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  1. Bagrat III of Georgia. English: Bagrat III (c. 960–1014), of the Georgian Bagrationi dynasty, was King of the Abkhazians from 978 on (as Bagrat II) and King of Kings of the Georgians from 1008 on. He united these two titles by dynastic inheritance and, through conquest and diplomacy, added some more lands to his realm, effectively becoming ...

  2. Bagrat IV of Georgia (1018-24 November 1072) was the king of Georgia from 1027 to 1072, succeeding Giorgi I of Georgia and preceding Giorgi II of Georgia. Bagrat was born in 1018 to the House of Bagrationi, a Georgian noble family. He was the son of King Giorgi I of Georgia, who made him a hostage of the Byzantine Empire after a failed war in 1022. He was eight when he succeeded his father as ...

  3. son of George XII of Georgia. This page was last edited on 18 January 2024, at 15:03. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  4. The Stemma of the Bagratid Kings of Georgia m the Fifteenth Century Bagrat V The Great 11305. Co-king c. 1355, King of Georgia 1360-1395 X I. Helen, 11366 II. June 1367 Anne, d. of Alexius III Comnenus, Emperor of Trebizond; *Apr. 6, 1357, t p. 1393 II: Constantine I *c. 1369, t k. 1412 King of Georgia 1405-1412 X Natia, d.

  5. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Bagrat’s reign, a period of uttermost importance in the history of Georgia, brought about the final victory of the Georgian Bagratids in the centuries-long power struggles. Anxious to create more stable and centralized monarchy, Bagrat eliminated or at least diminished the autonomy of the dynastic princes.

  6. 18 de dic. de 2022 · Bagrat IV (Georgian: ბაგრატ IV) (1018 – November 24, 1072), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was the King of Georgia from 1027 to 1072. During his long and eventful reign, Bagrat sought to repress the great nobility and to secure Georgia's sovereignty from the Byzantine and Seljuqid empires. In a series of intermingled conflicts, Bagrat ...