Georgia is a sloping nation and a subtropical region of 69,700 km² (with Abkhazia and South Ossetia). The nation has area fringes with four nations: Russia toward the north (723 km), Azerbaijan toward the east (322 km), Armenia toward the south (164 km) and Turkey toward the south-west (252 km). Toward the west, the nation is flanked by the Black Sea.
Georgia is one of three nations of Transcaucasia, provincial subdivision of the Caucasus, with Armenia and Azerbaijan. The nation is for the most part precipitous, however a few sections of the nation are commanded by different scenes, for example, the Plateau of Javakheti, the Armenian outskirt. The north by cons, the Russian fringe is a genuine common outskirt made out of a huge mountain run, the Great Caucasus, rather than the Lesser Caucasus, which possesses the southern piece of the nation. The third and fourth most noteworthy crests of the Caucasus with Mount shkhara (5058 m) and Kazbek (5047 m) are situated in Georgia.
The towns, towns and provincial groups are by and large implicit tallness, with the exception of when they are situated on the Black Sea, as Sokhoumi, Poti and Batumi. Consequently the capital Tbilisi is situated at a normal height of 572 meters, while a few towns are situated in the most noteworthy piles of the Caucasus, making access troublesome and prompting independence and an alternate society from whatever remains of the nation, beneficiary of old and agnostic convictions of antiquated times. As it were, this was extremely helpful to the occupants of the nation: actually, Georgia has been a place that is known for plundering, decimation and attacks all through its history, the individuals who lived in these mountains were saved, to where the preservation of specific religious structures dating from the High Middle Ages.
Georgia is crossed by various waterways and streams. The key is the Mtkvari (or Kura) which has a more than 1,515 km and which starts upper east of Turkey, before intersection the Georgian capital Tbilisi and streaming into the Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan. The other critical streams such Alazani and R
The atmosphere of Georgia is subtropical Mediterranean toward the west and east. The chain of the Greater Caucasus conservatives its varieties by serving as a boundary against chilly air from the north. The warm, soggy air from the Black Sea moves effectively in the seaside fields of the west. The atmosphere shifts as per the separation to the Black Sea and the elevation. Along the bank of the Black Sea, Abkhazia to the Turkish fringe and in the area known Kolkhida (inside swamps of the coast), the predominant qualities of the subtropical atmosphere are high moistness and substantial precipitation (1 000-2 000mm every year, the port of the Black Sea Batumi gets 2,500 mm every year). A few mixed bags of palm trees develop in these locales, where the normal temperature from 5 ° C in winter to 22 ° C in summer. The fields of eastern Georgia are shielded from the impacts of the Black Sea by mountains that give a more mainland atmosphere. The temperature in summer midpoints 20 to 24 ° C, winter temperatures of 2 to 4 ° C. The stickiness is lower, and the normal precipitation 500 to 800 mm every year. An elevated atmosphere is found in the mountains of east and west, somewhere around 2100 and 3600 m, and a semi-parched district on the Iori level in the southeast. At high elevations, precipitation is now and then twice as high as in the eastern fields and snow and ice are available year-round
The Georgians have a solid custom of neighborliness, gallantry and codes of individual honor. They accept that visitors originate from God. Companionship is the most prominent of every last one of ideals. It is commended in a national epic of the twelfth century of Shota Rustaveli, The Knight in the Panther's Skin ("ვეფხისტყაოსანი" or "Vepkhist'q'aosani"), in which the estimation of an individual is judged by the profundity of its fellowships. Georgians are glad, energetic and furiously individualistic however profoundly associated together by a typical feeling of fitting in with an expansive Georgian gang. Ladies are exceedingly regarded in the public eye and are allowed a gallant appreciation. The statue of the Mother Georgia (Kartlis Deda) situated in the slopes above Tbilisi symbolizes maybe the best national character: in her exited hand she holds a dish of wine with which she respects her companions and on her right side