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Topic: Grigol Peradze


In the News (Sat 18 May 13)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Grigol Peradze was born in 1899 in Bakurciche, Georgia, into an Orthodox family.
Peradze took religious vows and was ordained to the priesthood in the Greek Cathedral in Paris in 1931.
In 1933 the Orthodox Metropolitan Dionisius (Waledyński) invited Archimandrite Peradze to assume the duties of the professor of patrology and chair of the patristic seminar in the School of Orthodox Theology at Warsaw University.
www.b16.pl /agenda/883,peratze.html   (288 words)

  
 A Georgian Saint Ecumenical Review, The - Find Articles
In the 1920s Peradze was active in the ecumenical movement; and he took part in the first world conference on Faith and Order in Lausanne in 1927 and continued to have links with the ecumenical movement in the decade that followed.
Grigol Peradze was born on 13 September 1899 in Bakutsiche, Kakhetia, the son of a priest.
On 19 April 1931 Peradze was ordained as a priest by Metropolitan Germanos of Thyateira, the great pioneer and advocate of the ecumenical movement.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m2065/is_1_52/ai_62298593   (957 words)

  
 Grigor Feradze - ©Welcome2Sakartvelo
Grigol Peradze was born on 13 September 1899 in Bakutsiche,
But what made Grigol Peradze a saint was his commitment to the persecuted.
Grigol Peradze could not as yet know what his own future would hold - but the story does seem to point to the way that lay ahead for him in the years that followed.
www.georgianweb.com /language/geo/feradze.html   (2143 words)

  
 Grigol Peradze - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Feast Day for St. Priest Martyr Grigol is December 6.
Świadkowie XX wieku - Grzegorz Peradze (in Polish)
A Georgian Saint (Grigol Peradze) by Lukas Vischer.- The Ecumenical Review, January, 2000
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Grigol_Peradze   (593 words)

  
 Orthodoxie: 6 décembre : fête de saint Grégoire (Grigol) Peradzé
Grigol Peradzé est né le 13 septembre 1899 à Bakourtsiché, en Kakhétie (est de la Géorgie).
Grigol Peradzé continuait ses études pendant ces années turbulentes durant lesquelles il effectua son service militaire, forcé, et, de manière intermittente, il enseigna.
Grigol Peradzé a dès lors vécu une vie discrète à Varsovie.
www.orthodoxie.com /2006/12/6_dcembre_fte_d.html   (1116 words)

  
 Grzegorz Peradze - Wiki compass 08
Grzegorz Peradze (გრიგოლ ფერაძე – Grigol Peradze), drukarki (ur.
Grzegorz Peradze zginął w obozie 6 grudnia 1942.
Grzegorz Peradze pośmiertnie został podniesiony do godności archimandryty przez patriarchat ekumeniczny.
www.compass-poland.com /wiki/link-Grzegorz_Peradze   (356 words)

  
 NATO Research Fellowships 1994-1996
Kekelidze's principle studies in which the significance of Old-Georgian translated literature for Byzantinism is highlighted, were translated into German by M. Tarkhnishvili and J. Assfalg, and into English by G. Peradze.
It should be said to the credit of modern European Kartvelologists that they have coped with these obstacles, turning the study of recent Georgian literature into a single line of research.
Interest in Europe in 20th-century Georgian literature arose from the acquaintance with the work of Grigol Robakidze, a major representative of 20th-century emigrant Georgian literature, at once attracted the attention of European intellectual circles.
www.nato.int /acad/fellow/94-96/elguja/03.htm   (5273 words)

  
 KARTULI IDEA - THE GEORGIAN IDEA
Many ethnographers claim the name to be a successor of a pagan moon deity and popular mythological warrior Giorgi later identified with St. George, patron Saint of Georgia).
Founders and main leaders of "Tetri Giorgi" were Mikheil (Mikhako) Tsereteli, Leo Kereselidze, Shalva Maglakelidze, Alexandre Manvelishvili, Grigol Robakidze, Viktor Nozadze, Kalistrate Salia and other famous representatives of the Georgian political emigration.
After nationwide Referendum of Georgia about the restoration of the State Independence of Georgia (March 31, 1991), on April 9, 1991, the Republic of Georgia was declare with the Act of Restoration of Georgian State Independence as a Independent country.
www.geocities.com /levan_urushadze_98/Georgia.html   (3791 words)

