Tbilisi was founded in the middle of the 5th century A.D. in place of the warm sulfuric springs that gave the name to the city ("tbili" - translated from Georgian means "warm"). A sightseeing tour of Tbilisi allows you to visit a large number of architectural and cultural monuments of the Middle Ages, including the oldest church in the city - Anchiskhati (VI century).
Tbilisi was repeatedly destroyed and subsequently rebuilt. Here you can see buildings from different eras: the Narikala fortress of the 4th century, Liberty Square of the 19th century, the largest Holy Trinity Cathedral in the country in 2004, the visiting card of modern Tbilisi - the Peace Bridge, which opened in 2012.
Interesting information on the history of the country is collected in the National Museum of Georgia, in the National Gallery you can see the works of the famous Georgian primitive artist Niko Pirosmani and in the State Museum of Art there is a unique “Golden Fund” - rare medieval icons and the world's largest collection of cloisonne enamel technique, which Georgians call "minankari".
Like 1500 years ago, sulfur springs still operate in Tbilisi. From the Middle Ages to the present there are sulfur baths that anyone can visit while traveling in Georgia.
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Jvari Monastery and town Mtskheta
Chavchavadze's house-museum in Tsinandali
Bodbe Monastery
Signagi City of Love
Georgian Military Road
Joseph Stalin Museum in Gori
Cave city Uplistsikhe
Resort Borjomi
Cave city-monastery of Vardzia
Ottoman fortress Rabat
Gelati Monastery
Prometheus Cave
Upper Svaneti Region
Batumi seaside resort
Roman fortress Gonio
Batumi Botanical Garden
Bagrat Temple
Martvili Canyon
Makhuntseti Waterfall and Queen Tamar Bridge