Knowledge

Talk:Kingdom of Georgia

Source 📝

329: 308: 31: 85: 339: 64: 262: 237: 191: 173: 95: 1116: 417: 22: 1095:
CoA is much older. So it is appropriate and legitimate for both CoA to be placed there. Of course, both CoA may represent a different historical period and style. It is also possible that neither of them is historically true and both are only attributed, because none of them cannot be substantiated by another source. Do you agree?
1718:
Wrong! The Kingdom of Georgia minted coins with Arabic and later Persian inscriptions. You deciding that the infobox consists of Georgian residents involvement is your opinion. Whether you like it or not, it happened. You don't own this article and your continued labeling my edits to this article are
1529:
You are repeating same information about coins and as sources themselves say, coins were indicative of trade partners and their importance. It says nothing about how common these languages were among Georgia residents. I don't need to know Arabic to use bilingual Georgian-Arabic coin, just as I don't
725:
is the perfect descriptor and should be included initially in the lede to establish this fact and to dissuade any misleading, politicised efforts to paint the picture as being entirely European or entirely Middle Eastern (and this includes weasel words, structure and context). The lede should make it
1742:
How is it harassment to point out obvious issues? I am not allowed to change what you add but I am also not allowed to mark my objection either? How will others know that this is even being discussion if they are no tags? It is not fair to insert something, tell me it cannot be changed, and also not
1672:
This infobox is about country in question, so of course common languages is about residents of that country, why would it be about residents of some other country, including Georgia's trade partners? Just as you stretch meaning of what coin inscriptions mean, now you're redefining what purpose these
1427:
If you have reason to suspect that Georgian was not spoken in Georgia, feel free to delete that. All I can say is that I read what your source says and it only talks about languages of Georgia's foreign trade partners, so it is not relevant to this specific section of infobox, which is about commons
1069:
Look more closely, it is not 100% the same as the version in the source. The sword and the crown is different, and the lion and shield is less detailed in the source, this means that while they are similar, it is not the same. And again, there is no reason for change, the long-standing version has a
592:
Yeah, i know this was another editor, but quite strangely, you made (partly) the same changes. Anyway, as i said above, just wait and see, if this edit is endorsed by other editors then it's perfectly fine for me. Also, you should take a look at my comment, for now, i did not present any "appology".
523:
I think that "at the peak of its might" is severely unencyclopedic, and weirdly nationalistic and politically biased. I do not see any argument against the far more accurate and appropriate "at the peak of its territorial expansion" - please do not revert, rather demonstrate what that argument might
1566:
I did not remove Georgian because I have no specific reason to question that Georgian was spoken in Georgia... If you have reason to doubt that Georgian was spoken, please do. I am focus on your reference because you are stretching the meaning of coins to suggest these languages were common in this
1094:
I think the best solution (compromise, how to stop local editing war) is to use both Coat of Arms in the infobox. It is possible to use a special way to put both CoA there and prevent ongoing disputes. Of course, somebody thinks that Prince Vakhushti is more trustworthy, however Conrad GrĂŒnenberg's
804:
Simply linking to an article about a historical person is not attributing a source. Also neither of these CoA are wrong, but there is no need for a change unless it is a modern version of the CoA already in place. If you really want that other CoA in the article so bad then put it somewhere else in
1275:
Also, Armenian would certainly be more common in the Georgia kingdom than Arabic even if there is no bilingual Georgian-Armenian coins. Same about Greek, Abkhazian, Ossetian and other languages of people who lived there. Relevance of languages on coins is already covered in another area of article
619:
It's not that strange that we've both reached the same conclusion; I'm sure we'd both agree that an apple was different to an orange as well, or that red and blue are different colours. Also, just to clarify, you've made two eccentrically spelled quotations above ("gainning" and "appology") which
1746:
Infobox is just not the place for this information because numismatics is very specific thing and does not denote common languages. What coins they minted is already explain in detail thanks to your addition to the article, which is best place for this information. Everything else about these
1262:
Recent additions was made under "common languages" infobox that Arabic and Persian were "common" languages spoken in the kingdom along with Georgian. This was based on bilingual coins with Arabic and Persian inscription. Based on provided authors themselves, these languages were important
1214:. This effort will run for up to seven days, ending early if the article is felt to be at B-class or impossible to further improve. Articles are chosen by a quick vote among interested chatters, with the goal of working together on interesting Vital articles that need improving. 1447:
Later Bagrationi monarchs, notably David IV AgmaĆĄenebeli (r.1089–1125), Dimitri I (1125–54), and Giorgi III (r. 1156–84), minted coins with the title malik al-mulĆ«k and T‘amar (r. 1187–1213) followed suit with malikat al-malikāt. Brosset correctly dismisses the idea that
1271:
the Georgian kingdom. Inscription on coin says more about languages of trade partners, than domestic language situation of Georgia. Provided books also don't make claims that coin languages were indicative of domestic language demographics. It is just not what they say.
