. The Caucasus Mountains are also noted for a dog breed, the Caucasian Shepherd Dog (Rus. Kavkazskaya Ovcharka, Geo. Nagazi). Vincent Evans noted that minke whales have been recorded from the Black Sea.
Energy and mineral resources
The Caucasus has many economically important minerals and energy resources, such as gold, silver, copper, iron ore, manganese, tungsten, zinc, oil, natural gas, and coal (both anthracite coal and brown).
Sport
Krasnaya Polyana is a popular center of mountain skiing and a snowboard venue.
The 2015 European Games is the first in the history of the European Games to be held in Azerbaijan.
Mountain-skiing complexes include:
- Alpika-Service
- Mountain roundabout
- Rosa Hutor
- Tsaghkadzor Ski Resort in Armenia
- Shahdag Winter Complex in Azerbaijan
The 2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix (motor racing) was the first in the history of Formula One to be held in Azerbaijan. The 2017 World Rugby Under 20 Championship was held in Georgia. In 2017 the U-19 Europe Championship (Football) was held in Georgia. In 2019 the UEFA European Under-19 Championship was held in Armenia.
See also
- Caucasian cuisine
- Community for Democracy and Rights of Nations
- Culture of Armenia
- Culture of Azerbaijan
- Culture of Georgia (country)
- Eastern Partnership
- Eurasian Economic Union
- Euronest Parliamentary Assembly
- Khanates of the Caucasus
- Prometheism
- Regions of Europe
- Transcontinental nations
Tourism-related links
- Tourism in Armenia
- Tourism in Azerbaijan
- Tourism in Georgia
- Tourism in Russia
References
Citations
- Wright, John; Schofield, Richard; Goldenberg, Suzanne (16 December 2003). Transcaucasian Boundaries. Routledge. p. 72. ISBN 9781135368500.
- "Caucasus | Mountains, Facts, & Map". Encyclopedia Britannica. 20 September 2023.
- Shamil Shetekauri et al., Mountain Flowers and Trees of Caucasia; Pelagic Publishing Limited, 2018, ISBN 178427173X.
- John L. Esposito, Abdulaziz Sachedina (2004). "Caucasus". The Islamic World: Past and Present. Volume 1. Oxford University Press USA. ISBN 0195165209. p. 86 (registration required). Accessed 30 June 2021.
- "Caucasus - region and mountains, Eurasia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
- "Russia, Geography". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
- "Caucasus - region and mountains, Eurasia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
West of the Kura-Aras Lowland rises the Lesser Caucasus range, which is extended southward by the Dzhavakhet Range and the Armenian Highland, the latter extending southwestward into Turkey.
- "The languages of the Caucasus". Language Log. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
- King, Charles (23 March 2017). "The Ghost of Freedom: A History of the Caucasus (Audible Audio Edition)". www.amazon.com. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
- Pliny the Elder, Natural History, vi.(19).50.
- Kretschmer, Paul (1928). "Weiteres zur Urgeschichte der Inder" [More about the Pre-History of the Indians]. Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen [Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research into Indo-European Philology] (in German). 55: 75–103.
- Kretschmer, Paul (1930), Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen [Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research into Indo-European Philology], vol. 57, pp. 251–255
- "kruveši | Tēzaurs". tezaurs.lv. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- Barney, Lewis, Beach, Berghof, Stephen A., W. J., J. A., Oliver (2006). The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville. New York, United States: Cambridge University Press. pp. 297–298. ISBN 978-0-521-83749-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Vasmer, Max Julius Friedrich (1953–1958). "Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch" [Russian Etymological Dictionary]. Indogermanische Bibliothek herausgegeben von Hans Krahe. Reihe 2: Wörterbüche [Indo-European Library Edited by Hans Krahe. Series 2: Dictionaries] (in German). Vol. 1. Heidelberg: Carl Winter.
- Yuyukin, M. A. (18–20 June 2012). "О происхождении названия Кавказ" [On the Origin of the Name of the Caucasus]. Индоевропейское языкознание и классическая филология – XVI (материалы чтений, посвященных памяти профессора И. М. Тронского) (in Russian). Saint Petersburg. pp. 893–899 and 919. ISBN 978-5-02-038298-5. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
- Qoranashvili, G. Questions of Ethnic Identity According to Leonti Mroveli's Historical Chronicles, Studies, Vol. 1. Tbilisi.
- George Anchabadze. "The Vainakhs (The Chechen and Ingush)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2012. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
- Schrader, Otto (1901). Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde: Grundzüge einer Kultur- und Völkergeschichte Alteuropas [Real Lexicon of the Indo-Germanic Antiquity Studies: Basic Principles of a Cultural and People's History of Ancient Europe] (in German). Strasbourg: Karl J. Trübner.
- Room, Adrian (1997). Placenames of the World: Origins and Meanings of the Names for over 5000 Natural Features, Countries, Capitals, Territories, Cities, and Historic Sites. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-0172-7.
*kau-meaning.
- "Caucasus - region and mountains, Eurasia". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
Caucasia includes not only the mountain ranges of the Caucasus proper but also the country immediately north and south of them. The land north of the Greater Caucasus is called Ciscaucasia (Predkavkazye, or "Hither Caucasia") and south of it is Transcaucasia (Zakavkazye, or "Farther Caucasia").
- Mikaberidze, Alexander (6 February 2015). Historical Dictionary of Georgia. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-4146-6.
- Gocheleishvili, Iago. "Caucasus, pre-900/1500". Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- Bolatojha J. "Древняя родина Кавкасов [The Ancient Homeland of the Caucasus]", p. 49, 2006.
- "The Caucasus: Land of Diverse Cultures - The University of Chicago Library News - The University of Chicago Library". www.lib.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
- "Non-recognition and engagement. The EU's policy towards Abkhazia and South Ossetia | European Union Institute for Security Studies". www.iss.europa.eu. 18 May 2017. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
- "The Spectrum of Georgia's Policy Options Towards Abkhazia and South Ossetia". E-International Relations. 2 March 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
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While Hodgson astutely perceived Caucasia's cross-cultural condition, subsequent research has exposed the region's long-term participation in the Iranian and wider Persianate world. This multifaceted association began in the Iron Age, survived the intensive Christianization of Caucasia, and continued until the annexation of Caucasian lands by the Russian Empire in the nineteenth century. (...) Above all, pre-modern Caucasia is characterized by its integration into the Iranian and Persianate socio-cultural world, the Iranian commonwealth, which extended from Central Asia to Anatolia and south to the Arabian Peninsula. Caucasia's active membership in this commonwealth began under the first "world empire" of the Achaemenids and survived both Christianization and the demise of the Sāsānian empire.
