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Michel Tamarati


Michel Tamarati, born Mikhail Tamarashvili (Georgian: მიხეილ თამარაშვილი), (September 1858 – September 16, 1911) was a Georgian Roman Catholic priest and historian, known for his oft-cited French-language history of the Georgian Christianity L'Eglise géorgienne des origines jusqu' à nos jours published in Rome in 1910. He died while trying to rescue a drowning man in stormy sea near Santa Marinella, Italy.

Michel Tamarati was born as Alexander Tamarashvili (ალექსანდრე თამარაშვილი) in the Georgian Catholic family in Akhaltsikhe, then part of the Russian Empire. He received his early education in Akhaltsikhe and Kutaisi before continuing his studies at a Georgian Catholic parish college in Constantinople in 1878. After three years of study in Spain, he returned to Constantinople, where he was ordained as a priest under the name of Michel (მიხეილ, Mikheil). In 1888, he graduated from the Seminary of St. Lazarus in Paris and returned to Georgia, where he became an abbot at the Roman Catholic church of the Assumption in Tiflis. Considered by the Imperial Russian authorities to be politically unreliable, Tamarashvili left Georgia and finally settled, in 1891, in Rome, where he, now known as Michel Tamarati, obtained a doctorate in theology from the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas in 1894. He spent years in the archives of Europe, studying the hitherto unexplored history of Roman Catholicism in Georgia and the Georgian–Western European cultural and political interaction. His landmark research in this area, ისტორია კათოლიკობისა ქართველთა შორის ("History of Catholicism among Georgians"), appeared in Georgian in Tiflis in 1902.


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