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Vladislav Ardzinba
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Vladislav Ardzinba (Abkhaz: Владислав Арӡынба, Georgian: ვლადისლავ არძინბა; 14 May 1945 – 4 March 2010) was an Abkhaz historian and politician who served as the first de facto president of Abkhazia. Ardzinba led Abkhazia to de facto independence in the 1992–1993 War with Georgia, but its de jure independence from Georgia remained internationally unrecognised during Ardzinba's two terms as President from 1994 to 2005. His government orchestrated ethnic cleansing of Georgian civilians in Abkhazia in 1993.[1]
Key Information
A noted specialist in Hittitology, he was a member of the first parliament to be elected democratically in the Soviet Union in 1989.[2]
Early life and career
[edit]Vladislav Ardzinba was born in the village of Lower Eshera, Sukhumi District, Abkhaz ASSR, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union[citation needed], to a Muslim Abkhaz family.[3] After graduating from the Historical Department of the Sukhumi Pedagogical Institute, Ardzinba studied at the Tbilisi State University, where he received a doctoral degree[citation needed]. He then worked for eighteen years in Moscow specialising in ancient Middle Eastern civilizations under Yevgeniy Primakov, then head of the Institute of Oriental Studies in Moscow, and later Russian foreign and Prime Minister[citation needed]. He then returned to Sukhumi and he served there as the director of the Abkhazian Institute of Language, Literature and History from 1987 until 1989, when he was elected a Deputy to the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union from Gudauta[citation needed]. From there, he was involved closely with national issues, including Abkhazia, and quickly emerged as one of the most active proponents of the Abkhaz secessionist cause. While a deputy to the USSR Supreme Soviet, Ardzinba forged close ties with the hardliners in Moscow, particularly with the parliamentary chairman Anatoly Lukyanov and other members of the hardline communist groups in Moscow that were responsible for the August 1991 coup attempt.[4]
Role in the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict
[edit]He was a member of the first parliament to be elected democratically in the Soviet Union in 1989.[2]
On 4 December 1990, Ardzinba was elected Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Abkhazia.[2] Ardzinba, who was a charismatic but excitable figure popular among the Abkhaz, was believed by Georgians to have helped to instigate the violence of July 1989.[5] Ardzinba managed to consolidate his power relatively quickly and reneged on pre-election promises to increase the representation of Georgians in Abkhazia's autonomous structures; since then, Ardzinba tried to rule Abkhazia relatively single-handedly, but avoided, for the time being, overt conflict with the central authorities in Tbilisi. In mid-1991, he negotiated and accepted the Georgian concession on the reform of the electoral law that granted the Abkhaz wide over-representation in the Supreme Soviet. However, Ardzinba created the Abkhazian National Guard that was mono-ethnically Abkhaz, and initiated a practice of replacing ethnic Georgians in leading positions with Abkhaz. As the Georgian-Abkhaz tensions rose, Ardzinba's rhetoric mounted, as he claimed in late July 1992 that "Abkhazia is strong enough to fight Georgia."[6]
In August 1992, a Georgian military force ousted Ardzinba and his group from Sukhumi when Abkhazian militants seized government buildings. They took shelter in Gudauta, a home to the Soviet-era Russian military base. Ardzinba benefited from his contacts with the Russian hardliner circles and military leaders to garner critical support in the war against the Georgian government.[7]
Presidency
[edit]

After the hostilities ended in 1994 and the bulk of the Georgian population was forced out of Abkhazia, the Abkhazian parliament elected Ardzinba to the presidency, a move that was condemned by Georgia and the United Nations as illegal. He won the first direct polls on 3 October 1999, without an opponent and was re-elected as president of Abkhazia.[8] He installed an autocratic regime[9] and remained politically untouchable until his health seriously deteriorated in 2003. He once stated that independence from Georgia is not negotiable, and he tried to align the state with Russia, whose political and economic support was essential to the republic. As a leader of the Abkhaz side he met the two successive Russian presidents, Boris Yeltsin[10] and Vladimir Putin, as well as a President of Georgia, Eduard Shevardnadze.
