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  1. I have just modified one external link on George X of Kartli. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:

  2. In Kartli. In 1688, when the government of Iran declared its recalcitrant subject George XI of Kartli deposed, Heraclius acceded to the shah's pressure. He converted to Islam assuming the title of Nazar Alī Khān in 1676. In reward, Heraclius was confirmed as King of Kartli and given a Persian army to win over the crown.

  3. In 1545, Bagrat and his ally Luarsab I of Kartli suffered a bitter defeat at the Battle of Sokhoista in 1545. As a result, Samtskhe wrested of Bagrat’s control, and came under the Ottoman hegemony. In the following years, the principalities of Mingrelia and Guria also asserted their de facto independence from the crown of Imereti, further reducing the royal power.

  4. Nestan-Darejan outlived her husband and died sometime after 1612, having mothered six children, including Simon's successor to the throne of Kartli, George X. Marriage [ edit ] Nestan-Darejan was born of Levan of Kakheti's second marriage to a daughter of the shamkhal of Tarki , whom the king married in 1529 after he divorced his first wife, Tinatin Gurieli .

  5. George XI (Gurgin Khan; 1651–1709), king of Kartli. Levan (Shah-Quli Khan) (c. 1653–1709), regent of Kartli. Alexander (Iskander Mirza; fl. 1666 – 1697), a darogha (prefect) of the Persian capital Isfahan in 1667. Married Mehr Sharf Begum, a daughter of Izz-i-Sharf and Mirza Abdollah al-Husayni al-Marashi.

  6. Jesse of Kartli. Jesse ( Georgian: იესე, Iese ), also known by his Muslim names Ali-Quli Khan and Mustafa Pasha, (1680 or 1681–1727), of the Mukhranian Bagrationi dynasty, was a king ( mepe) of Kartli ( Georgia ), acting actually as a Safavid Persian and later Ottoman viceroy ( wali) from 1714 to 1716 and from 1724 until his death ...

  7. Bagrat would win a decisive battle, forcing George VIII to return to Kartli. [12] While Kutaisi, the regional capital, remains temporarily under the control of George VIII, Bagrat would eventually take the city and at the Gelati Monastery he would be crowned as King of Imereti and assume the title of Bagrat II, officially separating the regions west of Likhi Range from the rest of the unified ...