

Samegrelo (Mingrelia) is an historic province in the western part of the republic of
Georgia, formerly also known as Odishi. Samegrelo is bordered by the secessionist region of
Abkhazia to the north-west,
Svaneti to the north,
Imereti to the east,
Guria to the south and the
Black Sea to the west. The
Mingrelians are one of the local culture-groups of the ethnically subdivided
Georgian people, who speak both Mingrelian and Georgian, but have only a Georgian script.
Mingrelian prince, by G. Gagarin. 1840s.
Administratively, the province of Samegrelo is incorporated with the northern part of the neighboring mountainous province of Svaneti into the
Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti region, the capital of which is Samegrelo's main city
Zugdidi. In ancient times Samegrelo was a major part of the kingdom of
Kolkha (
Colchis) (
9th-
6th centuries BC) and the kingdom of
Egrisi (
4th century BC-
6th century AD). In the
11th-
15th centuries Samegrelo was a part of the united Georgian Kingdom. In the
16th century-
1857 the independent Principality of Samegrelo was under the rule of a Georgian dynasty
Dadiani and the patronage of the
Ottoman Empire. In December of
1803 the Principality came under the patronage of the
Russian Empire by an agreement between the
Tsar and the Megrelian Prince Grigol Dadiani. In
1857 the Principality was abolished officially by the Tsarist
Russian Empire. From
1918 to
1921 Samegrelo was part of the
Democratic Republic of Georgia (DRG). In
1921 Georgia became part of the Soviet Union, as the
Georgian SSR. In
April 9,
1991 independence was restored to Georgia, of which Samegrelo is now part.