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Khashuri ( ) is a city in the central part of Georgia and is the 9th largest settlement in Georgia. It is the administrative centre of Khashuri Municipality. It is located on the Shida Kartli plain, on the Suramula riverside, above sea level.
Khashuri is a city in central Georgia that serves as the administrative hub for Khashuri Municipality and ranks as the ninth-largest settlement in the country. Located on the Shida Kartli plain along the Suramula river, it functions as an important regional center in Georgia's geography.
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thumb|300px|right|Khashuri Aerial View Khashuri is approximately midway between its two largest cities Tbilisi and Kutaisi and well connected to both. It is thus a convenient travel hub for Borjomi and Akhaltsikhe if a direct connection cannot be found.
While the town is not a major tourist destination in itself, it does see the occasional tourist as marshrutkas stop there on the way to the archaeological sites at Akhaltsikhe. The town is best known for the colourful array of hammocks lining its streets.
The town is reasonably small and navigable by foot. However, as with all Georgian towns, there are bus and marshrutka links across most of it.
The main attraction of Khashuri is the hammocks (happily, 'hamak' in Georgian). Independent vendors scattered throughout the town sell variations on similar (though good quality) hammocks and woven garden swings. Cheaper closer to the centre, a good one-person hammock is 30 lari (July 2018). Difficult to haggle by Georgian standards. As of summer 2018 the widest selection of hammocks seemed to be sold by a couple of vendors under a bright blue tarpaulin quite near the centre of town.
The usual street food is good in Khashuri; go for a lobiani or a khachapuri. The town's local khachapuri speciality is a cheese-less variety (which you may be forgiven for thinking is just salty bread, but it is salty bread you won't find anywhere else).
Options for sleeping in Khashuri are slim, but as ever, asking around should yield a local or two willing to offer up a spare room.
Borjomi – A picturesque small city with famous mineral water, a national park, and a summer mansion of the Russian Romanov dynasty. Akhaltsikhe – The small capital of Samtskhe-Javakheti is near two popular tourist destinations: Vardzia and the Sapara Monastery. Vardzia – A 12th century cave monastery overlooking a large river gorge.
Travel guide from Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA 4.0)
~1 min read
Khashuri ( ) is a city in the central part of Georgia and is the 9th largest settlement in Georgia. It is the administrative centre of Khashuri Municipality. It is located on the Shida Kartli plain, on the Suramula riverside, above sea level.
Khashuri is first mentioned in a 1693 document. Modern Khashuri was founded in 1872 as a modest railway stop called "Mikhaylovo" after Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich of Russia, Viceroy of the Caucasus. In 1917, it was renamed Khashuri. The city was granted city status in 1921. It was known as Stalinisi, after Joseph Stalin, from 1928 to 1934. In the 19th century after the leading Tbilisi-Poti main line, Khashuri gradually became a major transportation node. The railways and highways were heading towards Borjomi and Akhaltsikhe. The population of the city is 28.435 (2023). There is rail transport, glass container, food industry enterprises, educational and cultural institutions (public theatre, a museum of local lore). The 18th-century tower, St. John and St. Marine's churches are preserved in the city. There are the Surami and Khashuri residence in Khasuri.
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