Culturally, this metaphorical sea serves as a refuge and a mirror. Georgia has been invaded, partitioned, and dominated by Persians, Arabs, Mongols, Ottomans, and Russians. Its physical territory has been repeatedly redrawn. Yet, the sea of language has remained sovereign. The 20th-century Georgian poet Galaktion Tabidze, known as the “Georgian Lorca,” navigated these waters masterfully. In his poem “The Blue Horse,” the sea is not merely a setting but a state of being—an irrational, beautiful, tragic expanse that reflects the Georgian soul. When he writes of the sea, he is not mapping the coast of Batumi; he is mapping the inner tides of his people, which no foreign power can ever drain or conquer. This internal sea is where national trauma transforms into lyrical beauty, where the grief of lost territories (Abkhazia, Samtskhe) becomes a saltwater tear in the grammar of a folk song.
To understand this concept, one must first appreciate Georgia’s paradoxical geography. Anthropologically, Georgia is a mountainous, agrarian society—a land of vines, fortresses, and valleys. Yet, its western flank kisses the Black Sea, a body of water that has served as both a highway and a barrier. For centuries, Georgians were not a major seafaring power like the Greeks or Venetians. Their sea was a near neighbor, a source of myth (the Argonauts’ quest for the Golden Fleece) and of threat (invaders arriving by ship). Consequently, the real sea of Georgian consciousness is not the physical Black Sea but the linguistic sea—the boundless expressive power of Qartulad itself. the sea beyond qartulad
The Georgian language is a living artifact of the South Caucasian Kartvelian family, completely unrelated to Indo-European or Turkic languages. With its own unique script ( Mkhedruli ), a complex system of verb morphology, and a staggering capacity for agglutination, Georgian allows its speakers to build entire emotional landscapes within a single word. For example, the verb ‘ts’q’alob’ relates to water, but through prefixes and suffixes, one can create dozens of variations: ‘gadaits’q’aleba’ (to overflow), ‘mots’q’alva’ (to irrigate), or ‘shats’q’alebuli’ (slightly watery). This is the “sea beyond Qartulad”—a deep reservoir of nuance where every droplet of sound carries centuries of meaning. In this linguistic sea, a Georgian poet does not simply describe a storm; they conjugate it. Culturally, this metaphorical sea serves as a refuge
Furthermore, the “sea beyond Qartulad” manifests in the rich tradition of Georgian maritime folklore and oral poetry. Unlike the epic sagas of Nordic seafarers, which detail voyages and battles, Georgian sea songs often personify the sea as a capricious, maternal, or grieving figure. In the highland regions of Svaneti or Khevsureti, far from any coast, songs about the sea persist—a testament to the power of linguistic imagination. These songs use the sea as a symbol for the unknown, for exile, or for the afterlife. To sing of the sea in Qartulad is to invoke a collective dream, a shared subconscious where every Georgian, regardless of their distance from the shore, is a speaker of the tide. Yet, the sea of language has remained sovereign
In conclusion, “the sea beyond Qartulad” is an invitation to recognize language not as a tool for communication but as an entire cosmos. For Georgia, a nation wedged between the Caucasus and the Black Sea, the physical sea is a border, but the linguistic sea is a homeland. It is a place where verbs break like waves, where consonants build shorelines, and where the alphabet is the only boat needed. To explore this sea is to understand that the most profound voyages are not measured in nautical miles, but in the untranslatable depths of a mother tongue. The sea beyond Qartulad has no opposite shore—because it is the shore itself, the eternal ground of Georgian being.