Thursday, January 3, 2019

Tbilisi, Georgia

Bolstered by its Christian roots, the Georgian alphabet has survived for almost a millennium and has become a bulwark of Georgian nationalism. With only 4 million speakers, though, think of the pressures to adopt something more widespread. For the Soviet-era seat warmers it was the Cyrillic alphabet, and for the post-Soviet youngling it is the Roman alphabet. [2015]

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