Daba (settlement)
This article needs to be updated.(May 2020) |
Daba (Georgian: დაბა) is a type of human settlement in Georgia, a "small town".[1][2] It is equivalent to an urban-type settlement in some other countries of the former Soviet Union.
In present-day Georgia, daba is typically defined as a settlement with the population of no less than 3,000 and established social and technical infrastructure, which enables it to function as a local economic and cultural center; it, furthermore, should not possess large agricultural lands. The status of daba can also be granted to a settlement with the population of less than 3,000, provided it functions as an administrative center of the district (municipality) or has a prospect of further economic and population growth in the nearest future.[1]
Etymology
[edit]Daba is the term well known in Old Georgian, where it had the meaning "cornfield, hamlet". It is derived from a Common Kartvelian root *dab(a), which is also a source of the Svan däb, "cornfield", and, possibly, the Mingrelian dobera (dobira), "arable land". The derivative words are udabno, "desert", and mdabali, "low".[3] The name daba is also a basis for several placenames in Georgia, such as Daba, Akhaldaba ("new daba"), Q'veldaba ("cheese daba"), and Dabadzveli ("old daba").
List of daba in Georgia
[edit]As of 2011, 50 settlements are categorized in Georgia as daba. These, listed according to a population size (2002 census), are:
Daba | Population (2002) | Status granted | District/Municipality | Region or autonomous republic | Note | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Surami | 9,800 | 1926 | Khashuri | Shida Kartli | |
2. | Tskneti | 8,200 | 1967 | Vake District, Tbilisi |
Tbilisi | |
3. | Chakvi | 8,100 | 1954 | Kobuleti | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
4. | Kazreti | 7,300 | 1965 | Bolnisi | Kvemo Kartli | |
5. | Khelvachauri | 6,100 | 1968 | Khelvachauri | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
6. | Ochkhamuri | 5,000 | 1954 | Kobuleti | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
7. | Chkhorotsqu | 5,000 | 1960 | Chkhorotsqu | Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti | |
8. | Laituri | 3,600 | 1953 | Ozurgeti | Guria | |
9. | Tianeti | 3,600 | 1960 | Tianeti | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | |
10. | Shaumiani | 3,600 | 1932 | Marneuli | Kvemo Kartli | |
11. | Agara | 3,500 | 1934 | Kareli | Shida Kartli | |
12. | Makhinjauri | 3,400 | 1959 | Khelvachauri | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
13. | Aspindza | 3,200 | 1961 | Aspindza | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
14. | Manglisi | 2,800 | 1926 | Tetritsqaro | Kvemo Kartli | |
15. | Kveda Nasakirali | 2,600 | 1976 | Ozurgeti | Guria | |
16. | Mestia | 2,600 | 1968 | Mestia | Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti | |
17. | Akhalgori | 2,500 | 1960 | Akhalgori | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | Controlled by the Republic of South Ossetia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
18. | Kharagauli | 2,400 | 1944 | Kharagauli | Imereti | |
19. | Akhaldaba | 2,400 | 1965 | Borjomi | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
20. | Didi Lilo | 2,400 | 1974 | Tbilisi | Tbilisi | |
21. | Chokhatauri | 2,100 | 1947 | Chokhatauri | Guria | |
22. | Kulashi | 2,000 | 1961 | Samtredia | Imereti | |
23. | Bakuriani | 2,000 | 1926 | Borjomi | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
24. | Zhinvali | 1,900 | 1976 | Dusheti | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | |
25. | Kojori | 1,900 | 1968 | Tbilisi | Tbilisi | |
26. | Stepantsminda | 1,800 | 1966 | Kazbegi | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | |
27. | Lentekhi | 1,700 | 1969 | Lentekhi | Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti | |
28. | Shorapani | 1,600 | 1938 | Zestaponi | Imereti | |
29. | Pasanauri | 1,600 | 1966 | Dusheti | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | |
30. | Ureki | 1,400 | 1953 | Ozurgeti | Guria | |
31. | Abastumani | 1,400 | 1926 | Adigeni | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
32. | Naruja | 1,300 | 1987 | Ozurgeti | Guria | |
33. | Keda | 1,200 | 1966 | Keda | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
34. | Khulo | 1,100 | 1964 | Khulo | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
35. | Tsagveri | 1,100 | 1926 | Borjomi | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
36. | Adigeni | 1,000 | 1961 | Adigeni | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
37. | Shuakhevi | 0,900 | 1974 | Shuakhevi | Autonomous Republic of Adjara | |
38. | Bakurianis Andeziti | 0,500 | 1956 | Borjomi | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
39. | Sioni | 0,400 | 1960 | Tianeti | Mtskheta-Mtianeti | |
40. | Tamarisi | 0,400 | 1982 | Marneuli | Kvemo Kartli | |
41. | Bediani | 0,300 | 1963 | Tsalka | Samtskhe-Javakheti | |
42. | Trialeti | 0,300 | 1944 | Tsalka | Kvemo Kartli | |
43. | Kharistvala | 0,000 | 1956 | Ambrolauri | Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti | Depopulated as a result of the 1991 earthquake and a series of avalanches |
44. | Bichvinta | - | 1963 | Gagra | Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia | Controlled by the Republic of Abkhazia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
45. | Gantiadi | - | 1966 | Gagra | Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia | Controlled by the Republic of Abkhazia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
46. | Miusera | - | 1990 | Gudauta | Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia | Controlled by the Republic of Abkhazia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
47. | Gulripshi | - | 1975 | Gulripshi | Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia | Controlled by the Republic of Abkhazia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
48. | Kornisi | - | - | Kareli | Shida Kartli | Controlled by the Republic of South Ossetia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
49. | Kvaisa | - | - | Oni | Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti | Controlled by the Republic of South Ossetia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
50. | Java | - | - | Java | Shida Kartli | Controlled by the Republic of South Ossetia Russian-occupied territory under the Law of Georgia on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008)[4] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b (in Georgian) მოხელის სამაგიდო ლექსიკონი / გაეროს განვითარების პროგრამა; [შემდგ.: სამსონ ურიდია და სხვ.; რედ.: ვაჟა გურგენიძე] - თბ., 2004 - 483გვ.: ცხრ.; 24სმ. - (საჯარო მოსამსახურის ბ-კა). - ISBN 99940-0-063-2.
- ^ Allen, William Edward David (1932, reissued 1971), A History of the Georgian People: From the Beginning Down to the Russian Conquest in the Nineteenth Century, p. 240. Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0-7100-6959-6.
- ^ Klimov, Georgy (1998), Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages, p. 36. Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 3-11-015658-X.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Law of Georgian on Occupied Territories (431-IIs, October 23, 2008) Archived June 24, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. State Ministry for Reintegration. Retrieved on December 15, 2011.