Ts'iteli Tvali

Ts'iteli Tvali (Samot: Წითელი თვალი, : /t͡sʼitʰɛli tʰvali/, lit. 'Red Eye') was a 20th-century revolutionary political organization in Tavaluda which conducted assassinations of government officials in an attempt to overthrow the democratic and monarchical system and overturn the government reforms of Sa III & I of Tavaluda, which her son, Veki I, was intent on continuing. The organization declared itself to be an Artimijan populist and irredentist movement, seeking to claim back Badzevala and Artimijan-inhabited lands in Tavaluda, to be ruled by a government of Artimijans, who they considered to be a superior, "civilized" race. Composed primarily of young revolutionary national socialist intellectuals believing in the efficacy of terrorism, Ts'iteli Tvali emerged in the Autumn of 1922, after national socialist ideas migrated into Artimijan communities in Tavaluda from their homeland of the Samot People's Republic, where fascistic movements under were first developing under Mikeil Kobakhia were plotting the overthrow the government and bring about what would in 1931 become the Samot Central State.

Based upon an underground apparatus of local, semi-independent cells co-ordinated by a self-selecting Executive Committee, Ts'iteli Tvali continued to espouse acts of revolutionary violence in an attempt to spur a political and ethnic revolt against republicanism, monarchism, and Tavafalek rule over Artimijan-inhabited areas, culminating in the successful assassination of King Veki I in October 1928, which led directly to the beginning of the Black Decade, a period of insurgent activity throughout Southern Tavaluda between the government and militant ethnic Artimijan elements.