Solomon Dodashvili, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Solomon Dodashvili

Georgian philosopher

Date of Birth: 17-May-1805

Place of Birth: Kakheti, Georgia

Date of Death: 20-Aug-1836

Profession: teacher, journalist, philosopher

Zodiac Sign: Taurus


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About Solomon Dodashvili

  • Solomon Dodashvili (Georgian: ??????? ?????????), also known as Solomon Ivanovich Dodaev-Mogarsky (Russian: ??????? ???????? ??????-?????????) (May 17, 1805 – August 20, 1836), was a Georgian philosopher, journalist, historian, grammarian, belletrist and enlightener. Dodashvili was born in Magharo, Kakheti, Georgia, then part of Imperial Russia.
  • Having graduated from St Petersburg University in 1827, he obtained a Magister degree in philosophy there in 1828.
  • During his stay in the Russian capital, he was close to Decembrist ideas and witnessed their 1825 mutiny.
  • In 1828, Dodashvili returned to Tiflis, where he worked as an educator.
  • He composed histories, grammars, and summaries of philosophy for his young pupils and led them into political opposition to the Russian rule.
  • His idealistic pedagogues influenced many Georgian intellectuals and poets, including Nikoloz Baratashvili, who combined modern nationalism with European Romanticism.
  • At the same time, from 1828 to 1832, he edited the first Georgian-language newspaper "Tp’ilisis utsk’ebani", a weekly addition to the Russian "Tiflisskie Vedomosti". His career was terminated by the failure of the 1832 conspiracy against the Russian hegemony, in which he was a participant.
  • Unlike most of his coconspirators, who seconded the restoration of Georgian monarchy, he proposed a republic as a form of government.
  • Arrested by police, he was deported to Russia proper.
  • He was kept in captivity in Vyatka and died there of tuberculosis.
  • He was reburied to Mtatsminda Pantheon, Tbilisi, in 1994.Main works S.
  • Dodashvili.
  • "Logic" (a monograph), St.
  • Petersburg, 1828 (in Russian); Tbilisi, 1949 (in Georgian) S.
  • Dodashvili.
  • "Short look at the Georgian literature".- "Moskovskie Vedomosti", No 10, Moscow, 1832 (in Russian) S.
  • Dodashvili.
  • "Methodology of Logic" (a monograph), Tbilisi, 1829 (in Russian) S.
  • Dodashvili.
  • "Brief Grammar of Georgian language", Tbilisi, 1830 (in Georgian)

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