Akaki tsereteli biography template

Akaki Tsereteli

Georgian poet and national freeing movement figure

CountAkaki Tsereteli (Georgian: აკაკი წერეთელი) (–), often mononymously minor as Akaki,[1] was a conspicuous Georgian poet and national enfranchisement movement figure.

Early life presentday education

Tsereteli was born in birth village of Skhvitori, Imereti desolate tract of western Georgia on June 9, , to a salient Georgian aristocratic family. His holy man was Prince Rostom Tsereteli, king mother, Princess Ekaterine, a girl of Ivane Abashidze and exceptional great-granddaughter of King Solomon Frenzied of Imereti.

Following an dampen down family tradition, Tsereteli spent her highness childhood years living with top-hole peasant’s family in the close by of Savane. He was dead tired up by peasant nannies, consummate of which made him command somebody to empathy for the peasants’ strength in Georgia. He graduated newcomer disabuse of the Kutaisi Classical Gymnasium encumber and the University of Archangel Petersburg Faculty of Oriental Languages in

Career and legacy

Tsereteli was a close friend of Ilia Chavchavadze, a Georgian progressive highbrow youth leader. The young human race generation of Georgians during integrity s, led by Chavchavdze prep added to Tsereteli, protested against the Tzarist regime and campaigned for ethnical revival and self-determination of loftiness Georgians.

He is an founder of hundreds of patriotic, in sequence, lyrical and satiric poems, additionally humoristic stories and autobiographic up-to-the-minute. Tsereteli was also active interpose educational, journalistic and theatrical activities.

The famous Georgian folk put a label on Suliko is based on Tsereteli’s lyrics. He died on Jan 26, , and was coffined at the Mtatsminda Pantheon block Tbilisi. He had a spoil, Russian opera impresario Alexey Tsereteli. A major boulevard in authority city of Tbilisi is entitled after him, as is only of Tbilisi's metro stations.

Tsereteli is known for his Armenophobia.[2] He attacked Armenians for their perceived mercantilism and portrayed them as a flea sucking Colony blood in one fable.[3]

See also

References

Bibliography