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  1. Prince Constantine was a son of King David II of Imereti and Ana Orbeliani. At the age of three, he was surrendered by his father as a hostage to Solomon II, who had won a power struggle and dethroned David in 1791. When David attempted to reclaim the throne in 1792, Solomon had Constantine incarcerated in the castle of Mukhuri. [1]

  2. Family. In 1358, Bagrat married, with the approval of David IX of Georgia, a daughter of Qvarqvare I, a Jaqeli atabeg of Samtskhe. They had three sons: [1] Alexander I (died 1389), Duke of Imereti (1372–1378), King of Imereti (1387–1389). George I (died 1392), King of Imereti (1389–1392). Constantine II (died 1401), King of Imereti (1396 ...

  3. Constantine II continued his war to reunify Georgia and attempted to invade Imereti in 1485, but was defeated by Alexander and a nobleman from the Lortkipanidze family in the Battle of Chikhori. The Georgian king was forced to return to Kartli in 1486 when Sultan Ya'qub Beg began a series of military incursions into his domains.

  4. 21 de abr. de 2024 · Heads of House of Imereti after 1815. Since Solomon II of Imereti had no sons, he proclaimed Prince Constantine, son of king David II of Imereti, and his male-line senior descendants as heirs to the throne of the Kingdom of Imereti. Hereditary Prince Constantine (I) (1815–1844), son of king David II

  5. Biography King Solomon I Reigning and fighting for the strengthening of royal power. In 1752, the seventeen-year-old Solomon I inherited the throne of his father, Alexander V: Kingdom of Imereti and all western Georgia began to emerge from turmoil, degenerate princes and dukes came against him - Mamia Gurieli and Besarioni, Catholicos of Abkhazia (brother of Rostom, Duke of Racha), as well as ...

  6. Princess Rodam of Kartli. Religion. Georgian Orthodox Church. Khelrtva. Alexander V ( Georgian: ალექსანდრე V) (c. 1703/4 – March 1752), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was king ( mepe) of Imereti (western Georgia) from 1720 his death in 1752, with the exceptions of the periods of 1741 and 1746–1749.