During its two-year history, the Assembly adopted 126 laws, notably on citizenship, local elections, the country's defense, agriculture, legal system, political and administrative arrangements for ethnic minorities, a national system of public education, and some other laws and regulations on fiscal/monetary policy, the Georgian railways, trade and domestic production, etc. In July 1919, the Assembly set up a
Senate whose members were to be elected by the nation’s legislative body to "supervise the observance and defense of laws and to ensure strict adherence to them by all organizations, persons, and local government organs." The Senate was essentially an appellate court but also had the power to revoke any government decision contrary to law and to deal with complaints against courts. Preoccupied with uneasy foreign relations and domestic problems in the years of the
Russian Civil War, the Georgian government was not able to fully implement in practice the progressive program laid out in the legislation. By early 1921, the Constituent Assembly had drafted Georgia’s first
constitution, which was adopted already in the wake of the
invasion by Soviet troops on 21 February 1921, when the battle was raging at the outskirts of
Tbilisi, capital of Georgia. On 25 February the Constituent Assembly evacuated Tbilisi first for
Kutaisi, and finally for
Batumi where it held its last meeting on 21 March 1921, ordering the government of the republic to leave the country. On 24 March 1921 the
Revolutionary committee of Georgia – a provisional administration set up by the victorious Bolsheviks – declared the Assembly dissolved. == References ==