1377:
Your sources just don't say this was common languages in Georgia, only that their presence on coins indicated Georgia's important trade partners. You are stretching meaning of what they say, which is why it was removed. It has its own paragraph where trade and coins are
1135:
text or images borrowed from other web sites or printed material; such additions must be deleted. Major contributions by contributors who have been verified to have violated copyright in multiple articles may be presumptively deleted in accordance with
726:
clear that the Kingdom encompassed both Eastern Europe (and Eastern European culture) and the Middle East (and Middle Eastern culture), and should not imply that it is merely one or the other, or that it is predominantly indicative of one or the other.
1039:
Sorry but the source doesn't back it. The CoA on pages 5-6 are similar but not identical. Keep in mind that various states have used different version of the same CoA, this is not uncommon. Also, there is no reason to change the CoA already in place!
1452:
implied vassalage to the Caliphate or the amīrates of the North. If that were the case, Georgian coins would have followed Abbāsid patterns as we see emanating from Tiflīs/Tp‘ilisi and Sharwān in the eleventh century. Brosset instead suggests that
1070:
source attributed to it on its commons-page. If you want to change from one sourced version to another then ask for concensus for such a change here on the talk-page, dont just carry out the change thinking nobody is going to object to it.
720:
There are some tiresome edit wars going on here that are transparently politically motivated. The Kingdom of Georgia (much like the country of Georgia today) was both European AND Asian, it was not either European OR Asian. The term
769:" from the geographical description in the introduction. That it hints at far-flung areas like the Balkans, Ukraine, and European Russia, while it is implied by "North Caucasus", which is appropriately specific. 742:
Text already says that Georgia stretched from Russia to Iran, so it is clear that it was on both continents. But if you want to be specific and say that it was both in Eastern Europe and middle east, that is also
1837:
I'm not making any assumptions, I have added exactly what the source states, nothing more. I even included numismatics and chancery, which explains in which capacity those languages are used. Also, while you are
539:
Actually, the burden of "gainning consensus" is on you, since you want to change a stable version of the article, but let's wait for other contributors opinion (however, i've seen that you added back your edit
822:
was a person famous for his armorial as this person was dedicated and working on them. Not the case with Prince Vakhushti. Conrad takes precedent over Vakhushti as his armorial is more credible in all senses.
1291:
I see no reason to not include all languages, especially those on their coins, in the infobox. Personal opinions mean nothing here. Facts clearly state this Kingdom used two other languages on their coinage.
983:
IP, on my request, this article is now protected by an administrator. However, if you're able to provide sources for your edit, please ping me here and i'll edit the article for you if you want. Best regards.
678:
I was the one who originally changed "peak of its might" to "peak of its territorial expansion" for reasons that Bdog talks about. The second one is more neutral, "might" implies other things besides size.--
1822:
It obviously was not single language kingdom as many other peoples live there and spoke their own languages, including Armenian and Ossetian. But issue is that we are making assumptions here based only on
1143:
Interested contributors are invited to help clarify the copyright status of this material or rewrite the article in original language at the temporary page linked from the article's face. Please see our
1778:
I see no reason NOT to include these languages in the infobox. Your interpretation as to what common languages does or doesn't mean is meaningless. And, Arabic is not just numismatics, but chancery now.
1355:
I know enough English language to understand what they say and this claim is simply not something they make. They say these languages were important in trade, not that it was common languages spoken in
1747:
languages being "common" in the kingdom is just assumptions based on coins. I don't see why coin languages cannot be explained in article as they are and why they must be in this specific field.--
426:
for the content in the destination pages and must not be deleted as long as the copies exist. For attribution and to access older versions of the copied text, please see the history links below.
830: 1800:
It has become painfully obvious you want to present the infobox of the Kingdom of Georgia as a single language kingdom(which it wasn't), untouched/unconquered by outside forces, which it wasn't(
511:
As regards the caption beneath the map portraying the peak territorial expansion of the Kingdom of Georgia, what do people feel is more appropriate for Knowledge from a language perspective:
1588:
Mikberidze books entire section is strictly on "currency" and he does not attempt make any assumption about common language knowledge of Georgia. Second book does reference trade partners.--
1124: 1494:
All I can say is that I read what your source says and it only talks about languages of Georgia's foreign trade partners, so it is not relevant to this specific section of infobox.
