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  1. Prince Grigol Dadiani (Georgian: გრიგოლ დადიანი; 6 October 1814 – 24 December 1901) was a member of the Georgian noble Dadiani family of Mingrelia. He was a son of Levan V Dadiani, Prince-regnant of Mingrelia, and member of the regency council for his nephew, Niko I Dadiani.

  2. Grigol Dadiani (Georgian: გრიგოლ დადიანი; 1770 – 23 October 1804), of the House of Dadiani, was Prince of Mingrelia from 1788 to 1804, with intermissions from 1791 to 1794 and in 1802 when his position was filled by his rivaling brothers.

  3. La Casa de Dadiani (en georgiano: დადიანი) fueron una familia noble de duques y príncipes de Mingrelia, situada en la actual Georgia. Historia. El nombre Dadian menciona por primera vez en 1046, y se referiría a descendientes de Dadi, un miembro de la casa de Vardanisdze.

  4. Levan V Dadiani (Georgian: ლევან V დადიანი; 1793 – 30 July 1846), of the House of Dadiani, was Prince of Mingrelia, in western Georgia, from 1804 to 1846. Succeeding on the death of his father Grigol Dadiani , he ruled—initially under the regency of his mother Nino from 1804 to 1811—as a loyal subject of ...

  5. Este desde 1802 pidió a Rusia que restableciese el reino de Kartli y Kajetia y que a cambio aceptaría el protectorado ruso, pero no fue escuchado. Se rebeló el mthavari de Mingrelia Grigol Dadiani y Salomón tuvo que combatirlo. Grigol pidió el protectorado ruso.

  6. Manuchar II Dadiani (Georgian: მანუჩარ II დადიანი; died c. 1840), of the House of Dadiani, was Prince of Mingrelia from 1791 to 1793 as a rival to his elder brother, Grigol Dadiani, whose rule was marred by the long-standing struggle between the Imeretian crown seeking to subdue Mingrelia and Mingrelian ...

  7. En 1805, la princesa Ninó (viuda de Grigol Dadiani), junto con una delegación de los príncipes megrelianos, presentó el icono al emperador Alejandro I de Rusia, quien ricamente decoró el icono y lo devolvió al pueblo megreliano.