TRANSCAUCASIA

trănzˌkôkāˈzhə, –shə, trănsˌ–, transitional region between Europe and Asia, extending from the Greater Caucasus to the Turkish and Iranian borders, between the Black and Caspian seas. It comprises the Republics of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. Tbilisi, Baky, Batumi, Yerevan, and Kutaisi are the major cities. Between the Greater Caucasus in the north and the Lesser Caucasus in the south is the Colchis lowland. The Kura, Rion, Inguri, and Alazan rivers are important for both hydroelectricity and irrigation. The region's natural resources are oil, manganese, copper, clays, and building stones. Manufactures include oil-industry machinery, mining equipment, metal products, automobiles, chemicals, plastics, cotton and silk cloth, and leather footwear. The climate is sub-tropical. The area's chief crops are cotton, grain, sugar beets, sunflowers, tobacco, citrus fruits, tea, and plants for essential oils. Transcaucasia's mineral springs have given rise to numerous health resorts; seaside resorts also abound. The population consists of Georgians, Armenians, Azeris, Assyrians (Christians), Ossets, Abkhas, Talyshin, Kurds, and Tats. An independent federal democratic Transcaucasian republic existed in 1917–18. The federation was dissolved in May, 1918, into the republics of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. After the three republics were conquered by the Red Army, the Transcaucasian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic was formed; it joined the USSR in Dec., 1922, becoming one of the four original federated republics. In 1936, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia were reestablished as separate union republics. In 1991, all three republics seceded from the USSR.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Transcaucasia
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books on: Transcaucasia  - 804 results

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...stimulated the Armenians influx in Transcaucasia, including Nagorno-Karabakh, where...Soviet politics deliberately wedged into Transcaucasia the Karabakh Autonomous Region and...along with the rapid strengthening in Transcaucasia of the economic positions of the united...
...near abroad 3 in general, and with Transcaucasia in particular, it is an essential...factor affecting Russian policy towards Transcaucasia is the impact events there have on...fears underlying Russian policy towards Transcaucasia are rooted in history, it is as well...
...Markazi va Ghafghaz Central Asia and the Caucasus Review Tehran , 2, No. 1 Summer 1993 , 59 98. 25. REF/RL web journal, Transcaucasia and Central Asia, 29 May 2001. 26. Bahram Amirahmadian, The Trend of Developments in the Karabakh Crisis, Majelieh...
Chapter 10 Transcaucasia The Russian/titular relationships in Transcaucasia are similar, but not identical, to those in Central Asia. Russias incorporation of Transcaucasia can be compared to the colonial conquest and...
...and Black seas is the region known as Transcaucasia, or Transcaucasus, home of the three...Armenia, and Azerbaijan. Bordering Transcaucasia on the south and west are Iran and...by ethnic and political conflict, Transcaucasia has become in the 1990s the Yugoslavia...
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journal articles on: Transcaucasia  - 81 results

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Ankaras Baku-centered Transcaucasia Policy: Has It Failed? by Suha...least limiting Russian return to Transcaucasia; and participating in Azerbaijani...reduce the Russian presence in Transcaucasia, Ankara wants good relations...
Chronology: Central Asia and Transcaucasia Central Asia and Transcaucasia See also, Petroleum Affairs, Regional Affairs, Iran 1995 Jan. 21: Kazakhstans President Nursultan Nazarbayev signed an agreement establishing "joint forces" with Russia...
Chronology: Central Asia and Transcaucasia Central Asia and Transcaucasia See also, Petroleum Affairs, Regional Affairs, Afghanistan 1997 Apr. 28: In Istanbul, Armenian president Levon Ter-Petrossian met with Azerbaijani president Haydar...
Chronology: Central Asia / Transcaucasia by Jordan M. Rankin 1996 Nov. 4: Armenian prime minister Hrant Bagratian resigned, citing personal reasons. The resignation...
Chronology: Central Asia and Transcaucasia 1998 July 18: In Cholpon-Ata, Kyrgyzstan, the presidents of the member states of the Central Asian Economic Community-Kazakhstan...
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magazine articles on: Transcaucasia  - 29 results

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...Lower Karabakh. Christianity spread in Transcaucasia in the early fourth century, although...giving the latter a free hand in Transcaucasia. In the same year Ottoman troops invaded...with the incorporation of the rest of Transcaucasia into the Russian Empire after the second...
...followed, lasting until Soviet power was established across Transcaucasia in 1921. With various groups, such as Bolsheviks, Mensheviks...Russia, which, for better or worse, has interests in Transcaucasia. It was, and will remain, folly to ignore this. Some...
...army as the only organised force east of the Black Sea. Transcaucasia swiftly split into three jealous, suspicious ethnic factions...convinced that, with the War at an end, the Allied presence in Transcaucasia could save Armenia. But, in Major Gibbons own words...
...to the independent republics established in the Ukraine, Transcaucasia and Central Asia in the immediate post-Revolution years...attention to the democratic content of their politics. Neither Transcaucasia, nor Central Asia have more than transient experience of...
...near abroad or soft underbelly to the south, i.e., Transcaucasia and Central Asia. Russia systematically annexed these territories...Bulgaria, and Serbia) and in the "near abroad, of Transcaucasia and Central Asia. The more complex challenge, however...
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encyclopedia articles on: Transcaucasia  - 12 results

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TRANSCAUCASIA tranz koka zh , sh , trans , transitional region between Europe and Asia, extending from the Greater Caucasus to the Turkish and...
...two major regions North Caucasia and Transcaucasia. North Caucasia, in Russia and composed...Caucasia with the second major section, Transcaucasia. This region includes the southern...of Kalmykia and the Rostov region. Transcaucasia includes Georgia (including Abkhazia...
...677,000), c.26,900 sq mi (69,700 sq km), in W Transcaucasia. Georgia borders on the Black Sea in the west, on Turkey...reached its greatest expansion (it then included the whole of Transcaucasia) and cultural flowering. From that period dates the national...
...Military Road. Located in a mountain-ringed basin, Tbilisi is the economic, administrative, and cultural heartland of Transcaucasia. It is also a major transportation center. Industries include printing and publishing, machine building, food processing...
...Eastern Church predominates in E and SE Europe; and there are pockets of of Muslim predominance in the Balkan Peninsula and Transcaucasia. With the exception of the northern third of the continent, Europe is densely populated. Eleven cities have populations...
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