1894: 1909: 1581:
Yes, I'm sure you're upset about Arabic and Persian, but even Mikaberidze doesn't say "trade partners", which you conveniently missed. You only see what you want to see. "
155: 145: 834: 896:
Please take a look at this article. User above is absolutely noncompromisingly biased and pushing fraudulent information and ignores a credible European armorial by
1914: 1567:
country, when authors themselves are strictly taking about importance of Arabic and Persian trade partners, rather than commonality of this language among locals.--
1924: 203: 566:- I think you'll find that not only was it a different user who made the original edit this is a reference to, but also a different user who "added back edit 202:, a collaborative effort to improve Knowledge's coverage of defunct states and territories (and their subdivisions). If you would like to participate, please 1934: 1884: 395: 385: 121: 1904: 1944: 1899: 620:
seem to incorrectly imply that it was I who misspelled those words. Was this a mistake on your part or did you intend it to be a sleight? Regardless, I
1879: 1024:
You are a vandal and stop removing the sourced information! Stop vandalism! See the pages presented in the article. Also there is summery in English!
1919: 35: 1889: 1374:
non-Georgian languages listed in the infobox. Clearly this kingdom used multiple languages, for coinage, and clearly this is properly referenced.
108: 69: 361: 198: 178: 1808:). Someone has done quite the job, to sanitize this article, to the point it appears the Kingdom of Georgia never was invaded or conquered. -- 1175:, this is an acceptable method. I apologize for any disruption caused, but this is the best way that I can think of cleaning up this article. 1929: 955: 907: 870: 654:
it's just a typo because I have a lot of screens in front of me. Also, i have no comment about your "apple and oranges" babble. regards.---
1673:
boxes serve? It is not to describe other countries populations, it is to describe Georgia so of course it is about "Georgian residents".--
1058:
Do you even read the source! It is the SAME COA. It is the oldest dated COA for the kingdom. Stop vandalism and removing sourced content!
1002: 1402:
Also, Armenian would certainly be more common in the Georgia kingdom than Arabic even if there is no bilingual Georgian-Armenian coins.
863:" The current CoA will remain in place! " - it shows clearly how biased and noncompromising you are. Your behavior will be addressed. 1244: 1211: 423: 1939: 1743:
let me note what issues are. Others should be aware so they can comment as it is not enough for one or two people to decide clearly.
352: 313: 700:
And i'm the one who said above that if your edit is endorsed by other editors, then it would be perfectly fine for me. Regards.---
1658:
And that is your interpretation of the infobox. I see nothing stating "Common languages" has to indicate "Georgian residents". --
1874: 1552:. Nothing in the article states Georgian residents used Middle Georgian either. Oddly, you didn't tag that or remove that. -- 1207: 1137: 268: 242: 1310:. This section is not about common languages of Georgias trade partners, it is about common languages spoken in Georgia.-- 570:" as you put it. Your edit war is being held with somebody else entirely, thankyou very much, and I accept your apology. 328: 307: 1828: 1752: 1678: 1593: 1572: 1535: 1433: 1383: 1361: 1315: 1281: 44: 1805: 1767:
I don't see why coin languages cannot be explained in article as they are and why they must be in this specific field.
1842:
sources that make no mention of languages, you better add Kipchak, since apparently you haven't read this article. --
497: 1267:, but I don't think that is intended purpose of this specific infobox section, which is about common languages 959: 911: 874: 100: 1455:
Arabic served as a lingua franca in Georgia due to the significance of commercial ties with the Islamic world
1006: 1824: 1748: 1674: 1589: 1568: 1531: 1429: 1379: 1357: 1330:
Provided books also don't make claims that coin languages were indicative of domestic language demographics.
1311: 1277: 1210:, a collaborate effort to bring Stub and Start class Vital articles up to a B class if possible, similar to 731: 629: 575: 529: 970:
IP, again, there is not a single source for your edit in the article, stop it before being blocked, please.
1248: 1168: 887: 844:
This sounds highly like POV and seems almost completely irrelevant. The current CoA will remain in place!
493: 1847: 1813: 1728: 1663: 1557: 1518: 1418: 1346: 1297: 1182: 1155: 748: 727: 683: 625: 571: 525: 50: 1801: 1720: 1468:
again bore evidence of foreign influence as they combined Georgian, Arabic, and Persian inscriptions.
1132: 998: 951: 926: 903: 897: 866: 826: 819: 797: 758: 693: 273: 247: 1171:
and all the content that I have removed WILL be restored via rewriting by the end of this week. Per
21: 705: 659: 598: 549: 360:
on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
120:
on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
1479:
languages in the infobox, since they also state Georgian language, along with Arabic and Persian.
1172: 1100: 465: 442: 344: 422:
Text has been copied to or from this article; see the list below. The source pages now serve to
1203: 1075: 1045: 849: 810: 113: 1843: 1809: 1724: 1659: 1553: 1514: 1414: 1342: 1293: 1229: 1176: 1149: 995:
What part of my question you cannot understand.? See the source information in the image'!
