The area around the present-day Tskhinvali was first populated back in the
Bronze Age. The unearthed settlements and archaeological artifacts from that time are unique in that they reflect influences from both Iberian (east Georgia) and
Colchian (west Georgia) cultures with possible
Sarmatian elements. Tskhinvali was first chronicled by Georgian sources in 1398 as a village in
Kartli (central Georgia) though a later account credits the 3rd century AD Georgian king Asphagur of Iberia with its foundation as a fortress. By the early 18th century, Tskhinvali was a small "royal town" populated chiefly by monastic serfs. Tskhinvali was annexed to the
Russian Empire along with the rest of eastern Georgia in 1801. Located on a trade route which linked North Caucasus to
Tbilisi and
Gori, Tskhinvali gradually developed into a commercial town with a mixed
Jewish,
Georgian,
Armenian and
Ossetian population. In the 1917 it had 600 houses with 38.4% Jews, 34.4% Georgians, 17.7% Armenians and 8.8% Ossetians. == Notes ==