Christian dating :
Georgia

Geography
Area: 69,700 square kilometers; slightly larger than South
Carolina; 20% of total territory is not under government control.
Cities: Capital--Tbilisi (pop 1.1 million 2002).
Terrain: Mostly rugged and mountainous.
Climate: Generally moderate; mild on the Black Sea coast with cold
winters in the mountains.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Georgian(s).
Population: 4.4 million (2002 census preliminary results. Does not
include Abkhazia or South Ossetia.)
Population growth rate (2001 est.): -0.9%.
Ethnic groups: Georgian 70.1%, Armenian 8.1%, Russian 6.3%, Azeri
5.7%, Ossetian 3%, Abkhaz 1.8%, other 5%. (1989 est.)
Christian singles note-Religion: Georgian Orthodox 65%, Muslim 11%,
Russian Orthodox 10%, Armenian Apostolic 8%, other 6%.
Language: Georgian (official), Abkhaz also official language in
Abkhazia.
Education: Years compulsory--11. Literacy--99%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2001 est.)--52.37 deaths/1,000
live births. Life expectancy--64.63 yrs.
Government
Type: Republic.
Constitution: October 17, 1995.
Branches: Executive--president with State Chancellery. Legislative--unicameral
parliament, 235 members. Judicial--supreme court,
Constitutional Court, and local courts.
Subdivisions: 67 districts, including those within the two autonomous
republics (Abkhazia and Ajara) and eight cities.
Political parties and leaders: National Democrats [Mikhail Saakashvili];
Rightist Opposition [Davit Gamkrelidze]; Labor Party [Shalva
Natelashvili].
Suffrage: Universal over 18.
Economy (2001)
GDP: $3.6 billion.
GDP per capita: $744.
GDP growth: 5.3%.
Inflation rate: 3.4%.
Natural resources: Forests, hydropower, nonferrous metals, manganese,
iron ore, copper, citrus fruits, tea, wine.
Industry: Types--steel, aircraft, machine tools, foundry
equipment (automobiles, trucks, and tractors), tower cranes, electric
welding equipment, fuel re-exports, machinery for food packing,
electric motors, textiles, shoes, chemicals, wood products, bottled
water, and wine.
Trade (2001): Exports--$354 million. Partners--Russia,
Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia. Imports--$737 million. Partners--Russia,
Turkey, Azerbaijan, Germany, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Turkmenistan,
United States.
Work force (1.72 million in 2000): Agriculture--52.1%; trade--10.0%;
education--6.5%; public administration--6.0%; manufacturing--5.9%;
health and social work--4.9%; transport and communications--4.1%;
unemployment (2002--12.3% official - State Statistical
Department).
PEOPLE AND HISTORY
Christian singles note-Georgia's recorded history dates back more than
2,500 years. Georgian -- a South Caucasian (or “Kartvelian”)
language unrelated to any other outside the immediate region -- is one
of the oldest living languages in the world, and it has its own
distinctive alphabet. Tbilisi, located in the picturesque Mtkvari
River valley, is more than 1,500 years old. In the early 4th century
Georgia adopted Christianity, only the second nation in the world to
do so officially, and Orthodox Christianity -- in combination with a
unique language and alphabet -- proved to be key factors in preserving
Georgia’s separate identity for so many centuries. Georgia has
historically found itself on the margins of great empires, and
Georgians have lived together in a unified state for only a small
fraction of their existence as a people. Much of Georgia's territory
was fought over by Persian, Roman, Byzantine, Arab, Mongol, and
Turkish armies from at least the 1st century B.C. through the 18th
century. The zenith of Georgia’s power as an independent kingdom
came in the 11th and 12th centuries, during the reigns of King David
the Builder and Queen Tamara, who still rank among the most celebrated
of all Georgian rulers. In 1783 the king of Kartli (in eastern
Georgia) signed the Treaty of Georgievsk with the Russians, by which
Russia agreed to take the kingdom as its protectorate. In 1801, the
Russian empire began the piecemeal process of unifying and annexing
Georgian territory, and for most of the next two centuries (1801-1991)
Georgia found itself ruled from St. Petersburg and Moscow. Exposed to
modern European ideas of nationalism under Russian tutelage, Georgians
like the writer Ilya Chavchavadze began calling for greater Georgian
independence. In the wake of the collapse of tsarist rule and war with
the Turks, the first Republic of Georgia was established on May 26,
1918, and the country enjoyed a brief period of independence under the
Menshevik president, Noe Zhordania. However, in March 1921, the
Russian Red Army re-occupied the country, and Georgia became a
republic of the Soviet Union. Several of the Soviet Union’s most
notorious leaders in the 1920s and 1930s were Georgian, such as Joseph
Stalin, Sergo Orjonikidze, and Lavrenti Beria. In the postwar period,
Georgia was perceived as one of the wealthiest and most privileged of
Soviet republics, and many Russians treated the country’s Black Sea
coast as a kind of Soviet Riviera. On April 9, 1991, the Supreme
Council of the Republic of Georgia declared independence from the
U.S.S.R.
Beset by ethnic and civil strife from independence in 1991, Georgia
began to stabilize in 1995. However, almost 300,000 internally
displaced persons present an enormous strain on the country. Peace
remains fragile in the separatist areas of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
-- overseen by Commonwealth of Independent States' (essentially
Russian) peacekeepers, the United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia
(UNOMIG), and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE). Considerable progress has been made in negotiations on the
Ossetian-Georgian conflict. Negotiations are continuing on the
stalemated Georgia-Abkhazia conflict under the aegis of the United
Nations.
The Georgian Government stakes much of its future on the revival of
the ancient Silk Road as the Eurasian energy transportation corridor,
using Georgia's geography as a bridge for transit of goods between
Europe and Asia. Georgians are renowned for their hospitality and
artistry in dance, theater, music, and design.
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