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Darial Gorge

Mountain pass in Georgia (country)

Darial Gorge

Summary

Mountain pass in Georgia (country)

FieldValue
nameDarial Gorge
other_nameCaucasian Gates
photoDarial Gorge, Terek River, Georgia.jpg
photo_captionDarial Gorge near Georgia–Russia border.
mapCaucasus mountains#Georgia#Russia North Ossetia–Alania
countryGeorgia
Russia
reliefcanyon
coordinates
riverTerek

Russia The Darial Gorge is a river gorge on the border between Russia and Georgia. It is at the east base of Mount Kazbek, south of present-day Vladikavkaz. The gorge was carved by the river Terek, and is approximately 13 km long. The steep granite walls of the gorge can be as much as 1800 m tall in some places. The Georgian Military Road runs through the gorge.

History

The pass in [[Luigi Villari]]'s book ''Fire and Sword in the Caucasus'' (1906).
[[Georgian Orthodox]] Church of the Archangel in the Dariali Gorge near border with Russia.

The name Darial originates from Dar-i Alān (در الان) meaning "Gate of the Alans" in Persian. The Alans held the lands north of the pass in the first centuries AD. It was fortified in ancient times both by the Romans and Persians; the fortification was variously known as the Iberian Gates or the Caucasian Gates. It was also frequently mistakenly referred to as the Caspian Gates in classical literature. The pass is mentioned in the Georgian annals under the names of Darialani; Strabo calls it Porta Caucasica and Porta Cumana; Ptolemy, Fortes Sarmatica; it was sometimes known as Porta Caucasica and Portae Caspiae (a name bestowed also on the "gate" or pass beside the Caspian Sea at Derbent); and the Tatars call it Darioly.

Josephus wrote that Alexander the Great built iron gates at an unspecified pass which some Latin and Greek authors identified with Darial.

Darial Pass fell into Sassanid hands in 252–253, when the Sassanid Empire conquered and annexed Iberia. The control of the Darial Pass switched to the Western Turkic Kaganate in 628, when Tong Yabgu Kagan signed a treaty with Iberia, transferring over to the Kaganate the control of all its cities and fortresses, and establishing free trade. Control of Darial Pass switched to the Arab Rashidun Caliphate in 644. Afterwards, it was controlled by the Kingdom of Georgia. There was a battle point between the Ilkhanate and the Golden Horde, then indirectly controlled by Safavids and Qajar state. in 1597, it was invaded and occupied by Kabardians. until it was captured by Russian Empire after annexation of Kingdom of Georgia in 1801–1830. It remained a strategic Russian outpost under Russian control until the dismemberment of the Soviet Union.

Importance

The Darial Pass was historically important as one of only two crossings of the Caucasus mountain range, the other being the Derbent Pass. As a result, Darial Gorge has been fortified since at least 150 BC. In Greco-Roman imagination in the late Antiquity, the Darial Pass was a boundary between the known world (oikoumene) and the unknown world where barbarians lived.

As the main border crossing between Georgia and Russia, it has been the site of Russians fleeing conscription for the Russo-Ukrainian War.

Notes

References

;Bibliography

References

  1. {{EB1911
  2. (1980). "Natural Wonders of the World". Reader's Digest Association, Inc.
  3. Sauer, Eberhard. (2020). "Dariali: The 'Caspian Gates' in the Caucasus from Antiquity to the Age of the Huns and the Middle Ages". Oxbow Books.
  4. Van Donzel, Emeri. (2010). "Gog and Magog in Early Syriac and Islamic Sources: Sallam's Quest for Alexander's Wall". Brill Academic Publishers.
  5. Reynolds, Gabriel Said. (2007). "The Qur'an in its Historical Context". Routledge.
  6. Ehsan Yarshater. ''The Cambridge history of Iran'', Volume 1. Cambridge University Press, 1983. {{ISBN. 0-521-20092-X, 9780521200929, p. 141
  7. [[Movses Kagankatvatsi]]. ''History of Agvans'' (Russian trans. and ed. by [[Patkanov]]). St. Petersburg, 1861, pp. 121
  8. Akram A.I. ''The Muslim Conquest of Persia'', Ch:16 {{ISBN. 978-0-19-597713-4
  9. (2024). "How Did All These Barbarians Get Here? The (Im)Permeable Gates of the Caucasus in Late Antiquity in Jerome’s Letter 77 and Claudian’s Against Rufinus". PHASIS.
  10. Ivanova, Ksenia. (2022-10-01). "Panic, Bribes, Ditched Cars and a Dash on Foot: Portraits of Flight From Russia". The New York Times.
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