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  1. 2.David Soslan was one of these “Ossetian Bagratids”, and, therefore, his marriage with Tamara was endogamous, not exogamous. Prof. Togoshvili is forced to state that these provisions are not confirmed by either old Georgian, Armenian, or any other sources and represent the fruit of Vakhushti’s personal creativity.

  2. The Georgian army, numbering 65,000–90,000 troops, was ready for battle within ten days, and as soon as Rukn ad-Din's envoy left, it entered the battlefield under the command of David Soslan. It was composed of Zakaria and Ivane Mhargrdzeli, Shalva and Ivane Akhaltskheli, and other famous commanders. "

  3. La monarquía unificada mantuvo su precaria independencia de los imperios bizantino y selyúcida a lo largo del siglo XI, y floreció bajo el reinado de David IV el Constructor (1089-1125), que repelió los ataques selyúcidas y completó en lo esencial la unificación de Georgia con la reconquista de Tiflís en 1122.

  4. David Soslan: an Alan prince who fought against the neighboring Muslims! David Soslan (d.o.b. unknown-1207) feuded with the neighboring Muslims due to reiligious differences. He wound up marrying Queen Tamar of Georgia, thereby making him the king. During his reign, he led Georgian raids, conquering territories throughout the Muslim world, including Barda,Ganga, and others. He later defeated ...

  5. David-Soslan 902 −8. LARSnaOrtasoch 943 +5. White left the game • Black is victorious. Scandinavian Defense: Mieses-Kotroc Variation. 1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3.

  6. 27 de may. de 2023 · David Soslan's status of a king consort, as well as his presence in art, on charters, and on coins, was dictated by the necessity of male aspects of kingship, but he remained a subordinate ruler who shared throne with and derived his power from Tamar.[15][16] Tamar continued to be styled as mep’et’a mep’e – "king of kings".

  7. 26 de mar. de 2024 · Thanks to a strong and flexible military organization and the commander-in-chief David Soslan the Georgians undertook a massive offensive against the Turkish invaders. In 1195 the 400,000 Turks were crushed by 90,000 Georgians led by king David Soslan in the battle at Shamkor, and in 1203 at Basiani.