890: 774: 744: 679: 1035:
I've provided the source but this user is vandalising again. Please see the source. Thanks
1131:
it can be verified to be free of infringement. For legal reasons, Knowledge cannot accept
357: 338: 1549: 1371: 1032: 1025: 945: 884: 766: 701: 655: 594: 563: 545: 948:
Stop removing the COA. It is sourced which you can easily access in its description.
1868: 1839: 1221:
effort to ensure the article did not lose B rating due to copyright cleanup efforts.
1218: 1145: 1120: 1096: 84: 63: 1545: 1338: 1071: 1041: 1021: 930: 845: 806: 793: 1225: 770: 190: 172: 261: 236: 1633:
It says nothing about how common these languages were among Georgia residents.
1028: 893: 334: 90: 1851: 1832: 1817: 1756: 1732: 1682: 1667: 1597: 1576: 1561: 1539: 1522: 1437: 1422: 1387: 1365: 1350: 1319: 1301: 1285: 1252: 1243:
What was the actual name in Georgian? It could not have been Sakartvelos. --
1233: 1188: 1161: 1104: 1079: 1049: 1010: 989: 976: 963: 939: 915: 878: 853: 838: 814: 778: 752: 735: 709: 687: 663: 633: 602: 579: 553: 533: 501: 117: 929:
other editors and edit warring (could lead you to a block), please provide
520:"Kingdom of Georgia in 1184-1230 at the peak of its territorial expansion" 1121:
a large-scale clean-up project of multiple article copyright infringement
1442:
Wrong. As clearly stated, Georgian coins used Arabic language per Vacca
1148:
for how to properly implement limited quotations of copyrighted text. --
488:
The present article claims that the kingdom was established in 888, 975
722: 1464:
As Georgia came under the Mongol yoke in the late 13–14th centuries,
1413:
Sounds like speculation to me. Where is Middle Georgian sourced? --
1167:
I want to make a note that this is planning to be revised under
933:
for your edit. Also, please focus on content, not users. Thanks.
411: 15: 514:"Kingdom of Georgia in 1184-1230 at the peak of its might" 1711:
Just as you stretch meaning of what coin inscriptions mean
1370:
I know enough English language to understand when someone
1202:
This article has been chosen as this week's effort for
469: 461: 457: 453: 446: 438: 434: 430: 1626:
rather than commonality of this language among locals.
1306:
Source themselves say these languages were important
356:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of 112:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of 483: 796:please stop edit war and removing credible COA by 1789:How is it harassment to point out obvious issues? 1217:This was a special request from a member of the 624:accept your "appology" and you're very welcome. 271:, a project which is currently considered to be 1530:need to know English to use dollar or pound.-- 8: 492:1008. Any idea of what is the correct one?-- 1895:Knowledge level-5 vital articles in History 1583:Arabic served as a lingua franca in Georgia 1127:) It will likely be deleted after one week 996: 949: 901: 864: 824: 524:be and wait for a consensus here. thanks. 415: 302: 231: 167: 58: 1910:Top-importance Georgia (country) articles 1119:This article has been tagged as part of 1031:Please stop the vandalism of this user! 304: 233: 169: 130:Knowledge:WikiProject Georgia (country) 60: 19: 1915:WikiProject Georgia (country) articles 831:2600:1017:B417:1BFA:7D20:8A62:19DB:BC2 212:Knowledge:WikiProject Former countries 133:Template:WikiProject Georgia (country) 1925:WikiProject Former countries articles 1337:Yeah your personal interpretation is 215:Template:WikiProject Former countries 7: 350:This article is within the scope of 267:This article is within the scope of 196:This article is within the scope of 106:This article is within the scope of 1935:Low-importance Middle Ages articles 1885:Knowledge vital articles in History 49:It is of interest to the following 1905:C-Class Georgia (country) articles 1428:languages of the country itself.