| prov:value
| - It first occurs in the travel records of Ignatiy Smolnyanin as gurzi (??????????) (1389) and Afanasy Nikitin as gurzynskaya zemlya (?????????????????????? ??????????, Gurzin land) (1466-72).[8] The Russian name was brought into several other languages, such as Bulgarian, Belarusian, Chinese, Croatian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbian, Hungarian, Macedonian
|