Pre-WW2 Born in the
Guria region of
Georgia, into the
Mgeladze family, then part of the minor
Russian nobility. Mgeladze had grown up in
Abkhazia and was serving with the military on the
Transcaucasus Front when he was appointed head of the Communist Party of Abkhazia by
Joseph Stalin. Under Mgeladze,
Georgian was made the language of instruction in Abkhazia, replacing
Abkhaz and
Russian at the start of the 1945–1946 academic year.
Friendship with Stalin After the Second World War, Mgeladze became a confidant of Stalin, who nicknamed him “Comrade Wolf”. He made a declaration that Abkhazia would produce lemons for the entirety of the Soviet Union after Stalin repeatedly showed him lemon trees. Using his influence with Stalin, Mgeladze manoeuvred against head of the
Ministry of State Security Lavrentiy Beria, denouncing his corruption and that of Stalin’s other confidant
Kandid Charkviani, who was an ally of Beria. Mgeladze succeeded in convincing Stalin to turn against Charkviani and strengthened his distrust of Beria. In March 1952 Mgeladze was appointed First Secretary of the Georgian Communist Party by Beria, replacing Charkviani. ==Resignation and later life==