Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Categories: Georgian people | 1878 births | 1965 deaths | Georgian historians | Georgian scientists | Historians
Mikheil Tsereteli
Mikheil G. Tsereteli (Michael Von Zereteli. December 23, 1878-March 2, 1965) was a famous Georgian historian, philologist, sociologist and public benefactor, Dr.Sci., Professor.
He was born in 1878, in a village Tskhrukveti (Imereti region of Western Georgia). His father was Prince Giorgi Tsereteli. His brother Vasil Tsereteli (1862-1938) was a famous Georgian physician, writer and public benefactor.
In 1911 Mikheil Tsereteli graduated from the Heidelberg University (Germany). In 1913 he received a PhD degree in History. In 1914-1918 he was Associate Professor of the Berlin University and Chairman of the "Committee for the Independence of Georgia in Germany". In 1916 Tsereteli was a representative of Georgia in the Union of Nations in Lausanne, in 1918-1919 Ambassador of the Democratic Republic of Georgia (DRG) in Sweden and Norway.
In 1919-1921 Tsereteli was a Professor of the Tbilisi State University (TSU).
On February 25, 1921 the sovereign Georgia was occupied by the Soviet Russia. Since March, 1921 Mikheil Tsereteli was the Emigre.
In 1921-1933 Tsereteli was a Professor of the University of Brussels (Belgium), in 1933-1945 Professor of the Berlin University. Since 1945 he lived and worked in Munich.
In 1930s-1940s he was a Chairman of the "Georgian National Committee" (Berlin-Paris).
Mikheil Tsereteli was a member of the Editorial Board of the International Scientific Journal "Bedi Kartlisa - Revue de Kartvelologie" (Paris).
Main fields of scientific activity of Prof. Tsereteli were: Sumerology , history of Georgia and the Caucasus, history of Ibero-Caucasian civilization , Rustvelology (Shota Rustaveli was a great Georgian Poet of the 12th century), the rights of the Nations (Peoples), sociology, etc. He was author of more than 80 scientific-research works (among them about 10 monographs).
Mikheil Tsereteli died in 1965, in Munich. He is buried in Leville (France).
Some of main scientific works of Mikheil Tsereteli
- "Nation and mankind. Sociological investigation" (a monograph), Tbilisi, 1910, 250 pp (In Georgian)
- "Sumerian and Georgian: a study in comparative philology" (a monograph), JRAS, 1913 (In English)
- Shota Rustaveli. "Der Mann im Tigerfelle". Edited and translated from Georgian by M. Tsereteli, Munchen, 1955 (In German)
- "Georgien und der Weltkrieg" (a monograph), Potsdam, 1915 (In German)
- "Das Sumerische und das Georgische".- "Bedi Kartlisa - Revue de Kartvelologie", No 32-33, Paris (In German)
See also
Adapted from the Wikinfo article Mikheil Tsereteli by Levan Urushadze, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


