Mutso
Mutso, like Shatili, has a perfectly preserved complex of medieval tower dwellings. Unlike Shatili the village is not UNESCO listed and so there is more freedom open to the restorers who at the time of this visit were conserving the village. Mutso marks the end of the road - beyond this point there are only trails to other settlements and to the Atsunta Pass into Tusheti. The ancient village is located on a pinnacle of rock overlooking a bend in the river below and the climb to the settlement passes several tomb vaults (<em>akeldama</em>) of the same type found at Anatori on the Shatili-Mutso road.
Emma Loosley
2016-09-19
Emma Loosley
Peter Leeming
Metadata and all media released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA International licence unless otherwise indicated
Architecture
Anatori
The Anatori burial vaults lie several kilometres north of Shatili below the Georgian-Chechen border post on the other side of the river. The vaults are called <em>akeldama</em> in Georgian and the people of Shatili have a tradition that when a plague came to the town in the middle ages, those affilcted by the disease walked to the <em>akeldama</em> and sat and patiently waited to die in the vaults rather than infect their healthy families and friends.
Emma Loosley
2016-09-19
Emma Loosley
Peter Leeming
Metadata and all media released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA International licence unless otherwise indicated
Architecture