Bichvinta mosaic
The Bichvinta mosaic is a 5th or 6th-century floor mosaic from the ruined early Christian church at a cape in the coastal town of Bichvinta or Pitsunda, anciently known as Pityus, in Abkhazia/Georgia. It depicts symbolic animals, birds, and plants.
History
The mosaic was discovered, in 1952, in a ruined 4th-century Byzantine three-nave basilica. Fragments of the mosaic pavements were preserved in the apse, the spacious narthex, and baptistery. The surviving fragments were removed, restored, and laid on display at the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi.The Pityus mosaic seems to have been inspired by the earlier Roman prototypes and reveals close stylistic affinities with Syro-Palestinian mosaics. The closest regional counterpart is the near-contemporaneous mosaic of the Tsromi Church in eastern Georgia.