  
 NATO Research Fellowships 1994-1996
Review- and research papers as well as monographs on principal problems of Georgian literature were written.
Special mention should be made of advances in Rustvelology (Viktor Nozadze, Mikheil Tsereteli, Zurab Avalishvili, Grigol Robakidze, Noe Zhordania, Ekvtime Taqaishvili and others).
Special mention should be made of the contribution of some Kartvelologists to the study of Georgian literature in Europe, particularly, Mikheil Tamarashvili, Mikheil Tarkhnishvili, Grigol Peradze, Grigol Robakidze, Mikheil Tsereteli, Shalva Beridze, Kalistrate Salia, Eka Cherkesi, and others.
www.nato.int /acad/fellow/94-96/elguja/02.htm   (7955 words)

  
 LISTA DE CORREO
Tsereteli, Grigol Robakidze, Giorgi Gvazava, Victor Nozadze, Shalva Beridze,
Grigol Uratadze, Elise Pataridze, Markoz Tugushi, Tamar Papava, Samson
Grigol Robakidze as the Politician.- J. "Prometheus", 5
www.h-debate.com /Spanish/manifiesto/desarrollo/f/levan.htm   (6096 words)

  
 70 years of Soviet Georgia: CURZON
The success was so notable indeed that even after Grigol Robakidze defected to Germany the same year, "Lamara" continued to be staged to prove the achievements of Soviet theatrical art, although without the name of the playwright on the announces.
In 1937 Akhmeteli after two years of being removed from the scene, having never actually escaped the supervision of Beria’s secret police, was arrested, accused of state treason and terribly tortured, before being shot on 27 June 1937 as a foreign spy.
Georgian priest Father Grigol Peradze, who lived in Warsaw, in outstanding sacrificial act replaced by himself a Jewish woman and was taken to the concentration camp and gas camera, having left behind brilliant scholarly works on the history of mediaeval Georgian Church and its relations with the Holy Land.
rolfgross.dreamhosters.com /Texts/KandA-Web/Giahistory.htm   (19256 words)

  
 Georgian emigration in Poland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some of them responded to the Nazi request, but subsequently joined the Polish resistance movement.
The notable Georgian Orthodox priest and Professor Grigol Peradze of Warsaw University ended his life in the Auschwitz concentration camp (1942), when he deliberately entered a gas-chamber instead of a Jewish prisoner who had a large family.
After the war, most Georgians either left for Western Europe or were deported to the Soviet camps though some of them (e.g., General V. Tevzadze) remained in the Polish anti-Communist underground for several decades.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Georgian_emigration_in_Poland   (820 words)

  
 Prawosławny serwis internetowy - cerkiew.pl
We are neitives of St.Grigol Peradze in Georgia (among us is the famili of Romanoz Peradze)and we are going to found St.Grigol Peradze's society and it will be a Honore to be in contact with you and your friends in Poland, who have done a lot for St.Grigol Peradze in Poland and even in Georgia.
Best wishes from Romanoz Peradze and me Ilia Peradze.
If you receive this messege and it will not be difficult for you, pleace unswer on my e-mail (ilia.peradze@tvplus.ge).
www.cerkiew.pl /faq/faq.php?id=300   (91 words)

  
 Embassy of Georgia
Our people have done more than is possible for the freedom of Europe.
Our philosopher, thinker and spiritual leader Grigol Peradze fled from the Bolsheviks to Poland and was imprisoned in Auschwitz because he defended Jewish children against capture.
Instead of them, he volunteered to be sent to the gas chambers and died heroically for the freedom of these children and the whole of Europe.
www.georgiaemb.org /DisplayDoc.asp?id=387&from=home   (1428 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Gabriel Kikodze's sermons, speeches delivered on religious festivals, letters to Kikodze: from Grigol Dadiani on events occurred in Petersburg and connected with Georgia, from Iakob Gogebashvili on publication Kikodze's "Sermons"; from archpriest Davit Machavariani on church building; from baron Nikolai on translation of Kikodze's sermons; correspondence between Alexander Rudakov and Kikodze.
Materials on Kikodze: Meliton Kelenjeridze's letter sent from Petersburg on Kikodze's study in theological seminary and on content of materials preserved in theological academy; summary of Kikodze's work letters, Ilia Peradze's poem, Lavrenti Tskitishvili's, I. Tsereteli's and others memoirs on Gabriel Kikodze.
Gabriel Kikodze's letters to various persons: Besarion, monk of Athos Georgian Monastery, about speech delivered by Kikodze on Alexander III's visit to Tbilisi.
archive.gol.ge /17981892eng.htm   (4529 words)

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