Vaja-Pshavela

Vaja-Pshavela

Personal Info

  • Known for

    Writing

  • Gender

    Male

  • Birthday

    1861-07-26

  • Day of Death

    1915-07-10 (53 years old)

  • Place of Birth

    Chargali, Dusheti, Georgia

Biography

Vaja grew up in Pshavi, in the village of Chargali, in the small family of his father, the village priest Pavle, and his mother, Barbale Pkhikelashvili (Vazha-Pshavela brothers Bachana and Tedo Razikashvili also became famous writers). He studied at the Municipal Theological School, 1877 - 1879 - Tbilisi Teachers' Institute of the School of Civil orklasian, 1879 to Gori Teacher (saostato) Seminary in 1882 , he graduated from. The innate call of the truth-seeker brought Vazha-Pshavela closer to the circle of people in Gori. Once taught in Amtniskhevi , 1883 - 1884In the years he was a free listener at the Faculty of Law of the University of St. Petersburg .

Due to lack of money, he soon left the university and worked for several years, first in Otarasheni , in the Amilakhvari family, as a home teacher, and then in the village school of Didi Toneti . 1888 was the drinksHe lived, plowing the land like other peasants, tending cattle and hunting. Enjoyed great influence among the mountain people. Rarely came to the bar. Pshauri wrote his genius poems, stories and poems during the long winter nights. In Pshavi, on the bank of the river Charglura, stands a small house of Kvitkiri. It was in this house that Luka Razikashvili was born on July 14, 1861, whom we know as Vazha-Pshavela. Vazha's father was a man of rare talent, eloquent, curious, and a man of letters. He taught himself to read and write and became a priest. The father instilled in his children a love of books, told about David the Builder , Georgian and foreign heroes, loved the "Panther- skinned " and famous contemporaries - Ilia and AkakiCreatures. He also instilled in his children a love for the sacred books. Vazha-Pshavela remembers how Sulganabul listened to his father's sweet conversation when he was telling from divine history. The mother told heroic stories, Pshauri legends and poems. Thanks to his mother, Vaja knew a lot of folk poems by heart, so everyone was amazed at how one person was able to memorize so many poems.