Author | Epoch | Work | Type | Quote | Term |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “Georgian kingdom would receive ius bellum, i.e. the right of and cause for war”. (pg. 206) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “He is Catholic, he knows Latin and some other languages like Georgian”. (pg. 182) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “He could not wait to look into the Parchment written with Latin letters”. (pg. 133) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “A bronze centaur looked down on him from the pedestal. The horseman had a face of a twice-born Dionysus” (pg.121) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “The blue of night was traversed by hundreds of goat-headed Centaurs” (pg. 107) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “I am an Orthodox Christian, Georgian, and not a hypocrite Roman”. |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “On the one side a word “Barcil” was embroidered in gold […] The writing was in Latin” (pg.89) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “We inherited Romans’ malice, this won’t do us any good in Georgia”. (pg. 82) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “Kums-town was an old and firmly built castle, with walls and towers built by Romans” (pg. 68) |
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Chabua Amirejibi | 1921-2013 | Giorgi the Splendid (Chabua Amirejibi, Giorgi the Splendid, Tbilisi, 2008) | Prose | “Anania came across the ancient manuscript of Aristotle’s “Metaphysics” at the Baghdad market, his soul trembled with craving”. (pg. 59) |
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