• ქართული
  • Українська
  • Русский
Donate Now
No Result
View All Result
Independence Avenue Media
  • Home
  • SPOTLIGHT
  • INTERVIEW
  • DEEP DIVE
  • VIDEO
  • Forged by War
  • DIASPORA
Independence Avenue Media
  • Home
  • SPOTLIGHT
  • INTERVIEW
  • DEEP DIVE
  • VIDEO
  • Forged by War
  • DIASPORA
No Result
View All Result
Independence Avenue Media
Home DIASPORA

First printed Georgian Books now at the Library of Congress

Kartlos Sharashenidzeby Kartlos Sharashenidze
April 14, 2026
A A
Summarize with ChatGPTShare on X

Nearly four centuries ago, a Georgian cleric and diplomat traveled to Rome on a mission to save his kingdom. The mission failed, but what he left behind made history.

In 1629, at the printing press of Propaganda Fide — the Catholic Church’s missionary printing house in Rome — two books came off the press: a Georgian alphabet with prayers, and a Georgian-Italian dictionary.

They were the first Georgian-language texts ever set in movable type. They were printed some 80 years before Georgia had a printing press of its own.
Now, the books that marked that moment are held at the Library of Congress, alongside thousands of Georgian books, periodicals, maps, archival documents, photographs, and other materials.

For Washington’s Georgian diaspora, the collection carries a more personal meaning. The community traces its roots to exiles who fled after the Soviet occupation of Georgia’s first democratic republic in 1921 and the failed uprising of 1924 — building institutions to preserve their history far from home. The Georgian Association in the USA, founded in New York in 1932 by those exiles, continues that effort through its “Making of Modern Georgia” series, organizing visits and events at the Library.

Tags: First Georgian BooksgeorgiaGeorgia’s first democratic republicLibrary of Congress
Kartlos Sharashenidze

Kartlos Sharashenidze

Kartlos Sharashenidze is co-founder, executive editor, and Georgian Service managing editor of Independence Avenue Media, with expertise in U.S. foreign policy and Eurasian geopolitics. A former documentarian and reporter at Voice of America, he got his start in his native Georgia at Georgian Public Broadcaster and Imedi TV.

Recommended Reading

edited images of Viktor Orbán and Péter Magyar in Hungary’s election scene
INTERVIEW

A ‘Generational Challenge’ — What Changes After Orban

by Kartlos Sharashenidze
0
Jaap Arriens via Reuters Connect
DEEP DIVE

Orban is Gone: What it Means for Ukraine, the EU, Russia and the U.S. 

by Glenn Kates
0
Samuel Boivin- REUTERS - Photo Illustration - Reopening Of Maritime Transport In The Strait Of Hormuz
INTERVIEW

Former Blinken Adviser: Russia and China May Benefit From Iran War

by Kiryl Sukhotski
0
logo-dark

To provide clarity in a complex world through fact-based storytelling about American policy, politics, and society.

Quick Navigation

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
Donate Now

© 2025 Independence Avenue Media

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • English
    • English
    • ქართული
    • Українська
    • Русский
  • Home
  • USA
  • INTERVIEW
  • DEEP DIVE
  • Forged by War
  • DIASPORA
  • VIDEO

© 2025 Independence Avenue Media