-- 14: 1945:All WikiProject Middle Ages pages 1900:C-Class vital articles in History 1548:. This is starting to sound like 370:Knowledge:WikiProject Middle Ages 1880:Knowledge level-5 vital articles 1114: 373:Template:WikiProject Middle Ages 337: 327: 306: 260: 235: 189: 171: 93: 83: 62: 29: 20: 1920:C-Class former country articles 431:Turkmen incursions into Georgia 390:This article has been rated as 150:This article has been rated as 1890:C-Class level-5 vital articles 1450:Arabic-language Georgian coins 1195:Team-B-Vital Improvement Drive 1138:Knowledge:Copyright violations 1105:23:26, 11 September 2019 (UTC) 283:Knowledge:WikiProject Caucasia 1: 1852:23:55, 22 December 2023 (UTC) 1833:01:21, 21 December 2023 (UTC) 1818:02:09, 19 December 2023 (UTC) 1757:01:44, 19 December 2023 (UTC) 1733:01:36, 19 December 2023 (UTC) 1683:01:18, 19 December 2023 (UTC) 1668:19:08, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1598:01:18, 19 December 2023 (UTC) 1577:18:47, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1562:18:40, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1540:18:37, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1523:18:33, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1438:18:22, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1423:18:14, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1388:18:23, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1366:18:07, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1351:18:04, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1320:18:11, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1302:18:03, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1286:17:54, 17 December 2023 (UTC) 1189:12:43, 9 September 2021 (UTC) 1162:12:43, 9 September 2021 (UTC) 990:22:09, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 977:22:01, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 964:18:58, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 940:17:52, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 916:17:07, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 879:16:16, 30 December 2018 (UTC) 854:18:42, 29 December 2018 (UTC) 839:17:32, 29 December 2018 (UTC) 815:23:18, 28 December 2018 (UTC) 779:03:01, 30 December 2020 (UTC) 502:15:38, 23 November 2012 (UTC) 364:and see a list of open tasks. 286:Template:WikiProject Caucasia 124:and see a list of open tasks. 109:WikiProject Georgia (country) 1930:C-Class Middle Ages articles 1080:20:45, 11 January 2019 (UTC) 1050:20:10, 11 January 2019 (UTC) 199:WikiProject Former countries 1806:Mongol invasions of Georgia 1234:00:03, 26 August 2021 (UTC) 1212:WP:Articles for Improvement 1011:16:55, 7 January 2019 (UTC) 1961: 1146:guideline on non-free text 396:project's importance scale 156:project's importance scale 136:Georgia (country) articles 1276:which is the right place. 1125:the investigation subpage 753:16:13, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 736:15:38, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 710:21:45, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 688:21:39, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 664:16:40, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 634:16:34, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 603:16:00, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 580:15:51, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 554:15:42, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 534:15:31, 14 June 2018 (UTC) 389: 322: 255: 184: 149: 78: 57: 1940:C-Class history articles 