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Ancient lands of many faces

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  • Ancient lands of many faces

    The West Australian (Perth)
    August 17, 2013 Saturday
    First Edition


    Ancient lands of many faces

    Over 27 days next year, Travel Directors' The Treasures of Persia and
    the Caucasus tour will journey through Iran, Armenia and Georgia.
    Starting in Shiraz, travellers head first through Isfahan, Tehran and
    Tabriz, then cross the border from Maghri in Iran to Goris in Armenia.
    >From there, they will head on to Yerevan, the capital of Armenia,
    which is where I am now. And from there on through Armenia and into
    Georgia. These are a handful of highlights, from the pages of my
    notebook . . . ;
    ARMENIA;
    GEORGIA


    In the city, Yerevan.

    Mt Ararat dominates the Armenian capital's long-distance landscape,
    just as architecture in volcanic stone coloured from pink to charcoal
    does its urban one, and Christianity that of its emotions.

    Armenia was the world's first Christian country and Mt Ararat is where
    Noah's Ark is said to have come to rest, though it is now in Turkey.
    And thereby hangs a pivotal moment, for the border shifted about 1915,
    at the time of the genocide of Armenians at the hands of the Turks.

    Visits to Armenian Christian Apostolic Churches provide some of the
    framework of our days extraordinary places such as the Cathedral of
    Holy Etchmiadzin, built in AD301 and the church of St Hripsime, in
    AD618.

    Geghard Monastery sits in the mountains, with chapels hewn from rock.

    But this is also the home of apricot trees, of grapevines and of
    Ararat brandy and in an interesting visit to the factory, on a day
    when Mt Ararat appears snow-capped above it, we hear that 5000 farmers
    send their white grapes here, for the seven million bottles produced
    and exported to 28 countries last year.

    I quickly get to really like Yerevan. I walk out late one cool evening
    and sit at a cafe off a park, enjoying the coffee and the community of
    it. Young people, couples, families all stroll the streets. It's a
    relaxed scene, and too early for the jazz clubs that kick in later.
    Armenians like being up late but don't expect to easily find coffee
    and breakfast at 7am.

    On the road. From Yerevan to Dilijan.

    We are on the road, leaving the city behind and driving the grassed
    and grazed landscape. It is early summer and the country is green but
    I can imagine the harsh winters here. Very cold. Lots of snow. The
    road takes us up to 2000m. Ladas with loads, men doing roadworks with
    pickaxes, women collecting rubbish on the roadside. Cattle and garlic
    sellers with full buckets of the stuff.

    We arrive high at Lake Sevan, once the scene of a 10th century battle
    between Arabs and Armenians but now a favourite haunt for swimmers in
    a landlocked country. The Monastery of Sevan, on the hill, dates to
    AD874, overlooking the souvenir stalls and restaurants below, serving
    trout cooked over coals, local cheeses, Armenian salad of tomato,
    cucumber and onions with herbs, and flat shoti bread.

    Eat me, drink me. Dilijan and beyond.

    And then on, into Georgia, past wide, deceptively fast-flowing rivers,
    we are soon in flatter land where the temperature is often easily over
    40C in summer. And in these valleys, grapes have flourished for
    thousands of years, and so too has winemaking, hand in hand with
    Christianity. In fact, we will see a number of ancient wineries in old
    monasteries.

    Terracotta on a hill. Signagi.

    >From the roadside, it could be a scene from Italy. Pretty Signagi, in
    the east Georgia winegrowing region of Kakheti, perches on the
    shoulder of a hill, overlooking the productive, agricultural plain but
    the horizon gives its location away. For there is the great face of
    the Caucasus Mountains (part of the geographic girth that has bound
    Russia to the north), and this is most definitely Georgia.

    The medieval town of Signagi has a high, village feel, with its paved
    roads, cafes and intimate atmosphere. The hotel is comfortable and
    personable, and we sit under trees and dine on fresh cheeses and
    bread, local sparkling mineral water that tastes of the rock itself,
    and Turkish coffee smooth as melted chocolate.

    (I could stay longer.)

    The food of life. To Gremi, Alaverdi, Telavi.

    This is a culture based in agriculture, close to the food it produces.
    As we graze our way through this landscape, I feel never far away from
    the source of the food. The sheep cheeses are slightly salty, moist
    and fresh. The salad produce hasn't been gassed and trucked.
    Strawberries taste like, well, strawberries the deep, fragrant,
    pungent taste of fruit fed by the earth and ripened by the sun, and
    not forced to rush. Cherries by the bucket, for a few bucks, that glow
    like rubies.

