Alright, look to your right and feast your eyes on Narikala - Tbilisi’s very own “castle on the hill.” Picture this place a thousand years ago: kings in furry hats barking orders, guards trundling along stone walls, and the occasional invader peeking over, thinking, “Do we really want to try this?”
Legend says old King Vakhtang Gorgasali himself founded this giant playground back when folks were still figuring out the wheel. Actually, archaeologists have found evidence people were hanging around this hill since the 4th millennium BC! The Persians, the Arabs, Mongols, Georgians - everyone’s crashed here at some point, sort of like the world’s worst Airbnb. Mongols even gave it the catchy name “Narin Qala,” or “Little Fortress.”
These walls have seen earthquakes (big one in 1827!), epic sword fights, and more drama than a telenovela. The St. Nicholas Church below? The original burned down, but the new one’s got frescoes telling tales from the Bible and Georgia’s wild history. Take it in - Narikala isn’t just old stone, it’s the ultimate storyteller of Tbilisi.



