Georgian independence petition discovered at Bodleian

A century-old petition calling for Georgian independence was revealed on Friday by theย Bodleian Libraries to honour the centenary of the countyโ€™s independence.

The petition contains a number of objections against the occupying Russians as well as appeals to the international community to stop the atrocities and pogroms unfolding in Western and Central Georgia.

The petition was signed by 3000 men and women of all classes from across the country. The Bodleian Libraires claims that those signing the petition were doing so โ€œat greatย personal risk.โ€

The document has been in the Bodleian Libraries’ possession since 1920, however it was only overย the past few weeks that have researchers realised its importance.

Originally presented at the 1907 Hague International Conference, the petition is the first documented occasion of the Georgian populationย protesting for further rights as a nation.

Georgian independence was achieved in 1918,ย eleven years after the petition first surfaced.

The document was part of a collection donated by Sir Oliver Wardrop, who โ€“ along with hisย sister, Marjory โ€“ was friendly with the petition’s instigator, Varlam Chrkezishvili, an exiled Georgianย nationalist.ย The Wardrop siblings were both the founders and major benefactors of Kartvelian (Georgian)ย studies at Oxford.

The the significance of the document was realised and researched by Dr Beka Kobakhidze, Dr Nikoloz Aleksidze, and Dr Gillianย Evison.

Dr Kobakhidze said that he was “honoured” for his role in making “forgotten namesย public after 111 yearsโ€.

He said:ย โ€œAt a time when there was no compulsory education and a high rate ofย illiteracy, the petition is the first documented instance when the Georgianย national historic narrative of the Georgian-Russian relationship comes notย from elite groups, but from ordinary people of all social classes.

“Men andย women, entrepreneurs, workers, nobles, peasants, clergymen, andย teachers from all regions of Georgia put their signatures to this address to theย political west.

“Looking through the petition I had a feeling that I was interacting with my ancestors,ย people who stood for national liberties while risking their lives.”

Kobakhidze added that many Georgians might be interested to see the names of theirย relatives on the petition.

Bodleian Librarian Richard Ovenden claimed that the discovery of the petition made clearย the importance of Libraries and archives and showed the “role [they] play in theย preservation and dissemination of information.โ€

Ovenden also hoped that the attention generated by the documentย โ€œwill encourage greater scholarship on Georgia, the Wardrops, and this turbulentย period of history.โ€

Dr Evison noted the โ€œstrikingโ€ nature of the document, stating:ย โ€œSignatures have been collected on many different sheets of paper โ€“ย accounting paper, on the back of the petitions, and written in ink, or pencil โ€“ย so it tells its own story of how keen Georgians were to make their markย through whatever means were available to them.โ€

Former president of Oxford’s Georgian Society, Nikoloz Aleksidze, toldย Cherwell: “The petition is remarkable for a number of reasons.ย It undermines the commonly articulated view that the 1918ย independence was merely an accident and that Georgiansย never wanted or tried to secure independence from theย Russian Empire.

“The document proves that the unanimousย Georgian protest against the Russian Imperial Rule and colonialismย has a long history from the early 19th-century rebellions to the 1918ย Declaration of Independence and later 1991 restoration ofย Independence from the Soviet Union. The petition is a crucialย chapter in this history of resistance.

“From the point of view ofย Georgian-British relations, the document was edited by later Britishย High Commissioner to Transcaucasia, Oliver Wardrop, who wasย the most meticulous and ardent defender of Georgia’sย independence in the West during his entire life.

“Britain’sย support for Georgia’s independence, territorial integrity andย European integration, spearheaded by Oliver Wardrop, wasย reinvigorated after the restoration of Georgia’s independenceย in 1991.”

The 29-page document is now publicly available online.

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