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  1. 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 ...

  2. In 1542 AD, Duke Levan I Dadiani became hereditary Prince of Mingrelia and established himself as an independent ruler. His descendant Prince Levan III Dadiani was forced to abdicate in 1691 AD and Dadianis relatives from the House of Chikovani , hitherto Princes of Salipartiano , inherited the title of Princes of Mingrelia and ...

  3. 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 the Russian Empire.

    • Male
    • July 30, 1846
  4. Levan II. (1597-1657) Levan II Dadiani was one of the most powerful figures in western Georgia in the period between the united Kingdom of Georgia and the modern day. His father was Manuchar Dadiani, ruler of the Odishi Principality. [1] (which subsequently came to be known as Samegrelo).

  5. After the death of his mother, her son, Levan V Dadiani, saw the building of the church through to its completion. At present the icon of the Vlacherna Mother of God is kept in the Art Museum of Georgia, while the robe of the Holy Mother of God is kept in the Historical Palace-Museum in the main town of Samegrelo - Zugdidi.

  6. Levan IV Dadiani ( Georgian: ლევან IV დადიანი; died 1694) was Prince of Mingrelia from 1681 until 1691, when he was forced to abdicate and retire to Constantinople, where he died. A natural son of the preceding Levan III Dadiani, he was the last of the First House of Dadiani to rule Mingrelia, a principality ...

  7. Levan I Dadiani was the first of the Dadianis to rule Odishi [1] as a mtavari (Principal)—a position similar to a King, in the sense of not being formally subject to a higher secular authority—and not merely as an eristavi (Duke). He played a major role in the establishment and consolidation of Odishi as an independent state.