    And, at the 11th century Alaverdi Monastery, sitting rather like a
    dreamt-up fairytale castle in the broad landscape, it all comes
    together, with its wine, its beehives, its deep, deep belief and the
    icons and young Armenians that fill its St George Cathedral. Three
    young women sing in the Georgian polyphonic style, their simultaneous,
    harmonious, contrapuntal voices rising in the still amplifier of the
    church. Vibrating. An old woman joins in.

    The many faces of history. Gori.

    We arrive in Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, and then head out on a
    day tour to Gori, stopping on the way at the ancient capital of
    Mtskheta, inhabited since the second century, and Svetitskhoveli, the
    country's royal cathedral of Georgia, which was used for centuries for
    the coronation and burial of monarchs. Many believe that the robe of
    Jesus Christ was buried here, along with a woman who died in the
    ecstasy of holding it, after it was brought here in the first century.
    The Lord's Robe or, as the locals like to call it, Christ's T-shirt.

    And then on to the Joseph Stalin Museum, where I watch an old man
    steadily standing before, and contemplating, the little house where
    the Man of Steel leader of the former Soviet Union the man behind the
    death of millions was born.

    And then to Uplistsikhe, where shelters and rooms were hewn from the
    rock from the early Iron Age to late Middle Ages. I look up the rising
    face of the rock, past the pagan caves to the church above, a basilica
    with a spiritually moving atmosphere. A day of layer upon layer of
    human history.

    Bubbles. A city alive. Tbilisi.

    The Kura River, running through the heart of the Georgian capital of
    Tbilisi, is deceptive. At first it looks like the wide, slow rivers
    that we might expect of many capital cities. Wide, paved and
    tree-lined promenades beside it, fanciful streetlights, pretty
    bridges. And then you take a closer look and see that it's actually
    fast flowing. There are even whitewater rapids, and standing waves,
    where the water turns back on itself.

    And so it is with the city of Tbilisi itself. There are narrow paved
    streets, ancient homes, domed brick sulfur baths built in the 17th
    century and still popular, a comprehensive Museum District, old women
    in black dress, men who sit slouched in the sun in wide-kneed
    contemplation.

    Running in a fast stream over that is the modern city itself, shaking
    off the shadow of what it calls 70 years of Soviet occupation which
    ended when the USSR dissolved and it was released in 1991. There is
    continuing arm wrestling with muscular northern neighbour Russia and
    angst over its contemporary politics.

    For this is a political, angsty sort of place with tricky neighbours.

    After a day of seeing this and that, the city gels for me. I just get
    it the juxtapositioning. Past and present, politics and priests, and,
    well, dynamic, alive . . . fun.

    When I leave the hotel at 5am to fly home, I notice there are still
    people in a bar in Akhvlediani Street. The Glasgow, the Dublin Irish
    Bar, the Old London, Buffalo Bill's. What's the world coming to?

    And on a hill overlooking the Kura River's Metekhi Bridge, where, we
    are told, 100,000 people were once tortured during the Persian
    invasion, overseeing the new, open internationalism of Tbilisi, is a
    statue of King Vakhtang Gorgasali. He was hunting here with a falcon
    in the fifth century. It chased a pheasant and they both ended up
    falling into a spring which proved to be boiling. Because of the
    healing powers of these hot mineral waters, the king ordered a town to
    be built here.

    In Georgian, the word tbili means warm. And today, it is still
    bubbling with life, boiling with politics, and healing itself, as King
    Vakhtang Gorgasali looks down upon it all, statuesque.

    fact file

    Travel Directors' The Treasures of Persia and the Caucasus is a 27-day
    tour through Iran, Armenia and Georgia. Starting on May 13, it
    includes flights through Dubai with Emirates, connecting to flydubai,
    and starts in Shiraz. Travellers then continue to Isfahan, Tehran,
    Tabriz and Goris before crossing the border to Armenia. There are days
    in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, and insight into the world's first
    Christian country. In Georgia, the home of the world's first
    winemaking, there are intimate food and wine experiences before
    returning from Tbilisi. The tour starts from $14,957 per person, twin
    share, including all flights, accommodation, meals, tour leader, local
    guides, tips and taxes. Phone 9242 4200, call at 137 Cambridge Street,
    West Leederville, or visit traveldirectors.com.au.

    Emirates flies three times a day between Perth and Dubai, connecting
    to more than 120 destinations. Visit emirates.com/au, travel agents,
    or call Emirates' Perth ticket office on 9324 7600. It connects to the
    flydubai network which flies to 57 destinations in 33 countries.
    flydubai.com.

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