- Ferring, Reid; Oms, Oriol; Agustí, Jordi; Berna, Francesco; Nioradze, Medea; Shelia, Teona; Tappen, Martha; Vekua, Abesalom; Zhvania, David; Lordkipanidze, David (28 June 2011). "Earliest human occupations at Dmanisi (Georgian Caucasus) dated to 1.85–1.78 Ma". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (26): 10432–10436. doi:10.1073/pnas.1106638108. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 3127884. PMID 21646521.
- Vekua, A., Lordkipanidze, D., Rightmire, G. P., Agusti, J., Ferring, R., Maisuradze, G., et al. (2002). A new skull of early Homo from Dmanisi, Georgia. Science, 297:85–9.
- Theodor Mommsen, William Purdie Dickson, Francis Haverfield. The provinces of the Roman Empire: from Caesar to Diocletian. p. 68.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Allen, W.E.D (1932). A history of the Georgian people. p. 123.
- Hunter, Shireen; et al. (2004). Islam in Russia: The Politics of Identity and Security. M.E. Sharpe. p. 3.
(..) It is difficult to establish exactly when Islam first appeared in Russia because the lands that Islam penetrated early in its expansion were not part of Russia at the time, but were later incorporated into the expanding Russian Empire. Islam reached the Caucasus region in the middle of the seventh century as part of the Arab conquest of the Iranian Sassanian Empire.
- Аланы, Great Soviet Encyclopedia
- "Caucasian Albanian Church celebrates its 1700th Anniversary". The Georgian Church for English Speakers. 9 August 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- Timothy C. Dowling Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond pp 728–730 ABC-CLIO, 2 Dec. 2014. ISBN 978-1598849486
- Suny, page 64
- Allen F. Chew. "An Atlas of Russian History: Eleven Centuries of Changing Borders", Yale University Press, 1970, p. 74
- Yemelianova, Galina, Islam nationalism and state in the Muslim Caucasus. Caucasus Survey, April 2014. p. 3
- Memoirs of Miliutin, "the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse [ochistit'] the mountain zone of its indigenous population", per Richmond, W. The Northwest Caucasus: Past, Present, and Future. Routledge. 2008.
- Hamed-Troyansky 2024, p. 49.
- Balakian. Burning Tigris, pp. 319-323.
- Vahakn Dadrian. (2003). The History of the Armenian Genocide: Ethnic Conflict from the Balkans to Anatolia to the Caucasus. New York: Berghahn Books, pp. 360–61. ISBN 1-57181-666-6.
- Weitz, Eric D. (2003). A century of genocide: utopias of race and nation. Princeton University Press. p. 82. ISBN 0-691-00913-9.
- Gregović, Marko (21 February 2018). "Caucasus — The Mountain Where They Chained Prometheus". Medium. Archived from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
- Rashidvash, pp. 33–34.
- Mayor, p. xx; Hunt, p. 9.
- Rashidvash, pp. 33–34; for connections found in the Nart sagas, see Colarusso, pp. 5–7.
- Rashidvash, p. 33; Colarusso, pp. 6, 44, 53, 399.
- When Sosruquo was born burning in flames, the blacksmith god Tlepsh, grabbed Sosruquo and plunged him into water, making him invulnerable except where he was held by tongs, see Rashidvash, pp. 33–34; Colarusso, pp. 52–54 (Circassian Saga 8: Lady Setenaya and the Shepherd: The Birth of Sawseruquo), 185–186 (Abaza Saga 47: How Sosruquo Was Born), 387–394 (Ubykh Saga 86: The Birth of Soseruquo), cf. pp. 323–328 (Abkhaz Saga 75: The Mother of Heroes).
- Rashidvash, p. 34; Colarusso, pp. 130, 318.
- Hunt, pp. 9, 13, 201, 210–229; Bachvarova, p. 106; Mayor, pp. xxi; Rashidvash, p. 34; Colarusso. pp. 6–7, 170 (Circassian Saga 37: A Cyclops Bound atop Was'hamakhwa), 200–202 (Abaza Saga 52: How Sosruquo Brought Fire to His Troops).
- Hunt, p. 13.
- Hunt, Table 1, pp. 211–212.
- Hunt, pp. 218–222 (45. The Story of One-eye (Georgian)).
- Mayor, p. xxi; Hunt, pp. 14, 330–357; Calarusso, pp. 7, 170, 200—202; Rashidvash, p. 34.
- Hunt, p. 14. Hunt, p. 330, mentions forty-four versions.
- Hunt, pp. 330–331.
- Colarusso, pp. 158–168 (Circassian Saga 34: How Pataraz Freed Bearded Nasran, Who Was Chained to the High Mountain), 168–169 (Circassian Saga 35: Bound Nasran); Hunt, pp. 355–356; Rashidvash, p. 34.
- Hunt, pp. 332–337, 351–355; Colarusso, p. 169.
- Hunt, pp. 332, 339–344.
- Hunt, pp. 333, 347–351.
- Zazanashvili N, Sanadiradze G, Bukhnikashvili A, Kandaurov A, Tarkhnishvili D. 2004. Caucasus. In: Mittermaier RA, Gil PG, Hoffmann M, Pilgrim J, Brooks T, Mittermaier CG, Lamoreux J, da Fonseca GAB, eds. Hotspots revisited, Earth's biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial ecoregions. Sierra Madre: CEMEX/Agrupacion Sierra Madre, 148–153
- "WWF – The Caucasus: A biodiversity hotspot". panda.org. Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
- "Endemic Species of the Caucasus".
- "A faunistic database on the spiders of the Caucasus". Caucasian Spiders. Archived from the original on 28 March 2009. Retrieved 17 September 2010.
- Chaladze, G.; Otto, S.; Tramp, S. (2014). "A spider diversity model for the Caucasus Ecoregion". Journal of Insect Conservation. 18 (3): 407–416. Bibcode:2014JICon..18..407C. doi:10.1007/s10841-014-9649-1. S2CID 16783553.
- van Zeist W, Bottema S. 1991. Late Quaternary vegetation of the Near East. Wiesbaden: Reichert.
- Tarkhnishvili, D.; Gavashelishvili, A.; Mumladze, L. (2012). "Palaeoclimatic models help to understand current distribution of Caucasian forest species". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 105: 231–248. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2011.01788.x.
