Timote Gabashvili

Timote (Timothy) Gabashvili (Georgian: ტიმოთე გაბაშვილი) (1703–1764) was a Georgian travel writer, traveler, diplomat, cartographer, religious[1] and public figure. [2] He was the first to describe the Georgian antiquities of Jerusalem on his visit to the Holy Land in the 1750s.[3]

Detail from a map of Georgian coastal fortifications, by Timote Gabashvili, 1737

Works

Mimosvla - Travels by Timote Gabashvili, 1759

gollark: I can... do some CSS/HTML, sure.
gollark: <@301477111229841410> I have a webserver which does other things, and the memory usage is very very low. So is CPU. I don't get much traffic.
gollark: Browser extensions are generally autoupdated, so they probably *could* release a malicious version which steals them and get a bunch before anyone notices.
gollark: I would be surprised if it could actually run an entirely different language to the one it's designed for. Technically you could maybe run a Python interpreter written in JS, but that would be difficult and hilariously inefficient.
gollark: Obviously your password is decrypted at some point by a password manager. I'm not sure how you'd expect it to work.

References

  1. Ebanoidze, Mzia; Wilkinson, John (2013). Pilgrimage: Timothy Gabashvili's Travels to Mount Athos, Constantinople and Jerusalem, 1755-1759. Caucasus World. Routledge. pp. 36–37. ISBN 978-0700712649. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  2. E. Metreveli., Georgian Soviet Encyclopedia, vol. 2, pg. 604-605, Tb. Year 1977.
  3. Tchekhanovets, Yana (2018). The Caucasian Archaeology of the Holy Land : Armenian, Georgian and Albanian Communities between the Fourth and Eleventh Centuries CE. Brill. p. 3. ISBN 9789004365551.
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