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Georgian Folk Tales

23.99

Illustrated Edition

Compiled by: Marjory Scott Wardrop

Translator: Marjory Scott Wardrop

Editor: Jack Monro

A timeless treasury of Georgian folktales, blending humour, myth, and magic — newly re-edited and beautifully illustrated in this definitive new edition of Wardrop’s classic translation.

Categories: , , Tag: ISBN: 9781804842317

Georgian Folk Tales is a landmark collection of traditional narratives from Georgia, gathered and translated in the late 19th century by Marjory Scott Wardrop. Drawn from diverse regions such as Imereti, Mingrelia, and Guria, the stories range from magical adventures and moral fables to comedic parables and eerie encounters with devs (ogres), witches, and dragons. This beautifully presented 2025 edition revives Wardrop’s pioneering work, with a fresh editorial treatment, a modern introduction, and evocative illustrations by Glagoslav Publications.

These tales capture a unique cultural landscape where Eastern and Western influences intermingle: Persian demons, Christian saints, shapeshifting animals, and resourceful heroines share the stage. Some stories echo archetypes found across Europe — Cinderella, Bluebeard, and trickster foxes — yet retain a distinctly Georgian flair in their texture, tone, and narrative logic.

Wardrop’s work is more than translation; it is cultural preservation. She meticulously annotated her sources and preserved the stories’ oral style, giving English-speaking readers rare access to Georgian worldview and humour at a time when the region was largely unknown in the West. Her linguistic skill and anthropological insight shine through every page.

For modern readers, Georgian Folk Tales is both an introduction to a rich storytelling tradition and a fascinating artefact of Victorian-era translation. Its themes — cunning over brute strength, fate and transformation, justice and wit — remain timeless, resonating across generations and borders. A must-have for lovers of folklore, comparative mythology, and Caucasian history.

Dimensions 152 × 229 mm
Compiled by

Marjory Scott Wardrop

Pages

148 pages

Publication date

9th June 2025

Book Format

Paperback

Author

Marjory Scott Wardrop (1869–1909) was a pioneering British scholar and translator who opened a cultural bridge between Georgia and the English-speaking world. Born in London and deeply inspired by her brother Sir Oliver Wardrop’s travels, she taught herself Georgian—a language then virtually unknown in Britain—and immersed herself in its literature.

Her Georgian Folk Tales (1894), published as the first volume of the prestigious Grimm Library, introduced Western readers to the rich oral traditions of Georgia. But it was her translation of the 12th-century epic The Knight in the Panther’s Skin by Shota Rustaveli—published posthumously in 1912—that remains her crowning achievement, praised for both literary grace and linguistic fidelity.

Despite limited academic opportunities for women of her time, Marjory combined sharp intellect with deep cultural empathy. She travelled to Georgia, co-founded the Society for the Promotion of the Study of Georgian Language and Literature, and laid the foundation for Georgian studies in Britain. Her legacy endures through the Marjory Wardrop Fund at Oxford and the continuing reverence of her name in Georgia.

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