- Milne RI. 2004. "Phylogeny and biogeography of Rhododendron subsection Pontica, a group with a Tertiary relict distribution". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 33: 389–401.
- Kikvidze Z, Ohsawa M. 1999. "Adjara, East Mediterranean refuge of Tertiary vegetation". In: Ohsawa M, Wildpret W, Arco MD, eds. Anaga Cloud Forest, a comparative study on evergreen broad-leaved forests and trees of the Canary Islands and Japan. Chiba: Chiba University Publications, 297–315.
- Denk T, Frotzler N, Davitashvili N. 2001. "Vegetational patterns and distribution of relict taxa in humid temperate forests and wetlands of Georgia Transcaucasia". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 72: 287–332.
- Pokryszko B, Cameron R, Mumladze L, Tarkhnishvili D. 2011. "Forest snail faunas from Georgian Transcaucasia: patterns of diversity in a Pleistocene refugium". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 102: 239–250
- "OceanCare - Protecting oceans and marine mammals". 24 May 2021.
- Horwood, Joseph (1989). Biology and Exploitation of the Minke Whale. p. 27.
- "Current knowledge of the cetacean fauna of the Greek Seas" (PDF). 2003. pp. 219–232. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
- "2015 Minerals Yearbook: EUROPE AND CENTRAL EURASIA" (PDF). USGS. August 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
Sources
- Bachvarova, Mary R., From Hittite to Homer: The Anatolian Background of Ancient Greek Epic, Cambridge University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0521509794.
- Coene, Frederick (2009). The Caucasus: An Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-48660-6.
- Colarusso, John, Nart Sagas from the Caucasus: Myths and Legends from the Circassians, Abazas, Abkhaz, and Ubykhs, Princeton University Press, 2002, 2014. ISBN 9781400865284.
- Cornell, Susan E., Small Nations and Great Powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus.
- de Waal, Thomas (2010). The Caucasus: An Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-539977-6.
- Golvin, Ivan, The Caucasus.
- Griffin, Nicholas, Caucasus: A Journey to the Land Between Christianity and Islam, University of Chicago Press, 2004. ISBN 9780226308593.
- Hamed-Troyansky, Vladimir (2024). Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-3696-5.
- Hunt, David, Legends of the Caucasus, Saqi Books, London, 2012. ISBN 978-0863568237.
- Mayor, Adrienne (2016), "Introduction to the Paperback Edition" in Nart Sagas: Ancient Myths and Legends of the Circassians and Abkhazians, by John Colarusso, Princeton University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0691-16914-9.
- Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994). The Making of the Georgian Nation (2nd ed.). Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20915-3.
Further reading
- Baumer, Christoph (2021). History of the Caucasus - Volume 1: At the Crossroads of Empires (Hardback). London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9781788310079.
- Bealby, John Thomas (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). pp. 546–550. .
- Dubrovin, Nikolai F. The history of wars and Russian domination in the Caucasus (История войны и владычества русских на Кавказе). Sankt-Petersburg, 1871–1888, at Runivers.ru in DjVu and PDF formats.
- Fadeev, Rostislav Andreevich (1860). Sixty years of the Caucasian War (Шестьдесят лет Кавказской войны). Tiflis, at Runivers.ru in DjVu format.
- Gagarin, G. G. (1840). Costumes Caucasus (Костюмы Кавказа). Paris, at Runivers.ru in DjVu and PDF formats.
- Gasimov, Zaur (2011). The Caucasus, European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, retrieved: 18 November 2011.
- Kaziev Shapi (2003). Caucasian highlanders (Повседневная жизнь горцев Северного Кавказа в XIX в.). Everyday life of the Caucasian Highlanders. The 19th Century (In the co-authorship with I. Karpeev). "Molodaya Gvardiy" publishers. Moscow ISBN 5-235-02585-7
External links
- Caucasian Journal—a multilingual online journal on South Caucasus
- Information for travellers and others about Caucasus and Georgia
- Caucasian Review of International Affairs—an academic journal on the South Caucasus
- BBC News: North Caucasus at a glance, 8 September 2005
- United Nations Environment Programme map: Landcover of the Caucasus
- United Nations Environment Programme map: Population density of the Caucasus
- Food Security in Caucasus (FAO) (Archived 10 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine)
- Caucasus and Iran Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine entry in Encyclopædia Iranica
- University of Turin-Observatory on Caucasus
- Circassians Caucasus Web (in Turkish)
- Georgian Biodiversity Database (checklists for ca. 11,000 plant and animal species) Archived 17 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- WHAT TO SEE IN CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS Archived 24 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- The Caucasus, Regnal Chronologies (Wikiwix Archive, 8/21/2008)
The Caucasus ˈ k ɔː k e s e s or Caucasia k ɔː ˈ k eɪ ʒ e is a region spanning Eastern Europe and Western Asia It is situated between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea mainly comprising Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia and parts of Southern Russia The Caucasus Mountains including the Greater Caucasus range have conventionally been considered as a natural barrier between Europe and Asia bisecting the Eurasian landmass CaucasusTopography of the CaucasusCoordinates42 15 40 N 44 07 16 E 42 26111 N 44 12111 E 42 26111 44 12111Countries Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Russia Related areas Iran Turkey De facto states with almost no recognition AbkhaziaSouth OssetiaAutonomous republics and federal regionsAbkhazia since 2008 in exile Adjara Adygea Chechnya Dagestan Ingushetia Kabardino Balkaria Kalmykia partially Karachay Cherkessia Krasnodar Krai Nakhchivan North Ossetia Alania Rostov Oblast partially Stavropol KraiDemonymCaucasianTime ZonesUTC 03 00 UTC 03 30 and UTC 04 00Highest mountainElbrus 5 642 metres 18 510 ft Mount Elbrus Europe s highest mountain is situated in the Western Caucasus area of Russia On the southern side the Lesser Caucasus includes the Javakheti Plateau and the Armenian highlands part of which is in Turkey The Caucasus is divided into the North Caucasus and South Caucasus although the Western Caucasus also exists as a distinct geographic space within the North Caucasus The Greater Caucasus mountain range in the north is mostly shared by Russia and Georgia as well as the northernmost parts of Azerbaijan The Lesser Caucasus mountain range in the south is occupied by several independent states mostly by Armenia Azerbaijan and Georgia but also extends to parts of northeastern Turkey and northern Iran The region is known for its linguistic diversity aside from Indo European and Turkic languages the Kartvelian Northwest Caucasian and Northeast Caucasian language families are indigenous to the area Origin of the namePliny the Elder s Natural