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- The palace-fortress of Queen Darejan (became the 3rd wife of Heraclius II at the age of 12, bore him 23 kids, had some differences) was built in 1776.

- After Heraclius’ death in 1798, his firstborn George XII sent here Darejan who did not share the pro-Russian views of her husband and stepson.

- Darejan continued her struggle under house arrest (with the active support of her sons), but George died of angina pectoris just in 1800.

- After this, Russian troops occupied Kartli-Kakheti and took Darejan to Russia, ending the thousand-year reign of the Bagrationi.

- In the queen’s residence, a theological seminary was established, and later a monastery. The church was decorated with Renaissance-style frescoes.

- Beyond the palace wall rise the 13th-century Metekhi Church and the Narikala Church built in 1996 (on the site of the exploded medieval one).

- The Trinity Cathedral built in 2004 in neo-Georgian style with an Armenian umbrella dome, gilded in the Russian way. Expensive and rich, so to say.

- The abundance of annexes is intended to somewhat balance the insatiable height (about 80-100 m, depending on whence and where you count).

- David IV the Builder, a cornerstone, and grapevines planted in a Maltese cross (so that the kings would have a heraldic one).

- Holy gates, gate church, bell tower. The cathedral’s construction completed the 17th-century Armenian pantheon’s destruction begun by Beria.

- Bell towers aren’t exactly a Georgian style, but even the brief fashion for them in the 13th century featured entirely different forms.

- Gia Japaridze’s unholy kisses on the Baratashvili Bridge.

- Massimiliano Fuksas’s neo-futuristic petal-or-mushroom-shaped Public Service Hall fits in well (unlike his tubular Exhibition Hall).

- Here’s Zorba & Bond, a postmodern eclectic hotel with elements of Caucasian, Persian and European architecture.

- Grandparents are fun!

- Archaeopteryx was predicted by Darwin as an important connecting link. Yet they were only found in Bavaria, Gosha made up a bit about Georgia.

- I also have questions about the proportions.

- A bit of Chopin.

- Born romantic!

- The 15th-century Armenian Norashen Church periodically becomes the site of heated clashes between fraternal religions.

- The Great Synagogue and the October 7 memorial.

- It actually works.

- Semi-underground sulphur baths in the Baths Quarter (Abanotubani), where the Iberian king Vakhtang Gorgasali supposedly founded Tiflis.

- Levan Chkhartishvili’s “Falcon and Pheasant”, which fell into the king’s sulphur source of inspiration during a hunt. You never know.

- Orbeliani bathhouse in the Persian style with a pointed facade and minarets.

- The Juma Mosque (the only one in Tbilisi) reconciled Shiites and Sunnis. Why fight when you can not to?

- Bridge of love.

- And one more.

- Make love, not war!

- And don’t drink and drive.
