Rhodopolis Vartsikhe was home to a fortified settlement, which dates back to the 4th century, as suggested by archaeological evidence. The Georgian name of the village, literally meaning "a fort of the rose", replicates the Greek placename Rhodopolis, "a city of the rose", recorded by the 6th-century Eastern Roman authors such as
Procopius and
Agathias. Rhodopolis stood in a fertile and economically advantageous part of Lazica, on the road to its eastern neighbor,
Iberia, but the location of the city in an open plain was militarily weak. Therefore, the Lazi, in fear of an invasion by the Sasanian Persian forces, destroyed the fortress of Rhodopolis as incapable of defense in the 530s. During the
Lazic War (541–562), the Persian commander
Mihr-Mihroe occupied the city and left a garrison in it. In 557, a force of 2,000 cavalrymen placed by the Eastern Roman general
Justin under command of a
Hun named Elminzur entered Rhodopolis unopposed as both the Persian garrison and locals were outside of the city walls. The Persian detachments were found and destroyed in the neighborhood; the local population were spared, but they had to furnish hostages to prove their loyalty. Under the Byzantine hegemony, Rhodopolis was a diocese under the
metropolis of
Phasis. It disappears from the Constantinopolitan
Notitiae Episcopatuum in the early 8th century, roughly at the same time as the metropolis of Phasis, due to an
Arab invasion of the area. A Greek seal bearing the name of John, Bishop of Rhodopolis, may suggest a short-lived revival of the bishopric in the 11th century. Rhodopolis remains the name of a
titular see of both the Greek Orthodox
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and the
Roman Catholic Church. The area of modern-day Vartsikhe falls within the
canonical territory of the Eparchy of Vani and Baghdati of the
Georgian Orthodox Church.
Modern history Recorded history of Vardtsikhe is scarce until the 17th century, when the locale reemerges as a castle owned by the
kings of Imereti, who had a summer residence there and enjoyed hunting in the neighboring Ajameti forest. It was refurbished under
Alexander V of Imereti (
r. 1720–1752). The castle suffered heavily during the
Russo-Imeretian operations led by
Count Totleben against the
Ottoman Empire in 1771. As a conflict between Russia and Imereti was simmering in 1809, King
Solomon II left his capital of
Kutaisi, garrisoned by a Russian force, and entrenched himself at Vardtsikhe. In an ensuing war, the castle was captured by the Russian troops on 6 March 1810. Imereti was eventually annexed by Russia later that year and the Vardtsikhe castle, already damaged in fighting, fell in disuse. Early in the 1900s, the Ananovs, a family of entrepreneurs from Kutaisi, who owned an estate in Vardtsikhe, built a winery in the village and bottled a local brandy, which is still produced. The Ananov mansion, built in 1860, housed a kindergarten in the
Soviet era and then functioned as a hotel. == Heritage ==