1253:19:31, 20 May 2023 (UTC) 454:Georgian Orthodox Church 101:Georgia (country) portal 1719:starting to consist of 757:<-- blocked sock of 692:<-- blocked sock of 507:Unencyclopedic Language 353:WikiProject Middle Ages 218:former country articles 1875:C-Class vital articles 888:User:Giorgi Balakhadze 1208:#team-b-vital channel 789:Conrad GrĂŒnenberg COA 36:level-5 vital article 1802:Arab rule in Georgia 759:User:Studiawschodnie 694:User:Studiawschodnie 376:Middle Ages articles 269:WikiProject Caucasia 482:Conflicting dates = 424:provide attribution 1825:LeontinaVarlamonva 1749:LeontinaVarlamonva 1675:LeontinaVarlamonva 1590:LeontinaVarlamonva 1569:LeontinaVarlamonva 1532:LeontinaVarlamonva 1430:LeontinaVarlamonva 1380:LeontinaVarlamonva 1358:LeontinaVarlamonva 1312:LeontinaVarlamonva 1278:LeontinaVarlamonva 755: 690: 466:Kingdom of Georgia 443:Kingdom of Georgia 345:Middle Ages portal 45:content assessment 1372:just doesn't like 1339:original research 1110:Copyright problem 1013: 1001:comment added by 966: 954:comment added by 925:: IP, instead of 918: 906:comment added by 898:Conrad GrĂŒnenberg 881: 869:comment added by 841: 829:comment added by 820:Conrad GrĂŒnenberg 798:Conrad GrĂŒnenberg 741: 677: 568:without consensus 542:without consensus 478: 477: 410: 409: 406: 405: 402: 401: 301: 300: 297: 296: 289:Caucasia articles 230: 229: 226: 225: 166: 165: 162: 161: 127:Georgia (country) 70:Georgia (country) 1952: 1509:Clearly that is 1258:Common languages 1185: 1179: 1158: 1152: 1118: 1117: 1072:Vif12vf/Tiberius 1042:Vif12vf/Tiberius 987: 974: 937: 931:reliable sources 891:User:LouisAragon 846:Vif12vf/Tiberius 807:Vif12vf/Tiberius 481: 419: 418: 412: 378: 377: 374: 371: 368: 347: 342: 341: 331: 324: 323: 318: 310: 303: 291: 290: 287: 284: 281: 264: 257: 256: 251: 239: 232: 220: 219: 216: 213: 210: 209:Former countries 204:join the project 193: 186: 185: 179:Former countries 175: 168: 138: 137: 134: 131: 128: 103: 98: 97: 96: 87: 80: 79: 74: 66: 59: 42: 33: 32: 25: 24: 16: 1960: 1959: 1955: 1954: 1953: 1951: 1950: 1949: 1865: 1864: 1475:So we can keep 1260: 1241: 1197: 1183: 1177: 1169:WP:Team-B-Vital 1156: 1150: 1115: 1112: 1092: 1090:Use of both CoA 1019: 985: 972: 935: 791: 786: 718: 509: 494:Menah the Great 486: 416: 375: 372: 369: 366: 365: 358:the Middle Ages 343: 336: 316: 288: 285: 282: 279: 278: 245: 217: 214: 211: 208: 207: 135: 132: 129: 126: 125: 99: 94: 92: 72: 43:on Knowledge's 40: 30: 12: 11: 5: 1958: 1956: 1948: 1947: 1942: 1937: 1932: 1927: 1922: 1917: 1912: 1907: 1902: 1897: 1892: 1887: 1882: 1877: 1867: 1866: 1863: 1862: 1861: 1860: 1859: 1858: 1857: 1856: 1855: 1854: 1793: 1792: 1784: 1783: 1782: 1781: 1780: 1779: 1771: 1770: 1763: 1762: 1761: 1760: 1759: 1744: 1716: 1715: 1714: 1706: 1705: 1704: 1703: 1702: 1701: 1700: 1699: 1698: 1697: 1696: 1695: 1694: 1693: 1692: 1691: 1690: 1689: 1688: 1687: 1686: 1685: 1637: 1636: 1629: 1621: 1620: 1619: 1618: 1617: 1616: 1615: 1614: 1613: 1612: 1611: 1610: 1609: 1608: 1607: 1606: 1605: 1604: 1603: 1602: 1601: 1600: 1546:interpretation 1498: 1497: 1489: 1488: 1487: 1486: 1485: 1484: 1483: 1482: 1481: 1480: 1473: 1472: 1471: 1466:Georgian coins 1460: 1406: 1405: 1397: 1396: 1395: 1394: 1393: 1392: 1391: 1390: 1334: 1333: 1325: 1324: 1323: 1322: 1259: 1256: 1240: 1237: 1224:Thank you! -- 1196: 1193: 1192: 1191: 1111: 1108: 1091: 1088: 1087: 1086: 1085: 1084: 1083: 1082: 1062: 1061: 1060: 1059: 1053: 1052: 1033:User:Wikaviani 1026:User:Georgiano 1018: 1015: 993: 992: 980: 979: 956:174.202.10.254 946:User:Wikaviani 943: 942: 908:174.202.10.254 885:User:Georgiano 871:174.202.10.254 861: 860: 859: 858: 857: 856: 790: 787: 785: 782: 767:Eastern Europe 763: 762: 717: 714: 713: 712: 675: 674: 673: 672: 671: 670: 669: 668: 667: 666: 643: 642: 641: 640: 639: 638: 637: 636: 610: 609: 608: 607: 606: 605: 585: 584: 583: 582: 557: 556: 544:). Regards.