History 77 79 AD derives the name of the Caucasus from a Scythian name Croucasis which supposedly means shimmering with snow German linguist Paul Kretschmer notes that the Latvian word kruvesis also means frozen mud Isidore of Seville s Etymologies c 625 AD also says the name means shining white like snow Thus toward the east where it rises to a greater height it is called the Caucasus due to the whiteness of its snow for in an eastern language caucasus means white that is shining white with a very thick snow cover For the same reason the Scythians who live next to this mountain range call it Croacasim for among them whiteness or snow is called casim 3 The Taurus range is likewise called the Caucasus by many In the Tale of Past Years 1113 AD it is stated that Old East Slavic Kavkasijskyѣ gory Kavkasijskye gory came from Ancient Greek Kaykasos Kaukasos which according to M A Yuyukin is a compound word that can be interpreted as the mountain of the seagull s kay kaya3 kayh3 hkos kh3 khy3 a kind of seagull the reconstructed kasos mountain or rock richly attested both in place and personal names In Georgian tradition the term Caucasus is derived from Caucas Georgian კავკასოსი Ḳavḳasosi the son of the Biblical Togarmah and legendary forefather of the Nakh peoples According to German philologists Otto Schrader and Alfons A Nehring the Ancient Greek word Kaykasos Kaukasos is connected to Gothic hauhs high as well as Lithuanian kaũkas hillock and kaukara hill top Russian kucha heap British linguist Adrian Room claims that kau also means mountain in Pelasgian though this is speculative given that Pelasgian is so poorly known ToponymsMount ElbrusCaucasus mountains in Svaneti Georgia The term Caucasus is not only used for the mountains themselves but also includes Ciscaucasia which is part of the Russian Federation and Transcaucasia According to Alexander Mikaberidze Transcaucasia is a Russo centric term The Transcaucasus region and Dagestan were the furthest points of Parthian and later Sasanian expansions with areas to the north of the Greater Caucasus range practically impregnable The mythological Mount Qaf the world s highest mountain that ancient Iranian lore shrouded in mystery was said to be situated in this region The region is also one of the candidates for the location of Airyanem Vaejah the apparent homeland of the Iranians of Zoroaster In Middle Persian sources of the Sasanian era the Caucasus range was referred to as Kaf Kof The term resurfaced in Iranian tradition later on in a variant form when Ferdowsi in his Shahnameh referred to the Caucasus mountains as Kōh i Kaf Most of the modern names of the Caucasus originate from the Greek Kaukasos Lat Caucasus and the Middle Persian Kaf Kof The earliest etymon of the name Caucasus comes from Kaz kaz the Hittite designation of the inhabitants of the southern coast of the Black Sea It was also noted that in Nakh Kov gas Kov gas means gateway to steppe Endonyms and exonyms The modern endonym for the region is usually similar in many languages and is generally between Kavkaz and Kaukaz Abkhaz Kavkaz Kavkaz Adyghe Kaukaz s Kʺaukʺaz s Arabic القوقاز al Qawqaz Armenian Կովկաս Kovkas Avar Kavkaz Kawkaz Azerbaijani Qafqaz Chechen Kavkaz Kawkaz Georgian კავკასია K avk asia German Kaukasien Greek Kaykasos Kafkasos Ingush Kavkaz Kawkaz Karachay Balkar Kavkaz Kavkaz Kumyk Kavkaz Qawqaz Kurdish Qefqasya Qefqas Lak Kkavkkaz Kkawkkaz Lezgian Kavkaz K awk az Mingrelian კავკაცია K avk atsia Ossetian Kavkaz Kaukazi Kavkaz Kaukazi Persian قفقاز Qafqaz Russian Kavkaz Kavkaz Rutul Qawqaz Kavkaz Turkish Kafkas Kafkasya Ukrainian Kavkaz KavkazPolitical geographyContemporary political map of the Caucasus The North Caucasus region is also known as the Ciscaucasus whereas the South Caucasus region is alternatively known as the Transcaucasus The North Caucasus contains most of the Greater Caucasus mountain range It consists of Southern Russia mainly the North Caucasian Federal District s autonomous republics and the Krais in Southern Russia and the northernmost parts of Georgia and Azerbaijan The North Caucasus lies between the Black Sea to its west the Caspian Sea to its east and borders the Southern Federal District to its north The two Federal Districts are collectively referred to as Southern Russia The South Caucasus borders the Greater Caucasus range and Southern Russia to its north the Black Sea and Turkey to its west the Caspian Sea to its east and Iran to its south It contains the Lesser Caucasus mountain range and surrounding lowlands All of Armenia Azerbaijan excluding the northernmost parts and Georgia excluding the northernmost parts are in the South Caucasus The watershed along the Greater Caucasus range is considered by some sources to be the dividing line between Europe and Southwest Asia According to that the highest peak in the Caucasus Mount Elbrus 5 642 meters located in western Ciscaucasus is considered the highest point in Europe The Kuma Manych Depression the geologic depression that divides the Russian Plain from the North Caucasus foreland is often regarded by classical and non British sources as the natural and historical boundary between Europe and Asia Another opinion is that the rivers Kura and Rioni mark this border or even that of the river Aras The Caucasus is a linguistically culturally and geographically diverse region The nation states that compose the Caucasus today are the post Soviet states Georgia including Adjara and Abkhazia Azerbaijan including Nakhchivan Armenia and the Russian Federation The Russian divisions include Dagestan Chechnya Ingushetia North Ossetia Alania Kabardino Balkaria Karachay Cherkessia Adygea Krasnodar Krai and Stavropol Krai in clockwise order Two territories in the region claim independence but are recognized as such by only a handful of entities Abkhazia and South Ossetia Abkhazia and South Ossetia are largely recognized by the world community as part of Georgia DemographicsThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Caucasus news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Ethno linguistic groups in the Caucasus region as of 1995 The region has many different languages and language families There are more than 50 ethnic groups living in the region No fewer than three language families are unique to the area In addition Indo European languages such as East Slavic Armenian and Ossetian and Turkic languages such as Azerbaijani Kumyk language and Karachay Balkar are spoken in the area Russian is used as a lingua franca most notably in the North Caucasus The peoples of the northern and southern Caucasus mostly are Shia Muslims Sunni Muslims Eastern Orthodox Christians or Armenian Christians HistoryLocated on the peripheries of Turkey Iran and Russia the region has been an arena for political military religious and cultural rivalries and expansionism for centuries Throughout its history the Caucasus was usually incorporated into the Iranian world At the beginning of the 19th century the Russian Empire conquered the territory from Qajar Iran Prehistory