St. George high atop a pillar in Liberty Square in Tbilisi |
The first full day in Tbilisi and that means: time to take a free walking tour of the city.
The designated meeting spot for starting the tour was the Rustaveli Metro Station. Tbilisi has a small metro system, but it generally skirts the Old City -- they did not have underground subways in the Middle Ages -- so I did not take the metro to the metro station, I hoofed it.
Across from the Rustaveli Metro Station is the most attractive looking McDonald's I think I've ever seen:
And this is Mr. Shota Rustaveli.
And this is an olive tree. In the middle of a major thoroughfare.
It was a gift to Georgia and Tbilisi from the people of Israel. Which is why is there, in the middle of a busy street.
This is another important building:
And this is the cable car (lower) station. There are several cable car lines in Tbilisi. This one goes to Mtatsminda Park, which also is the upper destination for the (foreshadow) Tbilisi funicular.
This is a private residence on Shota Rustaveli Avenue. It is right next to the cable car line.
And this is a building in a Moorish style because why not?
It is the Opera and Ballet Theater of Tbilisi. You would think an Opera and Ballet Theater would spell "theater" with the more pretentious "-re" ending rather than "-er." But you would be wrong. Georgia the Country is humble that way.
This is the Ilia Chavchavadze and Akaki Tsereteli Statue:
The is the Georgia National Museum:
This is the rest of our tour group, sans me, outside the Parliament Building.
In the center of the circular square is St. George atop a pillar. Not a dragon in sight. St. George may be the patron saint of the nation of Georgia, but he is not the namesake. Shocking, right? The name "Georgia" is an Americanization of the Persian word for "wolf." Georgians don't call their country Georgia when speaking in the Georgian language. They call it Sakartvelo. Finland to the Finns is called Suomi. Germany to the Germans is called Deutschland. And Georgia to the Georgians is called Sakartvelo because that's the way they like it.
Having walked south from the Rustaveli Metro Station to Liberty Square, we cross an invisible line separating the bustling downtown from the Old City. Liberty Square is the point of delineation.
This a photo of the old city walls in the process of excavation.
I believe I took this photo because the restaurant in it is very highly recommended by the tour guide.
And here is something you don't see everyday.
This is a more traditional cat, without a QR code:
This is the Clock Tower:
The clock puts on a show twice a day, at 12 noon and at 7:00 p.m. The nooner draws the bigger crowd, so 7 o'clock it is.
Here is our guide pointing about the very small clock that is part of the structure (in addition to the large clock at the top of the tower:
Church doors:
As I said yesterday, Tbilisi is a Dog Town.
And we walk near the Bridge of Peace but walking on the bridge is not part of the tour.
Here is a statue of a man drinking alcohol from a horn:
And here is the cable car that goes over the Old City.
I believe it is the Metekhi Church of the Nativity of the Mother of God, if I have my placement on Google Maps correct.
And now we arrive in the Bath House District.
The name of the city actually means "Place of Warmth," a reference to hot waters.
Most of the "bath houses" consist of private bathing rooms, with small pool of sulfur-scented hot water and other amenities such as a dry sauna. Rent for these can be steep as they are priced for tourists. But you get privacy. The No. 5, that's its name, is the only one offering public, but gender-segregated, bathing in the sulfur water.
This is a monument to the founding of Tbilisi.
The founding myth is that the King. This king:
You buy it?
Finally, right in the Bath House district, is a bust of Heydar Aliyev, the founder of the modern state of Azerbaijan. Georgia and Azerbaijan have friendly relations because Georgia gets along with everyone. Except for Putin's Russia. I guess Mr. Aliyev must have liked a good soak in the sulfur waters, so they placed him the Bath House District.
And that ends the Free Walking Tour of Tbilisi. Tip your guide and tip him well because (a) he did a great job, (b) he only gets paid in tips and this was a small group he was guiding, and (c) he went overtime by about a half hour and did not sacrifice any tour destinations that I could tell. Five stars.
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