Khevsureti () is a historical and ethnographic region in eastern Georgia. Khevsurs are the branch of Kartvelian (Georgian) people located along both the northern (Pirikita khevsureti) and southern (Piraketa khevsureti) slopes of the Great Caucasus Mountains. By the conventional definition of the Europe-Asia boundary as following the watershed of the Greater Caucasus, Khevsureti is geographically a European part of Georgia.
Comprising the small river valleys of the Migmakhevi, Shatili, Arkhoti and the Aragvi, the province borders Ingushetia and Chechnya and is included in the present-day Dusheti Municipality, Mtskheta-Mtianeti region. Khevsureti, with an area of approximately 405.3 square miles (1050 kmò), is traversed by the main crest of the Greater Caucasus Range, dividing the province in two unequal parts. Pirikita Khevsureti ("thither") is a larger one, with the area of , while Piraketa Khevsureti ("hither") occupies 428 kmò. The largest villages are and Shatili.
The territory of Khevsureti, together with the neighboring area of Pshavi, was known to medieval writers under the joint designation Pkhovi. Chronicler Leonti Mroveli mentions that after the conversion of the King Mirian III of Iberia and Queen Nana to Christianity in the early 4th century, St. Nino continued to preach among Georgian highlanders, including in Pkhovi.
Historically, Georgian highlander communities enjoyed a wide degree of autonomy. Residents of Khevsureti in particular never accepted local lords; they elected their leaders, known as khevisberi ('elder'), and a council of elders, who submitted themselves only to the Georgian crown. They were exceptional warriors, embodying traditional Georgian qualities of courage, openness and honesty, fraternity, independence and love of freedom, who were often promoted as royal bodyguards. Kings regarded them as reliable guardians of the Caucasus Mountains and the northern border of the kingdom. In battle, the Khevsurs wore flags adorned with crosses and considered themselves permanent members of the army of the sacred flags and guardians of Georgian Kings.
A story first popularized by the Russian serviceman and ethnographer Arnold Zisserman, who spent 25 years (1842âÂÂ1867) in the Caucasus, suggests that these Georgian highlanders were descendants of the last European crusaders. He claimed that their folk culture â including material, social, and religious practices â resembled that of the Crusaders. Although Zisserman claimed to have arrived at the speculation himself and is often credited with the idea, this theory had already appeared in earlier sources and was a popular story among non-Georgians in Tbilisi. The claim that any historical evidence indicates that Khevsurs may have descended from crusaders has been thoroughly discredited, and Georgian scholars have universally derided the story.
Zisserman also writes that "concerning their origin the Khevsurs have preserved a tradition: they consider a certain man by the name of Gudaneli as their first ancestor. He was a peasant vassal of a landlord in Kakheti, and to escape punishment for some crime which he had committed, he found refuge in the Pshav village of . From his two sons, Arabuli and Chinchara, originated the family of Arabuli, consisting of 320 homes, and the family of Chincharauli, with 210 homes." American traveler Richard Halliburton (1900âÂÂ1939) saw and recorded the customs of the Khevsur tribe in 1935.
The Khevsur men, dressed in chain mail and armed with broadswords, wore garments full of decoration made up of crosses and icons, which they believed to be a means of protection. Greek historian Herodotus ( â BC) notes that the Caucasian highlanders of that time were brilliant knitters and embroiders of their dress or chokha, which wore out but never faded from frequent usage. Young girls started knitting at the age of 6-7, but men studying and military training, because according to their tradition women were deprived from education and higher social status. They had a strict system of physical training in martial arts preserved as a Khridoli martial art, and which is a part of the rich Georgian military tradition.
Khevsur dances also preserved in the national dances as a warrior dance Khevsuruli.
Their religion is a unique mixture of Georgian Orthodox Christianity and pre-Christian cults. They worship sacred places locally known as jvari ('cross'), khati ('icon') or salotsavi ('sanctuary').
As of the 1873 census, Khevsureti had a population of 4,872. By 1926, the population shrank to 3,885.
Figures from the Russian imperial census of 1873 given in Dr. Gustav Radde's Die Chews'uren und ihr Land (ein monographischer Versuch) untersucht im Sommer 1876 ("The Khewsurs and their country (a monographic attempt) examined in the summer of 1876") published by Cassel in 1878, divide the villages of Khevsureti into eight communities:
1873 TOTAL: 61 villages, 1,251 households, consisting of 2,967 men and 3,029 women, in all 5,996 souls.
These figures can be compared with those given in Sergi Makalatia's Khevsureti (Komunistis Stamba, Tbilisi: 1935; in Georgian):
1935(?) TOTAL: 43 villages, 769 households, consisting of 1,492 men and 1,668 women, in all 3,160 souls.
There are, of course, many reasons for which a comparison of these two censuses would be a tricky and to some extent pointless exercise. For what it is worth, however, such a comparison does confirm a process of rural exodus during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries whereby the Khevsurs seem to have abandoned isolated or higher-altitude settlements and moved down-valley to live in villages benefiting from more clement climatic conditions (or perhaps even to live in towns further afield).
Although these figures must of course be taken with a pinch of salt (in the sense that they are based upon data whose reliability is unproven and debatable to say the least), a comparison between the two years (1873 and 1935) reveals
Some disobedience offered by the Khevsurs to the Soviet ideology was a reason for obligatory migration to the plain initiated by the government in 1951. As a result, many high-mountainous villages were deserted. Economic hardship of the last two decades also increased a tendency towards migration.