User:MacTire02/kishtey geinnee

After acquiring Egrisi via a dynastic union in the 780s [][1] Abkhazia became the dominant power in the region. Kingdom of Abkhazia/Egrisi, also known as Kingdom of Egrisi or the Kingdom of the Abkhazs, was established.[2] The Georgian language, which had been secondary language, replaced the Greek as a primery language.The kingdom flourished[3] between 850 and 950 when it liberated significant parts of Eastern Georgia including Tbilisi from Arabian Rule. A period of unrest and chaos caused by conflict betwean major powers in Georgia (Kakhetia Abkhazia and Meskhetia) ended as Abkhazia and other eastern Georgian states were unified into a single Georgian monarchy under King Bagrat III (who himself was buried in the Monastery of Bedia in the Tkvarcheli district of Abkhazia) in the end of the 10th, and the beginning of 11th centuries. In the 16th century, North Caucasian ( related to Adigean) tribes started to migrate to Abkhazia most probably[4] due lack of land and constant conflicts in the North Caucasus. Georgia weakened from Mongolian invaisions was valuable for such migrations into Abkhazia.[5] This was also escalated by geographical changes and to the mountain slide[6] in Abkhazia that for sometime almost complitely isolated the land from Georgia. North-West Caucasian tribes, who are referred to as Jikks in Georgian sources (foreign sources use the general term of "Abazs"), settled in Abkhazia. The indigenous population of Abkhazia could not duly "assimilate" to the new comers, from a social and religious point of view. The mass of resettled migrants replaced the local population, which resulted in a radical change of ethnic composition in this area. [7] Georgians called this new ethnic group "Abkhaz", according to their place of residence, whilst Abkhaz kept on calling themselves "Apsuas". Identification of ethnonyms "Apsua" and "Abkhaz" caused chaos and confusion for researchers of the history of Abkhazia. It's worth mentioning, that the self-name of the Abkhaz "Apsua" is a phonetic variation of the ethnonym "Abaza". It is recognized[8] in linguistics that the Abkhaz (Apsua) language together with the Abaz language form a linguistic entity,[9] and there is only a dialectical difference between the two languages.

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