Bodorna

Bodorna

Infobox Settlement
official_name = Bodorna ბოდორნა
name_local = ბოდორნა



imagesize = 250px
pushpin_

mapsize = 280px
map_caption = Location of Bodorna in Georgia
subdivision_type = Country
subdivision_name = GEO
subdivision_type1 = Mkhare
subdivision_name1 = Mtskheta-Mtianeti
area_magnitude =
area_total_km2 =
area_land_km2 =
area_water_km2 =
population_as_of =
population_footnotes =
population_total =
population_density_km2 =
timezone = GMT
utc_offset = +4
timezone_DST = GMT
utc_offset_DST = +5
latd=42 |latm=5 |lats=19.67 |latNS=N
longd=44 |longm=42 |longs=14.6 |longEW=E
elevation_m = 880
website =
footnotes =

Bodorna ( _ka. ბოდორნა) is a small village in Georgia, situated on the Georgian Military Road, 8 km from the town of Dusheti, Mtskheta-Mtianeti region, in the east of the country.

Bodorna lies on the right bank of the small river Dushetis-Khevi, a right tributary to the Aragvi River, at an elevation of 880 m. above sea level. The village was fortified in the Middle Ages in a way to accommodate the fugitives from nearby locales during foreign incursions. Thus, the man-hewn caves at Bodorna are known to have served as a shelter for the populace of the Aragvi valley when the Turco-Mongol army of Timur penetrated the Georgian highlands in the 1390s.

South of the village is a 15 m. high column whose origin is not completely clear. It resembles a human figure, that of a monk, and may be a man-made structure, hewed from a natural, denudational relict, for cult purposes in the early Christian period, possibly the 5th-6th centuries. The column contains a large cave, one of those that were utilized as a shelter during Timur’s invasion. According to a medieval chronicle, the soldiers of Timur descended the column using ropes and shoot fiery arrows into the crowded cave.

Bodorna is a home to a 15th-century Church of the Nativity of the Mother of God, which then served as a familial abbey and a burial ground for the Dukes of Aragvi of the Shaburidze family. It was almost completely rebuild in 1717 as revealed by a contemporaneous inscription. The extant structure is a single-nave domed church erected on a woody hill ("pictured").ka icon "Bodorna", in: "Georgian Soviet Encyclopedia", vol. 2, p. 442. Tbilisi, 1977.]

References


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  • Shaburidze — ( ka. შაბურიძე) were a Georgian noble family, which claimed descent from the Sassanid dynasty of ancient Persia and to which belonged the Duchy of Aragvi from the 13th century to the 15th. According to traditional accounts, the family descended… …   Wikipedia

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