Nestled between the Black Sea and the peaks of the Greater Caucasus, Georgia is home to ancient cities, monasteries carved out of the rock and some of the most breathtaking landscapes in Eurasia.
Just 20 kilometres from Tbilisi, Mtskheta embodies two millennia of Georgian history between medieval cathedrals and hills overlooking the meeting point of two rivers.
In a cliff face in the Mtkvari valley, hundreds of caves connected by passages tell of the ambition of a kingdom in its moment of glory.
In this remote region of Georgia, every house has a defensive tower attached to it, keeping watch over the alpine meadows and the glacial tongues descending from some of the highest mountains in the Caucasus.
Tiflis es una ciudad donde las cúpulas medievales conviven con vanguardistas puentes de vidrio sobre el río Kurá y callejones que aún conservan el eco de quince siglos de historia.
On a rocky promontory close to the river Mtkvari, this cave-town preserves the vestiges of a Georgia that predates churches and cathedrals.
On the outskirts of Tbilisi, sixteen massive pillars turn the history of Georgia into a story carved in stone on a wind-lashed hill.
A steel and glass structure suspended over the river Kura links medieval Tbilisi with the country’s modern aspirations.
Situated at the summit of the sacred Mount Mtatsminda, in the heart of Tbilisi, lie the ruins of Narikala Fortress, one of the icons of Georgia’s capital and an essential destination for anyone visiting the city.
This monumental structure (built between 1995 and 2004) has become one of Tbilisi’s most popular tourist attractions.
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