Petroglyphs in Gobustan Azerbaijan a UNESCO World Heritage Site dating back to 10 000 BC The territory of the Caucasus region was inhabited by Homo erectus since the Paleolithic Era In 1991 early Hominini fossils dating back 1 8 million years were found at the Dmanisi archaeological site in Georgia Scientists now classify the assemblage of fossil skeletons as the subspecies Homo erectus georgicus The site yields the earliest unequivocal evidence for the presence of early humans outside the African continent and the Dmanisi skulls are the five oldest hominins ever found outside Africa Antiquity Kura Araxes culture from about 4000 BC until about 2000 BC enveloped a vast area of approximately 1 000 km by 500 km and mostly encompassed on modern day territories the Southern Caucasus except western Georgia northwestern Iran the northeastern Caucasus eastern Turkey and as far as Syria Under Ashurbanipal 669 627 BC the boundaries of the Assyrian Empire reached as far as the Caucasus Mountains Later ancient kingdoms of the region included Armenia Albania Colchis and Iberia among others These kingdoms were later incorporated into various Iranian empires including Media the Achaemenid Empire Parthia and the Sassanid Empire who would altogether rule the Caucasus for many hundreds of years In 95 55 BC under the reign of the Armenian king Tigranes the Great the Kingdom of Armenia included Kingdom of Armenia vassals Iberia Albania Parthia Atropatene Mesopotamia Cappadocia Cilicia Syria Nabataean kingdom and Judea By the time of the first century BC Zoroastrianism had become the dominant religion of the region however the region would go through two other religious transformations Owing to the strong rivalry between Persia and Rome and later Byzantium The Romans first arrived in the region in the 1st century BC with the annexation of the kingdom of Colchis which was later turned into the province of Lazicum The next 600 years was marked by a conflict between Rome and Sassanid Empire for the control of the region In western Georgia the eastern Roman rule lasted until the Middle Ages Kingdom of Armenia at the peak of its might at the beginning of the 1st century B C Middle Ages Kingdom of Georgia at the peak of its might early 13th century As the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia an eponymous branch of the Arsacid dynasty of Parthia was the first nation to adopt Christianity as state religion in 301 AD and Caucasian Albania and Georgia had become Christian entities Christianity began to overtake Zoroastrianism and pagan beliefs With the Muslim conquest of Persia large parts of the region came under the rule of the Arabs and Islam penetrated the region In the 10th century the Alans proto Ossetians founded the Kingdom of Alania that flourished in the Northern Caucasus roughly in the location of latter day Circassia and modern North Ossetia Alania until its destruction by the Mongol invasion in 1238 39 During the Middle Ages Bagratid Armenia Kingdom of Tashir Dzoraget Kingdom of Syunik and Principality of Khachen organized local Armenian population facing multiple threats after the fall of antique Kingdom of Armenia Caucasian Albania maintained close ties with Armenia and the Church of Caucasian Albania shared the same Christian dogmas with the Armenian Apostolic Church and had a tradition of their Catholicos being ordained through the Patriarch of Armenia In the 12th century the Georgian king David the Builder drove the Muslims out of the Caucasus and made the Kingdom of Georgia a strong regional power In 1194 1204 Georgian Queen Tamar s armies crushed new Seljuk Turkish invasions from the southeast and south and launched several successful campaigns into Seljuk Turkish controlled Southern Armenia The Georgian Kingdom continued military campaigns in the Caucasus region As a result of her military campaigns and the temporary fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1204 Georgia became the strongest Christian state in the whole Near East area encompassing most of the Caucasus stretching from Northern Iran and Northeastern Turkey to the North Caucasus The Caucasus region was conquered by the Ottomans Turco Mongols local kingdoms and khanates as well as once again Iran Modern period A scene from the Caucasian War by Pyotr Gruzinsky Up to and including the early 19th century most of the Southern Caucasus and southern Dagestan all formed part of the Persian Empire In 1813 and 1828 by the Treaty of Gulistan and the Treaty of Turkmenchay respectively the Persians were forced to irrevocably cede the Southern Caucasus and Dagestan to Imperial Russia In the ensuing years after these gains the Russians took the remaining part of the Southern Caucasus comprising western Georgia through several wars from the Ottoman Empire In the second half of the 19th century the Russian Empire also conquered the North Caucasus In the aftermath of the Caucasian Wars the Russian military perpetrated an ethnic cleansing of Circassians expelling this indigenous population from its homeland Between the 1850s and World War I about a million North Caucasian Muslims arrived in the Ottoman Empire as refugees Having killed and deported most of the Armenians of Western Armenia during the Armenian genocide the Turks intended to eliminate the Armenian population of Eastern Armenia During the 1920 Turkish Armenian War 60 000 to 98 000 Armenian civilians were estimated to have been killed by the Turkish army In the 1940s around 480 000 Chechens and Ingush 120 000 Karachay Balkars and Meskhetian Turks thousands of Kalmyks and 200 000 Kurds in Nakchivan and Caucasus Germans were deported en masse to Central Asia and Siberia by the Soviet security apparatus About a quarter of them died Georgian Civil War and the War in Abkhazia in August October 1993 The Southern Caucasus region was unified as a single political entity twice during the Russian Civil War Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic from 9 April 1918 to 26 May 1918 and under the Soviet rule Transcaucasian SFSR from 12 March 1922 to 5 December 1936 Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 Georgia Azerbaijan and Armenia became independent nations Ethnic administrative borders on the Soviet and Post soviet Caucasus on the pictorial map of the Caucasus The region has been subject to various territorial disputes since the collapse of the Soviet Union leading to the First Nagorno Karabakh War 1988 1994 the East Prigorodny Conflict 1989 1991 the War in Abkhazia 1992 93 the First Chechen War 1994 1996 the Second Chechen War 1999 2009 Russo Georgian War 2008 and the Second Nagorno Karabakh War 2020 MythologyIn Greek mythology the Caucasus was one of the pillars supporting the world After presenting man with the gift of fire Prometheus or Amirani in the Georgian version was chained there by Zeus to have his liver eaten daily by an eagle as punishment for defying Zeus s wish to keep the secret of fire from humans In Persian mythology the Caucasus might be associated with the mythic Mount Qaf which is believed