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Nikoladze family

Georgian noble family

Nikoladze family

Summary

Georgian noble family

[[Niko Nikoladze]] and his family in Allèves (Savoy, France), 1902

The Nikoladze family (ნიკოლაძე) is an old Georgian noble family (aznauri) known since 14th to 16th century, originating in the Kingdom of Imereti.

History

The first mention of the name dates back to 14th century in the monastery of Tbeti (The Tbethi Synodal Records) under the name of "Nikolasdze" (ნიკოლასძე). The Nikoladze family was also listed in the documents of the Catholicate of Abkhazia (Western Georgia). After the annexation of Georgia by the Russian Empire in 1801, the family became incorporated into the Russian nobility. The Nikoladze family was included in the list of nobles of Georgia in 1860 in the so-called "Barkhatnaia Kniga" published in Saint Petersburg.

The family became a prominent part of Georgian intelligentsia from the 1860s to the 1980s, with members of the family playing critical roles in the economic, political, and social transformation of Georgia during the periods of late Imperial Russia, the Democratic Republic of Georgia, and Soviet Georgia.

Niko Nikoladze is well-known for his contributions to Georgian journalism and intellectualism, and he was the first Georgian to receive a doctorate from a Western European university. His wife, Olga Guramishvili-Nikoladze, was a notable educator that introduced polytechnic education to her school, and their son Giorgi Nikoladze was a notable mathematician, professor, translator, and metallurgist. Salome Zourabichvili, the fifth president of Georgia, is the great-granddaughter of Niko Nikoladze.

Notable members

  • Niko Nikoladze (1843–1928), writer, m./div. Bogumila Zemaianskaia; m. Olga Guramishvili-Nikoladze (1855–1940), biologist
  • Unnamed son (died in infancy; of first marriage)
  • Elizabeth "Lolo" Nikoladze (of first marriage), m. Camille Huysmans (1871–1968), prime minister of Belgium
  • Nino Nikoladze (1876–1959; of first marriage), m. (1872–1940), politician
    • (1898–1944), economist and philosopher, m. (1902–1952)
    • Hélène Zourabichvili (1929–2023), historian and politician, m. (1928–2023)
      • Emmanuel Carrère (born 1957), author, screenwriter and film director
      • Marina Carrère d'Encausse (born 1961), physician and author
    • Nicolas Zourabichvili (born 1936), composer
      • François Zourabichvili (1965–2006), philosopher
    • (1906–1975), engineer, m. (1921–2016)
    • Salome Zourabichvili (born 1952), fifth president of Georgia, m./div. (born 1946)
      • (born 1981), diplomat
      • (born 1984), journalist
    • , physician
  • (1884–1981; of second marriage), chemist, m. (1872–1942), scientist
  • Giorgi Nikoladze (1888–1931; of second marriage), mathematician, m. Georgetta Gambashidze
  • Tamara Nikoladze (1892–1939; of second marriage), m. Nikoloz Muskhelishvili (1891–1976), mathematician
  • Koka Nikoladze (born 1989), composer
  • Iakob Nikoladze (1876–1951), artist

References

References

  1. {{in lang. link. (2011-07-21 Georgian Genealogy Archive.)
  2. link. (2011-07-21 Georgian Genealogy Archive.)
  3. "A History of Georgian Scientific Intelligentsia: The Case of the Nikoladze Family 1860-1981 - ProQuest".
  4. "From St. Petersburg to Notre Dame".
  5. (2024-09-09). "The Life and Legacy of Niko Nikoladze - Georgia's Visionary Leader".
  6. Bamberger, Benjamin. (2019). "Mountains of discontent: Georgian alpinism and the limits of Soviet equality, 1923-1955". University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
  7. (16 August 2018). "Salome Zurabishvili Launches Presidential Campaign, Outlines Priorities".
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