--- 508: 505: 485: 480: 479: 476: 475: 474: 473: 450: 420: 408: 407: 404: 403: 400: 399: 392:Low-importance 388: 382: 381: 379: 362:the discussion 349: 348: 332: 320: 319: 317:Low‑importance 311: 299: 298: 295: 294: 292: 265: 253: 252: 240: 228: 227: 224: 223: 221: 194: 182: 181: 176: 164: 163: 160: 159: 152:Top-importance 148: 142: 141: 139: 122:the discussion 105: 104: 88: 76: 75: 73:Top‑importance 67: 55: 54: 48: 26: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1957: 1946: 1943: 1941: 1938: 1936: 1933: 1931: 1928: 1926: 1923: 1921: 1918: 1916: 1913: 1911: 1908: 1906: 1903: 1901: 1898: 1896: 1893: 1891: 1888: 1886: 1883: 1881: 1878: 1876: 1873: 1872: 1870: 1853: 1849: 1845: 1841: 1836: 1835: 1834: 1830: 1826: 1821: 1820: 1819: 1815: 1811: 1807: 1803: 1799: 1798: 1797: 1796: 1795: 1794: 1790: 1786: 1785: 1777: 1776: 1775: 1774: 1773: 1772: 1768: 1764: 1758: 1754: 1750: 1745: 1741: 1740: 1739: 1738: 1737: 1736: 1735: 1734: 1730: 1726: 1722: 1721:WP:HARASSMENT 1712: 1708: 1707: 1684: 1680: 1676: 1671: 1670: 1669: 1665: 1661: 1657: 1656: 1655: 1654: 1653: 1652: 1651: 1650: 1649: 1648: 1647: 1646: 1645: 1644: 1643: 1642: 1641: 1640: 1639: 1638: 1634: 1630: 1627: 1623: 1622: 1599: 1595: 1591: 1587: 1586: 1584: 1580: 1579: 1578: 1574: 1570: 1565: 1564: 1563: 1559: 1555: 1551: 1547: 1544:That is your 1543: 1542: 1541: 1537: 1533: 1528: 1527: 1526: 1525: 1524: 1520: 1516: 1513:that case. -- 1512: 1508: 1507: 1506: 1505: 1504: 1503: 1502: 1501: 1500: 1499: 1495: 1491: 1490: 1478: 1474: 1469: 1467: 1461: 1458: 1456: 1451: 1444: 1443: 1441: 1440: 1439: 1435: 1431: 1426: 1425: 1424: 1420: 1416: 1412: 1411: 1410: 1409: 1408: 1407: 1403: 1399: 1398: 1389: 1385: 1381: 1376: 1375: 1373: 1369: 1368: 1367: 1363: 1359: 1354: 1353: 1352: 1348: 1344: 1340: 1336: 1335: 1331: 1327: 1326: 1321: 1317: 1313: 1309: 1305: 1304: 1303: 1299: 1295: 1290: 1289: 1288: 1287: 1283: 1279: 1273: 1270: 1266: 1257: 1255: 1254: 1250: 1246: 1238: 1236: 1235: 1231: 1227: 1222: 1220: 1215: 1213: 1209: 1205: 1200: 1194: 1190: 1186: 1180: 1174: 1170: 1166: 1165: 1164: 1163: 1159: 1153: 1147: 1141: 1139: 1134: 1130: 1126: 1122: 1109: 1107: 1106: 1102: 1098: 1089: 1081: 1077: 1073: 1068: 1067: 1066: 1065: 1064: 1063: 1057: 1056: 1055: 1054: 1051: 1047: 1043: 1038: 1037: 1036: 1034: 1030: 1027: 1023: 1016: 1014: 1012: 1008: 1004: 1003:128.122.37.81 1000: 991: 988: 986:---Wikaviani 982: 981: 978: 975: 973:---Wikaviani 969: 968: 967: 965: 961: 957: 953: 947: 941: 938: 936:---Wikaviani 932: 928: 924: 921: 920: 919: 917: 913: 909: 905: 899: 895: 892: 889: 886: 882: 880: 876: 872: 868: 855: 851: 847: 843: 842: 840: 836: 832: 828: 821: 818: 817: 816: 812: 808: 805:the article! 803: 802: 801: 799: 795: 788: 783: 781: 780: 776: 772: 768: 761: 760: 754: 750: 746: 740: 739: 738: 737: 733: 729: 728:Bdog Drummond 724: 715: 711: 707: 703: 699: 698: 697: 696: 695: 689: 685: 681: 665: 661: 657: 653: 652: 651: 650: 649: 648: 647: 646: 645: 644: 635: 631: 627: 626:Bdog Drummond 623: 618: 617: 616: 615: 614: 613: 612: 611: 604: 600: 596: 591: 590: 589: 588: 587: 586: 581: 577: 573: 572:Bdog Drummond 569: 565: 561: 560: 559: 558: 555: 551: 547: 543: 538: 537: 536: 535: 531: 527: 526:Bdog Drummond 521: 518: 515: 512: 506: 504: 503: 499: 495: 491: 471: 467: 463: 459: 455: 451: 448: 444: 440: 436: 432: 428: 427: 425: 421: 414: 413: 397: 393: 387: 384: 383: 380: 363: 359: 355: 354: 346: 340: 335: 333: 330: 326: 325: 321: 315: 312: 309: 305: 293: 276: 275: 270: 266: 263: 259: 258: 254: 249: 244: 241: 238: 234: 222: 205: 201: 200: 195: 192: 188: 187: 183: 180: 177: 174: 170: 157: 153: 147: 144: 143: 140: 123: 119: 115: 111: 110: 102: 91: 89: 86: 82: 81: 77: 71: 68: 65: 61: 56: 52: 46: 38: 37: 27: 23: 18: 17: 1840:synthesizing 1788: 1766: 1717: 1710: 1632: 1625: 1582: 1510: 1493: 1476: 1465: 1463: 1454: 1449: 1446: 1401: 1378:discussed.