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Shemokmedi

Shemokmedi
შემოქმედი
Village
View of the village from Shemokmedi Monastery
View of the village from Shemokmedi Monastery
Shemokmedi is located in Georgia (country)
Shemokmedi
Shemokmedi
Location of Shemokmedi
Coordinates: 41°54′40″N 42°04′11″E / 41.91111°N 42.06972°E / 41.91111; 42.06972Coordinates: 41°54′40″N 42°04′11″E / 41.91111°N 42.06972°E / 41.91111; 42.06972
Country  Georgia
Region Guria
Municipality Ozurgebti district flag.jpg Ozurgeti
Elevation 190 m (620 ft)
Population (2014)
 • Total 1,322

Shemokmedi (Georgian: შემოქმედი) is a village in the Ozurgeti Municipality, Guria, Georgia. It is located in western Georgia, on the Bzhuzhi river, at elevation of 190 m above sea level, 7 km east of the city of Ozurgeti. The village is home to the late medieval Shemokmedi Monastery.

Archaeological reconnaissance works conducted at Shemokmedi from 1991 to 1994 yielded fragments of pottery characteristic of the Kura–Araxes culture, suggesting that the area had already been inhabited in the Early Bronze Age.

The recorded history of Shemokmedi is inextricably bound to the monastery complex which sits on a small hill overlooking the village. The monastery was founded by the Gurieli family, rulers of the Principality of Guria, in the 15th century as a seat of a Georgian Orthodox bishop. Furthermore, it was a safe-house of church treasures and, by the late 19th century, had accumulated an extensive collection of various objects from other Georgian monasteries. At that time, the locale was fortified, housing a castle owned by the Gurieli.

During the 1819–1820 uprising in Imereti and Guria against the Imperial Russian rule, the Shemokmedi castle, then in possession of Prince Kaikhosro Gurieli, was the principal rebel stronghold in Guria. It was there that, in April 1820, the Gurians put the captured Russian interim governor of Imereti, Colonel Puzyrevsky, to death and dashed an attempt by the Russian punitive force to attack the castle. On 24 July 1820, the Russian general Aleksey Velyaminov stormed and captured Shemokmedi. The castle, dubbed by the Russian officials "an abode of brigandage", was razed to the ground in an act of revenge; houses were all burned down and farmlands and vineyards were destroyed to punish the locals with "extreme poverty".


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