Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
12 - Former Communications House (1932-1933, architect K. I. Solomonov) [25] is one of the examples of constructivism in Tbilisi. The facade of the building in 1953-1955 was reconstructed and redesigned according to the project of architect I. N. Chkhenkeli [26] 13 - Tbilisi Marriott Hotel, former Majestik Hotel (1915, architect G. Ter-Mikelov ...
Tiflisi is a family-owned restaurant on Queen Street in the Beaches. [2] The Georgian (also sometimes described as Central Asian ) [ 3 ] menu includes khachapuri , lavashi, and Georgian-style barbecue platters, as well as beef, cheese, and lamb varieties of khinkali .
Georgian cuisine (Georgian: ქართული სამზარეულო, romanized: kartuli samzareulo) consists of cooking traditions, techniques, and practices of Georgia. Georgian cuisine has a distinct character, while bearing some similarities with various national cuisines of the South Caucasus , the Middle East and Eastern Europe .
In addition to being home to top-ranking restaurants, Georgia boasts nine hotels and two spas that earned spots in the global rankings, results show. Worldwide, Forbes Travel Guide said over 2,000 ...
The sculpture of a man holding a horn in Tbilisi modeled on an ancient Colchian statuette affectionately monikered as "tamada".. A tamada [1] (Georgian: თამადა) is a Georgian toastmaster at a Georgian supra (feast) or at a wedding, [2] corresponding to the symposiarch at the Greek symposion or to the thyle at the Anglo-Saxon sumbel.
Statistical Yearbook Of Georgia, 2009. 36–37. Tbilisi, Georgia: Department of Statistics under the Ministry of Economic Development of Georgia. 2009. ISBN 978-99928-72-38-3 "Georgia: largest cities and towns and statistics of their population". World Gazetteer. Archived from the original on 5 January 2013
In Brooklyn's Georgian restaurants, you can expect giant soup dumplings as well as warm, soft cheesy bread at affordable prices.
Currently named after David IV of Georgia, it was originally called Mikheil Street in 1851, and Plekhanov Street after the Russian revolutionary Georgi Plekhanov from 1918 to 1988. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Since 2010, the avenue has seen major rehabilitation works, which includes the renovation of seventy buildings, as well as the road, sidewalks and street ...