Top 10 similar words or synonyms for guramishvili

akhvlediani    0.858450

kldiashvili    0.843983

kakabadze    0.838149

bakradze    0.835171

ioseb    0.822446

baratashvili    0.818381

avalishvili    0.817393

tsitsishvili    0.816136

amiranashvili    0.815894

machavariani    0.815695

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for guramishvili

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Guramishvili Guramishvili (; ) is a Georgian noble family derived from the House of Zevdginidze and known since the 16th century in the eastern provinces of the country.
Guramishvili The possible forefather of the Guramishvili family, Guram Zevdginidze, is recorded in the document dated from the period of 1401-1413. The surname “Guramishvili” appears later in the 16th century. The family was listed among the grandees in the Kingdom of Kakheti. Their possessions were centered on the villages Saguramo, Avchala, and Tsitsamuri. Throughout the 17th century, the family held a hereditary title of sup’raji, a court office responsible for serving the royal table. In the 18th century, the family seems to have been in a relative decline as we hear them holding relatively low titles such as bok’auli (bailiff) and milakhvari (a provincial Master of the Horse). After Russian annexation of Georgia, the family was confirmed in the princely rank (knyaz Guramov, Гурамовы) in 1826 and 1850.
Guramishvili The family was made famous by Prince David Guramishvili (1705-1792), an eminent poet known for his troubled life.
Davit Guramishvili Born in the village of Gorisubani into the Georgian princely ("tavadi") family of Guramishvili (a branch of the greater Amilakhvari house), Davit Guramishvili spent his early years in his patrimonial estate near Saguramo. As an eighteen-year-old he took part in the battle of Zedavela, which resulted in the defeat of King Vakhtang VI of Kartli at the hands of Ottoman army, Dagestani clansmen and renegade Georgians that plunged Georgia into complete anarchy. This period is chronicled in several sections of Guramishvili’s "Davitiani" (დავითიანი) conventionally called "Georgia’s Afflictions" (ქართლის ჭირი).
Davit Guramishvili Here he introduced Georgian water-mills to the Ukrainian peasantry and wrote poetry of lament, repent, and console for the misfortunes of Georgia and his own life. Apart from the Georgian folk sub-text, he also exploited Russian, Ukrainian and Polish motifs and combined, in the words of Professor Donald Rayfield, "two apparently incompatible elements, the Georgian psalmist’s spiritual asceticism and the Russian peasant’s carnal hedonism."