• ABOUT US
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • CONTACT US
Georgia Today
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Georgia Today
No Result
View All Result

Tim Severin’s Argo on Georgian Shores

by Georgia Today
January 15, 2021
in OP-ED, Social & Society
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Tim Severin’s Argo on Georgian Shores

December 18, 2020, was a grief-stricken instant for professional travelers of the world, and certainly for every single participant in the ‘Jason Voyage’ of 1984, because that sorrowful winter day, the venerated British explorer, scientist, historian, filmmaker and writer Tim Severin at age 80 departed his audacious exploratory life. Let his great soul rest in eternal piece!
Tim’s legendary journeys, reconstructing the voyages of mythical, historical and literary celebrities, will forever remain in the annals of travel adventure. This was a British intellectual who wanted to disperse any doubts about the ancient Greeks entering Georgian waters in a wooden boat called the Argo and navigated by Jason, the well-known Hellenic mythical hero. Indeed, the much-talked-about trip was elegantly replicated by Georgia’s wonderful friend Tim Severin, which he and his crew performed with such precision that the public both in Georgia and worldwide were totally fascinated.
Tim fell in love with Georgia, and, having hit the Batumi coast, he emotionally quipped that the Golden Fleece sought by Jason was for him a symbol of his dedication to Sakartvelo, and carried away not by hands but in the heart. Golden words indeed!
The then-Georgian Public TV was put in charge of hosting Severin’s international voyage mission, Georgia being one of the knees in the chart. The head of Georgia’s state television, Nugzar Popkhadze, handled the event with his usual organizational mastery; Archil Gogelia, the editor-in-chief of a popular sports edition, skillfully managed the coverage of the event from A to Z; Ilia Peradze, a journalist, athlete and himself an ‘Argonaut,’ was the heart of the entire experience; and Paata Natsvlishvili, outstanding Georgian journalist and publisher, brilliantly covered the developments thereof, having been made one of the regular Argo rowers. Only Paata could have fit comfortably into the frames of those two incredible duties!
Incidentally, Tim Severin and the members of his 1984 expedition, overwhelmed with a feeling of the sincerest camaraderie towards their Georgian fellow adventurers, returned to Georgia after 30 years to celebrate together the shared success of the Argo mission, although they had never met physically since the trip ended.
According to Natsvlishvili, the great epoch of historical voyages has come to an end, for Tim Severin is no longer with us. As true and painful as this statement might be, the name of this uniquely memorized professional voyager of the world renown will forever be carved in the minds of all those good people he met and worked with during his long and meaningful lifetime, including his Georgian fans and friends.
Tim Severin, as determined and interested as he was, built the Argo replica at Greek Island Spetses, and outlined its route based on the well-known ‘Argonautica’ by Apollonius of Rhodes. The final destination of Severin’s nautical itinerary was the shores of the ancient land of Colchis, what is today’s Georgia. Because this extraordinary trial was meant to prove the authenticity of the Voyage of the Argonauts, Severin needed to rely on certain fundamental scientific research, and his choice fell on the works of the famous Georgian archeologist Otar Lordkipanidze.
The third day of May 1984, following brief, sea-going trials in the Gulf of Argolis, Argo set sail from the Greek town of Volos. Tim Severin added 10 Greek rowers to his 10 British ones, who were substituted by 10 Turkish rowing men, and finally 10 Georgian rowers in the Turkish waters. Paata Natsvlishvili was one of those good and strong men. With Severin’s permission, he authored a book describing the daring expedition and detailing the story of the travel of the new Argonauts in Georgia.
Incidentally, the Argo crew members went to Svaneti, where they got acquainted with the ancient method of gold extraction with the help of sheep’s hide, and concluded that the myth of the Argonauts was indeed based on a real story. The news of Tim Severin’s death was taken in Georgia as the loss of one of our own esteemed men.

By Nugzar B. Ruhadze

ShareShareTweet

Related Posts

British journalist Will Neal denied entry to Georgia. Source: thedailybeast.com
Highlights

British Journalist Barred from Georgia after Investigating Links to Sanctioned Russian Oligarch

May 29, 2025
Quiz: Identify the airlines to which these logos belong!
Newspaper

Fly Backwards

May 29, 2025
Crafting with local children as part of the 60+ service. Source: CENN
Editor's Pick

From Grassroots to Government: Community-Led Change Transforming Lives in Kvemo Kartli with EU Funding and CENN Support

May 29, 2025

Recommended

Putin, Xi, and allied leaders mark Russia’s Victory Day at Moscow parade

Putin, Xi, and allied leaders mark Russia’s Victory Day at Moscow parade

3 weeks ago
Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

11 months ago
Champion Karateka Luka Khvedeliani on the Benefits of Georgian Karate for Georgia’s Youth

Georgia to Celebrate First Europe Day with European Union Candidate Status

1 year ago
Georgian Foreign Minister Holds Farewell Meeting with French Ambassador to Georgia

Georgian Foreign Minister Holds Farewell Meeting with French Ambassador to Georgia

3 years ago
Natia Mezvrishvili on Dealing with 2 Political Giants

Natia Mezvrishvili on Dealing with 2 Political Giants

3 years ago
Giorgi Gakharia: We were Told We Were Capable of Nothing – It’s All a Lie and Ukraine is a Great Example of This

Giorgi Gakharia: We were Told We Were Capable of Nothing – It’s All a Lie and Ukraine is a Great Example of This

3 years ago
GT Interview with Giorgi Badridze

GT Interview with Giorgi Badridze

3 years ago
Russo-Ukrainian War and Georgia – Analysis from security expert Kakha Kemoklidze

Russo-Ukrainian War and Georgia – Analysis from security expert Kakha Kemoklidze

3 years ago

Navigation

  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • International
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • Magazine
  • GEO
  • OP-ED
  • About Us
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • Contact

Highlights

MIA: Nika Melia detained on administrative charges

Ukraine Latest: Drones, Drills, and Diplomacy

British Journalist Barred from Georgia after Investigating Links to Sanctioned Russian Oligarch

The Blooming Electric Now: How DOCA Film Club’s ‘New Georgian Films’ Program Captures a Nation Mid-Transformation

ZEG Festival returns to Tbilisi with future-focused storytelling

Giorgi Bachiashvili: Ivanishvili’s orders led to my kidnapping and 2 days blindfolded

Trending

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia
Business & Economy

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

by Georgia Today
June 26, 2024

Why Silknet's eSIM could be your top choice in Georgia  Since its introduction, eSIM technology has become...

Photo by the author

Virtuosity and Versatility: Marc-André Hamelin Opens Tbilisi Piano Festival 2024

May 30, 2024
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • GEO
  • Magazine
  • Old Website

2000-2024 © Georgia Today

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • International
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • Magazine
  • GEO
  • OP-ED
  • About Us
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • Contact

2000-2024 © Georgia Today