Akhalkalaki

01/25/2022

Akhalkalaki, by Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=1... / CC BY SA 3.0

#Cities_and_towns_in_Samtskhe–Javakheti
#Tiflis_Governorate
#Armenian_diaspora_communities
Akhalkalaki (Georgian: ახალქალაქი, romanized: akhalkalaki; Armenian: Ախալքալաք / Նոր-Քաղաք, romanized: Axalk’alak’ / Nor-K’aġak’; Turkish:
Ahılkelek) is a town in Georgia's southern region of Samtskhe–Javakheti and the administrative centre of the Akhalkalaki Municipality.
Akhalkalaki lies on the edge of the Javakheti Plateau.
The city is located about 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the border with Turkey.
The town's recorded history goes back to the 11th century.
As of the 2014 Georgian census the town had a population of 8,295, with 93.
8% Armenian majority.
The name Akhalkalaki, first recorded in the 11th-century Georgian chronicle, means \"a new town\", from Georgian [ɑxɑli], \"new\", and [kʰɑlɑkʰi], \"city\" or \"town\".
The 19th-century ethnographic accounts have another Armenian name for the town, Nor-Kaghak, also meaning \"a new town\".
Akhalkalaki was founded by Bagrat IV of Georgia in 1064.
In 1066, the city was destroyed during the Seljuq invasions of the Kingdom of Georgia.
In the 11th century, Akhalkalaki became one of the political and economical centres of Javakheti.
In the 16th century, the city came under the rule of the Ottoman Empire and became a sanjak centre in Çıldır Eyaleti.
Under the Ottoman rule, the town was known as \"Ahılkelek\".
The city was passed from the Ottomans to the Russians after the Russo-Turkish War in 1828–1829.
On January 4, 1900, an earthquake destroyed much of the town and killed 1,000 people in the area.
The citizens predominantly dwelled in dugouts till the 1920s.
Downtown of Akhalkalaki By the time of the region's annexation to the Russian Empire in 1829, the population was mainly Islamicized Georgians.
After the Russian takeover, most of the Muslim Georgians left the area for the Ottoman Empire, and in their place Christian Armenian refugees from Erzurum and Bay...

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