Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Giorgi Khoshtaria

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President
  
Zviad Gamsakhurdia

Profession
  
Art historian

Prime Minister
  
Tengiz Sigua

Name
  
Giorgi Khoshtaria

Preceded by
  
Giorgi Javakhishvili

Succeeded by
  
Murman Omanidze



Born
  
4 October 1938 (age 85) Tbilisi, Soviet Union (Now Georgia) (
1938-10-04
)

Alma mater
  
Tbilisi State University

Education
  
Tbilisi State University

Giorgi "Gogi" Khoshtaria (Georgian: გიორგი (გოგი) ხოშტარია; born October 4, 1938) is a Georgian art historian and former politician who served as the first Minister of Foreign Affairs of post-Soviet Georgia from November 1990 to August 1991. He is ranked as First Class Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Envoy.

Career

Gogi Khoshtaria was born in Tbilisi in the family of Georgian intelligentsia. His father, Metode Khoshtaria (1911–1938), a highway engineer and a nephew of the wealthy entrepreneur and philanthropist Akaki Khoshtaria, was shot at the age of 27 during the Great Purge. His mother, Tinatin Virsaladze (1907–1985), was an art historian. Gogi Khoshtaria was also trained as an art historian at the Tbilisi State University and pursued an academic career. In the 1980s, he joined the dissident movement and became closely associated with Zviad Gamsakhurdia, who became the first post-Communist leader of Georgia and made Khoshtaria Minister of Foreign Affairs on November 26, 1990.

As a foreign minister, Khoshtaria met with the Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh twice after Georgia's declaration of independence in April 1991, but the relations between Moscow and Tbilisi became increasingly tense and the contacts between the two ministires ceased by mid-1991. Khoshtaria worked with the Turkish government for closer Georgian–Turkish relations and resisted the Soviet attempts to bring these ties under control. He also visited Germany and France in April and the United States in June 1991 to further the Georgian independence cause and lobby for closer economic relations. Despite his efforts, Khoshtaria became alienated from Gamsakhurdia and was dismissed in August 1991. He cited Gamsakhurdia's authoritarian tendencies and failure to immediately denounce the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt as the reasons behind the split.

After his retirement, Khoshtaria resumed academic career. He lectures at several other academia and is a frequent commentator on culture and monument protection.

References

Giorgi Khoshtaria Wikipedia