Under his rule, human rights records were extremely poor as most of the pre-war Georgian population of Abkhazia were deprived of the right to return, and those who remained were subjected to systematic ethnic cleansing. Ardzinba aroused some further criticism from the international community after issuing a decree banning Jehovah's Witnesses in 1995.
During the last years of his presidency Ardzinba faced criticism for both failing to bring stability to Abkhazia and his increasingly low public profile. He had not appeared in public since 2002. As a result, the role of governing the state had been increasingly left to Prime Minister Raul Khajimba.
He had been in extremely poor health and underwent treatment in Moscow for some time. Despite increasing calls from the opposition (particularly the Amtsakhara movement) for him to resign he had stated that he would finish his term, which was supposed to end in October 2004, but in fact did not end until 12 February 2005, due to disputes over the election of his successor. There were also calls for him to be impeached. However, although the Abkhaz Constitution allows for impeachment, the process would likely not have been completed before the end of his term, so no serious steps were taken to bring it about. He was unable to run for a third term due to constitutional restrictions, and it is unlikely that his health would have enabled him to do so even if this was allowed.
He was replaced by Sergei Bagapsh, the winner of the presidential election of 12 January 2005 held one month after the contested 2004 election.
Death
[edit]
By 2010, Ardzinba's health was in decline and had been for some time.[11][12] Ardzinba died on 4 March 2010, at the age of 64.[2] He was in the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow at the time.[2] He had been escorted there the previous week.[12] The cause of death was not released to the public.[2][13] He is survived by his wife and daughter.[2] The President of Abkhazia, Sergei Bagapsh, paid tribute: "His service to the Abkhaz people was boundless".[2] Three days of mourning were declared in Abkhazia in remembrance of Ardzinba.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "Vladislav Ardzinba, Once Led Abkhazia, Dies at 64". The New York Times. 5 March 2010.
By late 1993, after the Georgian Army left Abkhazia, Mr. Ardzinba's government orchestrated an ethnic cleansing campaign that resulted in the expulsion of about 250,000 ethnic Georgians, more than half of Abkhazia's population.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "First Abkhaz Leader Ardzinba Dead at 64". The Moscow Times. 5 March 2010. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ^ "АРДЗИНБА Владислав Григорьевич - Биография - БД "Лабиринт"". www.labyrinth.ru. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
- ^ Cornell, Svante E, Autonomy and Conflict: Ethnoterritoriality and Separatism in the South Caucasus – Case in Georgia, pp. 168, 180, 182. Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Report No. 61. Uppsala. ISBN 91-506-1600-5.
- ^ Stuart J. Kaufman (2001), Modern Hatreds: The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War, p. 117. Cornell University Press, ISBN 0-8014-8736-6.
- ^ Cornell, p. 180.
- ^ Cornell, p. 180
- ^ The International Crisis Group. Abkhazia Today. Europe Report N°176, pp. 5, 12. 15 September 2006.
- ^ Tunç Aybak (2001), Politics of the Black Sea: Dynamics of Cooperation and Conflict, p. 193. I.B. Tauris, ISBN 1-86064-454-6.
- ^ "Yeltsin meets Abkhaz rebel leader". UPI. 24 August 1993.
