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  1. In Georgia, celebratory liturgies for Saints days, Nativity, Pascha, and other Great Feasts were followed by a traditional feast—the trapezawhich was the site of further performances of para-liturgical songs and dances.

  2. The liturgy is primarily conducted in the Georgian language, using the country's unique script. Georgian Orthodox chant is an essential part of the liturgical experience, with its haunting polyphonic melodies adding a distinctive beauty to the worship.

  3. 8 wrz 2021 · Before the start of the English language community, the liturgical languages found within Georgia were Georgian, Church Slavonic, Greek, and Aramaic, because of the Patriarch’s desire to have each Orthodox minority hear the Liturgy in its native language.

  4. Several ancient editions of lectionariums (from Kala, Latali, Paris and Mount Sinai), reflect Liturgical practice in Jerusalem from the late 5 th century until 10 th centuries. In general lectionarium shows three basic types of chant performance: responsorial, antiphonal and single-choir.

  5. My aim is to study the types of Christian liturgical music in modern Georgia. The Orthodox liturgical music, which underwent repressions in the communist era ‒ simultaneously being one of the most important markers for the ethnical and religious identity of Georgians ‒ represents the object

  6. Liturgy chant; Vespers-Matins chant; Articles. Maksime Sharadze; Karbelashvili brothers history; Ekvtime Kereselidze; Georgian Easter chant – Christ is Risen! Jvarsa shensa – rare variant; Lord’s Prayer (Mamao Chveno) Pilimon Koridze; Sandro Kavsadze Choir; Shen khar venakhi; Svanetian Chant: Introduction; Kviria – Svan Ritual Chant

  7. 4 sie 2010 · It’s a familiar scene in Georgia, a Caucasus country where haunting three-voice chants reverberate through incense-heavy air in ancient churches packed with the faithful.

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