to surround the known world It is the battlefield of Saoshyant and the nest of the Simurgh citation needed The Roman poet Ovid placed the Caucasus in Scythia and depicted it as a cold and stony mountain which was the abode of personified hunger The Greek hero Jason sailed to the west coast of the Caucasus in pursuit of the Golden Fleece and there met Medea a daughter of King Aeetes of Colchis Later folklore The Caucasus has a rich folklore tradition This tradition has been preserved orally necessitated by the fact that for most of the languages involved there was no alphabet until the early twentieth century and only began to be written down in the late nineteenth century One important tradition is that of the Nart sagas which tell stories of a race of ancient heroes called the Narts These sagas include such figures as Satanaya the mother of the Narts Sosruquo a shape changer and trickster Tlepsh a blacksmith god and Batradz a mighty hero The folklore of the Caucasus shows ancient Iranian Zoroastrian influence involve battles with ancient Goths Huns and Khazars and contain many connections with ancient Indian Norse Scandinavian and Greek cultures Links between Greek mythology and subsequent folklore Caucasian folklore contains many links with the myths of the ancient Greeks There are resemblances between the mother goddess Satanaya and the Greek goddess of love Aphrodite The story of how the trickster Nart Sosruquo became invulnerable parallels that of the Greek hero Achilles The ancient Greek Amazons may be connected to a Caucasian warrior Forest Mother Amaz an Caucasian legends include stories involving giants similar to Homer s Polyphemus story In these stories the giant is almost always a shepherd and he is variously a one eyed rock throwing cannibal who lives in a cave the exit of which is often blocked by a stone kills the hero s companions is blinded by a hot stake and whose flock of animals is stolen by the hero and his men all motifs which along with still others are also found in the Polyphemus story In one example from Georgia two brothers who are being held prisoner by a giant one eyed shepherd called One eye take a spit heat it up stab it into the giant s eye and escape There are also links with the ancient Greek myth of Prometheus Many legends widespread in the Caucasus contain motifs shared with the Prometheus story These motifs include a giant hero his conflict with God or gods the stealing of fire and giving it to men being chained and being tormented by a bird who pecks at his liver or heart The Adyge Circassian Nart Nasran the Georgian Amirani the Chechen Pkharmat and the Abkhazian Abrskil are examples of such Prometheus like figures EcologyCaucasus vegetation land cover 1940View of the Caucasus Mountains in Dagestan Russia The Caucasus is an area of great ecological importance The region is included in the list of 34 world biodiversity hotspots It harbors some 6400 species of higher plants 1600 of which are endemic to the region Its wildlife includes Persian leopards brown bears wolves bison marals golden eagles and hooded crows Among invertebrates some 1000 spider species are recorded in the Caucasus Most of arthropod biodiversity is concentrated on Great and Lesser Caucasus ranges The region has a high level of endemism and several relict animals and plants the fact reflecting the presence of refugial forests which survived the Ice Age in the Caucasus Mountains The Caucasus forest refugium is the largest throughout the Western Asian near Eastern region The area has multiple representatives of disjunct relict groups of plants with the closest relatives in Eastern Asia southern Europe and even North America Over 70 species of forest snails of the region are endemic Some relict species of vertebrates are Caucasian parsley frog Caucasian salamander Robert s snow vole and Caucasian grouse and there are almost entirely endemic groups of animals such as lizards of genus Darevskia In general the species composition of this refugium is quite distinct and differs from that of the other Western Eurasian refugia The natural landscape is one of mixed forest with substantial areas of rocky ground above the treeline The Caucasus Mountains are also noted for a dog breed the Caucasian Shepherd Dog Rus Kavkazskaya Ovcharka Geo Nagazi Vincent Evans noted that minke whales have been recorded from the Black Sea Energy and mineral resourcesThe Caucasus has many economically important minerals and energy resources such as gold silver copper iron ore manganese tungsten zinc oil natural gas and coal both anthracite coal and brown SportGudauri is a popular destination for skiing Heliskiing and paragliding in Georgia on the southern slopes of the Greater Caucasus mountains Krasnaya Polyana is a popular center of mountain skiing and a snowboard venue The 2015 European Games is the first in the history of the European Games to be held in Azerbaijan Mountain skiing complexes include Alpika Service Mountain roundabout Rosa Hutor Tsaghkadzor Ski Resort in Armenia Shahdag Winter Complex in Azerbaijan The 2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix motor racing was the first in the history of Formula One to be held in Azerbaijan The 2017 World Rugby Under 20 Championship was held in Georgia In 2017 the U 19 Europe Championship Football was held in Georgia In 2019 the UEFA European Under 19 Championship was held in Armenia See alsoAsia portalEurope portalGeography portalMountains portalWorld portalCaucasian cuisine Community for Democracy and Rights of Nations Culture of Armenia Culture of Azerbaijan Culture of Georgia country Eastern Partnership Eurasian Economic Union Euronest Parliamentary Assembly Khanates of the Caucasus Prometheism Regions of Europe Transcontinental nationsTourism related links Tourism in Armenia Tourism in Azerbaijan Tourism in Georgia Tourism in RussiaReferencesCitations Wright John Schofield Richard Goldenberg Suzanne 16 December 2003 Transcaucasian Boundaries Routledge p 72 ISBN 9781135368500 Caucasus Mountains Facts amp Map Encyclopedia Britannica 20 September 2023 Shamil Shetekauri et al Mountain Flowers and Trees of Caucasia Pelagic Publishing Limited 2018 ISBN 178427173X John L Esposito Abdulaziz Sachedina 2004 Caucasus The Islamic World Past and Present Volume 1 Oxford University Press USA ISBN 0195165209 p 86 registration required Accessed 30 June 2021 Caucasus region and mountains Eurasia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 26 November 2018 Russia Geography The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 22 February 2016 Caucasus region and mountains Eurasia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 26 November 2018 West of the Kura Aras Lowland rises the Lesser Caucasus range which is extended southward by the Dzhavakhet Range and the Armenian Highland the latter extending southwestward into Turkey The languages of the Caucasus Language Log Retrieved 7 January 2021 King Charles 23 March 2017 The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Audible Audio Edition www amazon