- ^ "Vladislav Ardzinba, First Leader of Abkhazia, Dies". Spero News. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ^ a b "First leader of Georgian rebel region Abkhazia dies". Reuters India. 4 March 2010. Archived from the original on 1 December 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ^ "Vladislav Ardzinba, first leader of Abkhazia, dies". Taiwan News. 4 March 2010. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ^ http://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?hl=en&sl=ru&tl=en&u=http://www.natpress.net/stat.php%3Fid%3D5105&rurl=translate.google.com&twu=1&usg=ALkJrhjeajqUnl8iXwwPFoL8pxehtZtGSg – Translated from Russian to English by Google
External links
[edit]- President of Abkhazia official site (in Russian)
Vladislav Ardzinba
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Vladislav Grigoryevich Ardzinba was born on 14 May 1945 in the village of Lower Eshera, located in the Sukhumi District of the Abkhaz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (ASSR) within the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic of the Soviet Union.[3] His father worked as a history teacher at the local school, fostering an environment immersed in educational and intellectual activities typical of mid-20th-century Soviet rural life in the region.[2] Ardzinba grew up in this coastal Abkhaz village community during the post-World War II era, a time marked by Stalinist policies that included demographic shifts in the Abkhaz ASSR, where ethnic Abkhazians constituted a minority despite their titular status.[3] His family's teaching background likely emphasized discipline and learning, aligning with the Soviet emphasis on education, though specific details of his childhood experiences remain sparsely documented in available records. No records indicate siblings or further familial particulars beyond the paternal profession.Academic Training and Influences
Vladislav Ardzinba completed his undergraduate studies at the Historical Faculty of Sukhumi State Pedagogical Institute in 1966, specializing in history.[7][8] Following graduation, he entered postgraduate studies at Tbilisi State University, where he focused on ancient Near Eastern civilizations.[8] In 1971, Ardzinba defended his candidate's dissertation (equivalent to a PhD) at the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences, titled "Hattian Origins of the Social Structure of the Hittite State," examining the cultural and structural influences of the Hattian substrate on Hittite society.[9] He advanced to a doctoral dissertation in 1985 at Tbilisi State University, "Rituals and Myths of Ancient Anatolia," which explored mythological and ritual practices in the region, later published in Russian.[10][11] Ardzinba's academic work centered on Hittitology, philology, and ancient Middle Eastern mythology, drawing from primary sources in extinct languages like Hittite and Hattian to reconstruct historical causal links between Anatolian rituals and societal organization.[12] This specialization shaped his analytical approach, emphasizing empirical reconstruction of ancient cultural dynamics over interpretive narratives, as evidenced by his later role directing the sector on ideology and culture of the Ancient East at the Institute of Oriental Studies.[13] His training under Soviet academic institutions prioritized rigorous philological methods, influencing his broader views on ethnic continuity and historical agency in Caucasian contexts.[14]Scholarly and Pre-Political Career
Historical Research and Publications
Vladislav Ardzinba specialized in oriental studies, with a focus on the history, culture, and religious beliefs of ancient Near Eastern civilizations, particularly Hittitology and Anatolian mythology.[15] His research drew on cuneiform texts from the second millennium B.C. to reconstruct cosmological and ritual practices of ancient Anatolian societies.[16] Ardzinba defended his candidate's dissertation in historical sciences in 1971, earning the degree kandidat istoricheskikh nauk, and advanced to doctor of historical sciences (doktor istoricheskikh nauk) in 1985.[15] His doctoral thesis, centered on rituals and myths of ancient Anatolia, analyzed Hittite and related texts to elucidate religious ideologies and cultural continuities in the region. This work was published in Russian as Rituály i mify drevney Anatolii (Rituals and Myths of Ancient Anatolia), providing empirical insights into pre-Hellenic belief systems based on primary archaeological and textual evidence.[16] At the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences in Moscow, Ardzinba headed the sector on ideology and culture of the Ancient Near East, where he contributed to scholarly analyses of Hittite religious practices and their influences on subsequent Caucasian and Anatolian ethnogenesis.[15] His publications emphasized first-hand interpretation of ancient sources over secondary narratives, reflecting a commitment to philological and historical rigor amid Soviet-era constraints on regional studies.[2] Later documentaries, such as The Pen of the Hittologist (2018), highlighted his enduring impact on Hittitological research, underscoring his role in bridging ancient textual evidence with broader cultural historiography.[17]Professional Roles in Moscow
Vladislav Ardzinba advanced his academic career in Moscow at the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences, beginning as a graduate student.[15] He specialized in the history, culture, and religious beliefs of ancient peoples in Asia Minor, such as the Hittites and Hatti.[15][18] Ardzinba defended his candidate's thesis in 1971 and obtained his Doctor of Historical Sciences degree in 1985, based on his work Rituals and Myths of Ancient Anatolia, which was published as a monograph.[15][2] Ardzinba served as head of the Sector of Ideology and Culture of the Ancient East at the institute for much of his approximately 18-year tenure, which concluded in 1988.[15][19] This period fell under the directorship of Yevgeny Primakov.[2] During his time there, he produced over 40 scientific papers and investigated linguistic links between the ancient Hatti language and the Abkhaz-Adyghe family.[15][18]
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