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  1. Jorge II (en georgiano: გიორგი II: Giorgi II) (c. 1054-1112), de la dinastía Bagrationi, fue rey de Georgia de 1072 a 1089. Era hijo y sucesor de Bagrat IV y su mujer Borena de Alania. Incapaz de tratar eficazmente con los constantes ataques Selyúcidas y abrumado por problemas internos en su reino, Jorge se vio forzado para ...

  2. John George I, Elector of Saxony. Mother. Magdalene Sybille of Prussia. Religion. Lutheran. Signature. Johann George II (31 May 1613 - 22 August 1680) was the Elector of Saxony from 1656 to 1680. He belonged to the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin .

  3. Vakhtang II (died 1292), of the dynasty of Bagrationi, was king ( mepe) of Georgia from 1289 to 1292. His father, David Narin, appointed him as the heir to the throne of Western Georgia and in 1289 the Ilkhanids decided to reunify Georgian kingdoms and they appointed Vakhtang as King of East Georgia, Vakhtang was supposed to unite the kingdoms ...

  4. Father. Prince George. Mother. Gulashar (Gulkhan) of Imereti. Religion. Georgian Orthodox Church. Bagrat VI ( Georgian: ბაგრატ VI; c. 1439 – 1478), a representative of the Imeretian branch of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a king ( mepe) of Imereti (as Bagrat II) from 1463, and a king of Georgia from 1465 until his death.

  5. George II continued the expansionist policy of his predecessor, aiming primarily at unification of Georgia. It took him, however, some time to assume full ruling powers as his half-brother Bagrat also claimed the crown.

  6. George XII ( Georgian: გიორგი XII, romanized: giorgi XII ), sometimes known as George XIII (November 10, 1746 – December 28, 1800), of the House of Bagrationi, was the second and last king ( mepe) of the Kingdom of Kartl-Kakheti in eastern Georgia from 1798 until his death in 1800. The third son of King Heraclius II, George was ...

  7. Bagrat was the son of the king George I of Georgia ( r. 1014–1027) by his first wife Mariam of Vaspurakan. At the age of three, Bagrat was surrendered by his father as a hostage to the Byzantine emperor Basil II ( r. 976–1025) as a price for George's defeat in the 1022 war with the Byzantines. The young child Bagrat spent the next three years in the imperial capital of Constantinople and ...