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  1. The Transcaucasian Teachers Seminary ( Russian: Закавказская учительская семинария) in Gori (present-day Georgia) was a 4-year specialized secondary school in the Russian Empire in 1876–1917 aimed at professional training of primary school teachers.

  2. The Gazakh Teachers Seminary (Azerbaijani: Qazax müəllimlər seminariyası) is a teachers seminary that functioned from 1918 to 1959 in the Azerbaijani city of Gazakh. It was created on the initiative of the Azerbaijani enlightener Firudin-bek Kocharli and Husein Efendi Gaibov.

  3. The Gazakh Center of ADA University is located in the historical building of the Transcaucasian Teachers' Seminary, founded in 1918. It offers master's programs in education and public administration, and plans to expand its educational and cultural activities in the region.

  4. In this context, the opening of an Azerbaijani (Tatar) Department on 1 September 1879 at the Transcaucasian Teachers’ Seminary in Gori (in Georgia) was a highly significant event. The seminary was some distance from Azerbaijan’s borders.

  5. He was later transferred to the Transcaucasian Teachers Seminary in 1879. As the first teacher of Arabic and Persian at the seminary, he opened a school for the poor in Tbilisi at his own expense, and later, in the early 20th century, expanded it to become a six-grade "Mufti-Islamic School".

  6. In 1889, Dmitriy Gulia enters the Transcaucasian Teachers Seminary in Gori. For many years he worked as Abkhaz language teacher in villages. In 1892 Gulia together with K. D. Machavariani made up the Abkhaz alphabet used to present day.

  7. Oct 6, 2021 · The Gazakh Teachers Seminary was established in 1918 as a successor to the Azerbaijani branch of the famous Transcaucasian Teachers Seminary. Its graduates include some of Azerbaijan’s prominent writers, educators, and public figures, who went on to contribute to the country’s social, cultural, scientific, and educational development.

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