com Retrieved 14 September 2023 Pliny the Elder Natural History vi 19 50 Kretschmer Paul 1928 Weiteres zur Urgeschichte der Inder More about the Pre History of the Indians Zeitschrift fur vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research into Indo European Philology in German 55 75 103 Kretschmer Paul 1930 Zeitschrift fur vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research into Indo European Philology vol 57 pp 251 255 kruvesi Tezaurs tezaurs lv Retrieved 12 February 2024 Barney Lewis Beach Berghof Stephen A W J J A Oliver 2006 The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville New York United States Cambridge University Press pp 297 298 ISBN 978 0 521 83749 1 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Vasmer Max Julius Friedrich 1953 1958 Russisches etymologisches Worterbuch Russian Etymological Dictionary Indogermanische Bibliothek herausgegeben von Hans Krahe Reihe 2 Worterbuche Indo European Library Edited by Hans Krahe Series 2 Dictionaries in German Vol 1 Heidelberg Carl Winter Yuyukin M A 18 20 June 2012 O proishozhdenii nazvaniya Kavkaz On the Origin of the Name of the Caucasus Indoevropejskoe yazykoznanie i klassicheskaya filologiya XVI materialy chtenij posvyashennyh pamyati professora I M Tronskogo in Russian Saint Petersburg pp 893 899 and 919 ISBN 978 5 02 038298 5 Retrieved 19 March 2017 Qoranashvili G Questions of Ethnic Identity According to Leonti Mroveli s Historical Chronicles Studies Vol 1 Tbilisi George Anchabadze The Vainakhs The Chechen and Ingush PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Schrader Otto 1901 Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde Grundzuge einer Kultur und Volkergeschichte Alteuropas Real Lexicon of the Indo Germanic Antiquity Studies Basic Principles of a Cultural and People s History of Ancient Europe in German Strasbourg Karl J Trubner Room Adrian 1997 Placenames of the World Origins and Meanings of the Names for over 5000 Natural Features Countries Capitals Territories Cities and Historic Sites Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 0172 7 kau meaning Caucasus region and mountains Eurasia Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 26 November 2018 Caucasia includes not only the mountain ranges of the Caucasus proper but also the country immediately north and south of them The land north of the Greater Caucasus is called Ciscaucasia Predkavkazye or Hither Caucasia and south of it is Transcaucasia Zakavkazye or Farther Caucasia Mikaberidze Alexander 6 February 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 4146 6 Gocheleishvili Iago Caucasus pre 900 1500 Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Bolatojha J Drevnyaya rodina Kavkasov The Ancient Homeland of the Caucasus p 49 2006 The Caucasus Land of Diverse Cultures The University of Chicago Library News The University of Chicago Library www lib uchicago edu Retrieved 28 March 2022 Non recognition and engagement The EU s policy towards Abkhazia and South Ossetia European Union Institute for Security Studies www iss europa eu 18 May 2017 Retrieved 7 January 2021 The Spectrum of Georgia s Policy Options Towards Abkhazia and South Ossetia E International Relations 2 March 2020 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Ethnolinguistic groups in the Caucasus region Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Caucasian peoples Encyclopaedia Britannica Multiple Authors Caucasus and Iran Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 3 September 2012 Rapp Stephen H 2020 Georgia Georgians until 1300 In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 While Hodgson astutely perceived Caucasia s cross cultural condition subsequent research has exposed the region s long term participation in the Iranian and wider Persianate world This multifaceted association began in the Iron Age survived the intensive Christianization of Caucasia and continued until the annexation of Caucasian lands by the Russian Empire in the nineteenth century Above all pre modern Caucasia is characterized by its integration into the Iranian and Persianate socio cultural world the Iranian commonwealth which extended from Central Asia to Anatolia and south to the Arabian Peninsula Caucasia s active membership in this commonwealth began under the first world empire of the Achaemenids and survived both Christianization and the demise of the Sasanian empire Ferring Reid Oms Oriol Agusti Jordi Berna Francesco Nioradze Medea Shelia Teona Tappen Martha Vekua Abesalom Zhvania David Lordkipanidze David 28 June 2011 Earliest human occupations at Dmanisi Georgian Caucasus dated to 1 85 1 78 Ma Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 26 10432 10436 doi 10 1073 pnas 1106638108 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 3127884 PMID 21646521 Vekua A Lordkipanidze D Rightmire G P Agusti J Ferring R Maisuradze G et al 2002 A new skull of early Homo from Dmanisi Georgia Science 297 85 9 Theodor Mommsen William Purdie Dickson Francis Haverfield The provinces of the Roman Empire from Caesar to Diocletian p 68 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Allen W E D 1932 A history of the Georgian people p 123 Hunter Shireen et al 2004 Islam in Russia The Politics of Identity and Security M E Sharpe p 3 It is difficult to establish exactly when Islam first appeared in Russia because the lands that Islam penetrated early in its expansion were not part of Russia at the time but were later incorporated into the expanding Russian Empire Islam reached the Caucasus region in the middle of the seventh century as part of the Arab conquest of the Iranian Sassanian Empire Alany Great Soviet Encyclopedia Caucasian Albanian Church celebrates its 1700th Anniversary The Georgian Church for English Speakers 9 August 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond pp 728 730 ABC CLIO 2 Dec 2014 ISBN 978 1598849486 Suny page 64 Allen F Chew An Atlas of Russian History Eleven Centuries of Changing Borders Yale University Press 1970 p 74 Yemelianova Galina Islam nationalism and state in the Muslim Caucasus Caucasus Survey April 2014 p 3 Memoirs of Miliutin the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population per Richmond W The Northwest Caucasus Past Present and Future Routledge 2008 Hamed Troyansky 2024 p 49 Balakian Burning Tigris pp 319 323 Vahakn Dadrian 2003 The History of the Armenian Genocide Ethnic Conflict from the Balkans to Anatolia to the Caucasus New York Berghahn Books pp 360 61 ISBN 1 57181 666 6 Weitz Eric D 2003 A century of genocide utopias of race and nation Princeton University Press p 82 ISBN 0 691 00913 9 Gregovic Marko 21 February 2018 Caucasus The Mountain Where They Chained Prometheus Medium Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Rashidvash pp 33 34 Mayor p xx Hunt p 9 Rashidvash pp 33 34 for connections found in the Nart sagas see Colarusso pp 5 7 Rashidvash p 33 Colarusso pp 6 44 53 399 When Sosruquo was born burning in flames the blacksmith god Tlepsh grabbed Sosruquo and plunged him into water making