Georgian mythology


Apsat was a male deity of birds and animals in the pagan Svan mythology. ...more on Wikipedia about "Apsat (mythology)"

Armazi ( Georgian - არმაზი) was the highest god in Georgian pagan pantheon. According to Georgian chronicles it was a figure of soldier, made from gold, 30m height, with green eyes and sword in the right hand. Armazi was the heighest god of Georgians from IV BC to IV AD. ...more on Wikipedia about "Armazi"

The article is about the mythology of the country of Georgia. ...more on Wikipedia about "Georgian mythology"

Kartlos ( Georgian: ქართლოს) was the legendary establisher and eponymous father of Georgia, namely its nucleus Kartli (cf. Caucasian Iberia). His story is narrated in the compilation of the medieval Georgian chronicles, Kartlis Cxovreba, taken down from oral tradition by Leonti Mroveli in the 11th century. ...more on Wikipedia about "Kartlos"

Koba was a Georgian folk hero whose legend bears a resemblance to Robin Hood. The name Koba means, "The Indomitable." ...more on Wikipedia about "Koba (folk hero)"

Ocho-Kochi, a Colchian/ Mingrelian mythological personage, instead of hair on his breast has a protuberance in the form of a pointed bone or a stone-axe. He attacks by-passing people, whom he kills, by embracing them. ...more on Wikipedia about "Ocho-Kochi"

In the Torah, Togarmah is listed in the genealogy of nations as the son of Gomer, and grandson of Japheth (Gen. 10:3). Traditionally he is regarded as the ancestor of the Turkic-speaking peoples. For example, in King Joseph's Reply, the Khazar monarch writes: ...more on Wikipedia about "Togarmah"

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