The site

The village Shaumiani is located in a region which has been historically a crossroads of trade and a hub for multicultural exchange in the south of what is today modern Georgia. 

For this reason, the village Shaumiani was at a time a bustling place and an administrative centre for the region, with its own post office building, churches and other relevant public edifices. Around the turn of the 19th century, Armenian merchants moved their wealth and trade from the Karabakh region and established themselves in the village of Shaumiani. They built two-floor houses in ornate architectural styles and elegant wooden balconies.

One of these houses is the now Aleksander Melik-Pashaev House. The house was built by an architect by the name Kalantarov, who was a melik – a nobleman – of considerable wealth and name in the village. The house became the official residence to the noble Kalantarov Melik-Pashaev family.

It was into this family that the celebrated chief conductor of the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, Alexandre Melik-Pashaev, was born. It is believed that he was born at this same house in 1905, when Georgia was still a province of the Russian Empire. Alexandre Melik-Pashaev was Armenian by familial origin. Both a composer and a conductor, Alexander Melik-Pashayev studied initially with Nikolai Tcherepnin at the Tbilisi Conservatory and later joined the Tbilisi Opera in 1921 as a répétiteur. After further studies and experience in Russia he returned in 1930 to the Tbilisi Opera as chief conductor. He joined the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow as a conductor in 1931, making his debut with Verdi’s Aida, and worked there steadily in this capacity until 1953, when he replaced Nikolai Golovanov as chief conductor, following the latter’s unceremonious sacking. He ruled the Bolshoi Theatre as its chief conductor until 1962 and died soon after in 1964. Melik-Pashayev’s very considerable art is preserved through a relatively high number of complete recordings of operatic productions from the Bolshoi Theatre

By the time of his demise, the house had long ceased to be in his family’s possession. After the Bolshevik revolution the house had been confiscated in 1926 and belonged to the village council until 1987. After that, the house was reconverted once again into a library and a memorial museum for the famous music conductor.

 

The project

The project was jointly organised by European Heritage Volunteers and the Society of Young Archaeologists of Georgia. The association is based in the Academy of Sciences of Georgia, and it unites young professionals from archaeology and neighboring fields while working in cooperation with several universities in the country. Besides their own researches, the association carries out a wide range of educational activities aimed at young professionals, students, pupils and to local communities.

The Society of Young Archaeologists of Georgia aims to turn the Aleksander Melik-Pashaev House into a multifunctional educational centre – a place that would be the epicentre of culture and scientific development in a region that presently lacks it. The building would be developed further with the addition of library, lecture and conference rooms, an exhibition space, a laboratory, a place for experimental archaeology and other components.

While being used for the abovementioned educational purposes the house should become in addition a beacon of culture and intercultural exchange between different ethnic groups in this region with big ethnical plurality.

Despite Georgia is rich of cultural monuments of several hundred years’ age and the Marneuli region is rich of archaeological heritage, the preserved architectural heritage of the region is not very old. Thus, the Aleksander Melik-Pashaev House has a big importance for the region as one of the rare preserved manor houses dating back to the 19th century, the more because a lot of details from the time of its erection are preserved.

However, the monument is currently I an endangered state, and the risk that valuable details, the surrounding structures or even the whole monument will be lost forever due to negligence, lack of maintenance or vandalism is – sadly – a not only hypothetical scenario.    

During the European Heritage Volunteers Project an architectural survey of the building and its direct surroundings in accordance to the heritage conservation standards was carried out and its current state recorded in detail. The building – its structure, main characteristics and specific features – were examined, the used materials explored, and the different historic layers, the pathologies and damages documented. The final documentation will serve as a base for the future conservation project and the measures which need to be undertaken.

The documentation was led by architects from the association “Meshtra – Traditional Knowledge and Crafts” which is based in Sofia / Bulgaria and a member of the European Heritage Volunteers Network.

The participants gained experience in the field of architectural documentation – its process, issues, challenges and the tools to be used. They obtained hands-on experience in the documentation process – in measuring, sketching, drawing by hand and in CAD floor plans, sections, elevations, specific details, photographic documentation, and others. 

Within the framework of the educational part the necessity of documentation of architectural heritage was explained, the important aspects of heritage documentation discussed and an overview as well as a short introduction to the different methods of documentation of architectural heritage was also provided.

 

The project was jointly organised by European Heritage Volunteers, the Society of Young Archaeologists of Georgia, and the Association “Meshtra – Traditional Knowledge and Crafts”.

European Heritage Volunteers