him invulnerable except where he was held by tongs see Rashidvash pp 33 34 Colarusso pp 52 54 Circassian Saga 8 Lady Setenaya and the Shepherd The Birth of Sawseruquo 185 186 Abaza Saga 47 How Sosruquo Was Born 387 394 Ubykh Saga 86 The Birth of Soseruquo cf pp 323 328 Abkhaz Saga 75 The Mother of Heroes Rashidvash p 34 Colarusso pp 130 318 Hunt pp 9 13 201 210 229 Bachvarova p 106 Mayor pp xxi Rashidvash p 34 Colarusso pp 6 7 170 Circassian Saga 37 A Cyclops Bound atop Was hamakhwa 200 202 Abaza Saga 52 How Sosruquo Brought Fire to His Troops Hunt p 13 Hunt Table 1 pp 211 212 Hunt pp 218 222 45 The Story of One eye Georgian Mayor p xxi Hunt pp 14 330 357 Calarusso pp 7 170 200 202 Rashidvash p 34 Hunt p 14 Hunt p 330 mentions forty four versions Hunt pp 330 331 Colarusso pp 158 168 Circassian Saga 34 How Pataraz Freed Bearded Nasran Who Was Chained to the High Mountain 168 169 Circassian Saga 35 Bound Nasran Hunt pp 355 356 Rashidvash p 34 Hunt pp 332 337 351 355 Colarusso p 169 Hunt pp 332 339 344 Hunt pp 333 347 351 Zazanashvili N Sanadiradze G Bukhnikashvili A Kandaurov A Tarkhnishvili D 2004 Caucasus In Mittermaier RA Gil PG Hoffmann M Pilgrim J Brooks T Mittermaier CG Lamoreux J da Fonseca GAB eds Hotspots revisited Earth s biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial ecoregions Sierra Madre CEMEX Agrupacion Sierra Madre 148 153 WWF The Caucasus A biodiversity hotspot panda org Archived from the original on 8 May 2013 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Endemic Species of the Caucasus A faunistic database on the spiders of the Caucasus Caucasian Spiders Archived from the original on 28 March 2009 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Chaladze G Otto S Tramp S 2014 A spider diversity model for the Caucasus Ecoregion Journal of Insect Conservation 18 3 407 416 Bibcode 2014JICon 18 407C doi 10 1007 s10841 014 9649 1 S2CID 16783553 van Zeist W Bottema S 1991 Late Quaternary vegetation of the Near East Wiesbaden Reichert Tarkhnishvili D Gavashelishvili A Mumladze L 2012 Palaeoclimatic models help to understand current distribution of Caucasian forest species Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 105 231 248 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2011 01788 x Milne RI 2004 Phylogeny and biogeography of Rhododendron subsection Pontica a group with a Tertiary relict distribution Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 33 389 401 Kikvidze Z Ohsawa M 1999 Adjara East Mediterranean refuge of Tertiary vegetation In Ohsawa M Wildpret W Arco MD eds Anaga Cloud Forest a comparative study on evergreen broad leaved forests and trees of the Canary Islands and Japan Chiba Chiba University Publications 297 315 Denk T Frotzler N Davitashvili N 2001 Vegetational patterns and distribution of relict taxa in humid temperate forests and wetlands of Georgia Transcaucasia Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 72 287 332 Pokryszko B Cameron R Mumladze L Tarkhnishvili D 2011 Forest snail faunas from Georgian Transcaucasia patterns of diversity in a Pleistocene refugium Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 102 239 250 OceanCare Protecting oceans and marine mammals 24 May 2021 Horwood Joseph 1989 Biology and Exploitation of the Minke Whale p 27 Current knowledge of the cetacean fauna of the Greek Seas PDF 2003 pp 219 232 Archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 21 April 2016 2015 Minerals Yearbook EUROPE AND CENTRAL EURASIA PDF USGS August 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 SourcesBachvarova Mary R From Hittite to Homer The Anatolian Background of Ancient Greek Epic Cambridge University Press 2016 ISBN 978 0521509794 Coene Frederick 2009 The Caucasus An Introduction Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 48660 6 Colarusso John Nart Sagas from the Caucasus Myths and Legends from the Circassians Abazas Abkhaz and Ubykhs Princeton University Press 2002 2014 ISBN 9781400865284 Cornell Susan E Small Nations and Great Powers A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus de Waal Thomas 2010 The Caucasus An Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539977 6 Golvin Ivan The Caucasus Griffin Nicholas Caucasus A Journey to the Land Between Christianity and Islam University of Chicago Press 2004 ISBN 9780226308593 Hamed Troyansky Vladimir 2024 Empire of Refugees North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 1 5036 3696 5 Hunt David Legends of the Caucasus Saqi Books London 2012 ISBN 978 0863568237 Mayor Adrienne 2016 Introduction to the Paperback Edition in Nart Sagas Ancient Myths and Legends of the Circassians and Abkhazians by John Colarusso Princeton University Press 2016 ISBN 978 0691 16914 9 Suny Ronald Grigor 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation 2nd ed Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20915 3 Further readingBaumer Christoph 2021 History of the Caucasus Volume 1 At the Crossroads of Empires Hardback London I B Tauris ISBN 9781788310079 Bealby John Thomas 1911 Caucasia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed pp 546 550 Dubrovin Nikolai F The history of wars and Russian domination in the Caucasus Istoriya vojny i vladychestva russkih na Kavkaze Sankt Petersburg 1871 1888 at Runivers ru in DjVu and PDF formats Fadeev Rostislav Andreevich 1860 Sixty years of the Caucasian War Shestdesyat let Kavkazskoj vojny Tiflis at Runivers ru in DjVu format Gagarin G G 1840 Costumes Caucasus Kostyumy Kavkaza Paris at Runivers ru in DjVu and PDF formats Gasimov Zaur 2011 The Caucasus European History Online Mainz Institute of European History retrieved 18 November 2011 Kaziev Shapi 2003 Caucasian highlanders Povsednevnaya zhizn gorcev Severnogo Kavkaza v XIX v Everyday life of the Caucasian Highlanders The 19th Century In the co authorship with I Karpeev Molodaya Gvardiy publishers Moscow ISBN 5 235 02585 7External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Caucasus Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Caucasus Caucasian Journal a multilingual online journal on South Caucasus Information for travellers and others about Caucasus and Georgia Caucasian Review of International Affairs an academic journal on the South Caucasus BBC News North Caucasus at a glance 8 September 2005 United Nations Environment Programme map Landcover of the Caucasus United Nations Environment Programme map Population density of the Caucasus Food Security in Caucasus FAO Archived 10 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Caucasus and Iran Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine entry in Encyclopaedia Iranica University of Turin Observatory on Caucasus Circassians Caucasus Web in Turkish Georgian Biodiversity Database checklists for ca 11 000 plant and animal species Archived 17 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine WHAT TO SEE IN CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS Archived 24 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Caucasus Regnal Chronologies Wikiwix Archive 8 21 2008