-- 1329: 1307: 1274: 1268: 1264: 1261: 1245:95.24.69.191 1242: 1223: 1216: 1201: 1199:Hello all! 1198: 1142: 1128: 1113: 1093: 1022:User:Vif12vf 1020: 1017:Coat of arms 997:— Preceding 994: 984: 971: 950:— Preceding 944: 934: 922: 902:— Preceding 883: 865:— Preceding 862: 825:— Preceding 794:User:Vif12vf 792: 784:Coat of Arms 764: 756: 719: 691: 676: 621: 567: 541: 522: 519: 516: 513: 510: 489: 487: 391: 351: 272: 197: 151: 107: 51:WikiProjects 34: 1844:Kansas Bear 1810:Kansas Bear 1725:Kansas Bear 1660:Kansas Bear 1554:Kansas Bear 1515:Kansas Bear 1415:Kansas Bear 1343:Kansas Bear 1294:Kansas Bear 1178:Sennecaster 1173:WP:CVREPEAT 1151:Sennecaster 1133:copyrighted 765:I removed " 745:Bencemagyar 680:Bencemagyar 593:regards.--- 367:Middle Ages 314:Middle Ages 1869:Categories 1356:Georgia.-- 1204:WP:Discord 1029:User:Kober 927:canvassing 894:User:Kober 1265:for trade 702:Wikaviani 656:Wikaviani 595:Wikaviani 564:Wikaviani 546:Wikaviani 118:Georgians 39:is rated 1823:coins.-- 1308:in trade 1097:Dragovit 999:unsigned 952:unsigned 904:unsigned 867:unsigned 827:unsigned 723:Eurasian 716:Eurasian 484:Untitled 280:Caucasia 274:inactive 248:inactive 243:Caucasia 1123:. (See 923:Comment 462:history 452:Copied 439:history 429:Copied 394:on the 154:on the 114:Georgia 41:C-class 1226:ferret 1219:WP:CCI 1129:unless 771:Zaslav 47:scale. 743:ok.-- 458:oldid 435:oldid 28:This 1848:talk 1829:talk 1814:talk 1753:talk 1729:talk 1723:. -- 1679:talk 1664:talk 1594:talk 1573:talk 1558:talk 1550:JDLI 1536:talk 1519:talk 1434:talk 1419:talk 1384:talk 1362:talk 1347:talk 1341:. -- 1316:talk 1298:talk 1282:talk 1249:talk 1239:Name 1230:talk 1184:Chat 1157:Chat 1101:talk 1076:talk 1046:talk 1007:talk 960:talk 912:talk 875:talk 850:talk 835:talk 811:talk 775:talk 749:talk 732:talk 706:talk 684:talk 660:talk 630:talk 599:talk 576:talk 550:talk 530:talk 517:or: 498:talk 470:diff 464:) → 447:diff 441:) → 116:and 1585:". 1511:NOT 1477:all 1206:'s 1140:. 900:. 562:Hi 490:and 386:Low 146:Top 1871:: 1850:) 1831:) 1816:) 1804:, 1755:) 1731:) 1681:) 1666:) 1596:) 1575:) 1560:) 1538:) 1521:) 1436:) 1421:) 1386:) 1364:) 1349:) 1318:) 1300:) 1292:-- 1284:) 1269:in 1251:) 1232:) 1187:) 1160:) 1103:) 1078:) 1048:) 1009:) 962:) 914:) 877:) 852:) 837:) 813:) 800:. 777:) 751:) 734:) 708:) 686:) 662:) 632:) 622:do 601:) 578:) 552:) 532:) 500:) 460:, 437:, 1846:( 1827:( 1812:( 1791:" 1787:" 1769:" 1765:" 1751:( 1727:( 1713:" 1709:" 1677:( 1662:( 1635:" 1631:" 1628:" 1624:" 1592:( 1571:( 1556:( 1534:( 1517:( 1496:" 1492:" 1470:" 1462:" 1459:" 1457:. 1445:" 1432:( 1417:( 1404:" 1400:" 1382:( 1360:( 1345:( 1332:" 1328:" 1314:( 1296:( 1280:( 1247:( 1228:( 1181:( 1154:( 1099:( 1074:( 1044:( 1005:( 958:( 910:( 873:( 848:( 833:( 809:( 773:( 747:( 730:( 704:( 682:( 658:( 628:( 597:( 574:( 548:( 528:( 496:( 472:) 468:( 456:( 449:) 445:( 433:( 398:. 277:. 250:) 246:( 206:. 158:. 53::

Index


level-5 vital article
content assessment
WikiProjects
WikiProject icon
Georgia (country)
WikiProject icon
Georgia (country) portal
WikiProject Georgia (country)
Georgia
Georgians
the discussion
Top
project's importance scale
WikiProject icon
Former countries
WikiProject icon
WikiProject Former countries
join the project
WikiProject icon
Caucasia
inactive
WikiProject icon
WikiProject Caucasia
inactive
WikiProject icon
Middle Ages
WikiProject icon
icon
Middle Ages portal

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