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  1. Life. Bagrat was the son of the Georgian King David IX by his wife Sindukhtar Jaqeli. He was co-ruler from 1355, and became king after the death of his father in 1360. Bagrat V was respected by his subjects, who nicknamed him the Great. According to Armenian and Greek chroniclers, the king was a skilful warrior and a talented military leader.

  2. Bagrat (Georgian: ბაგრატი) (8 May 1776 – 8 May 1841) was a Georgian royal prince (batonishvili) of the House of Bagrationi and an author. A son of King George XII of Georgia , Bagrat occupied important administrative posts in the last years of the Georgian monarchy, after whose abolition by the Russian Empire in 1801 he entered the imperial civil service.

  3. A fresco of King Bagrat III from Bedia Cathedral Map of the Caucasus region and surrounding areas at 1000 AD, before the death of David III. During the 10th century, David III of Tao invaded the Duchy of Kartli , giving it to his adopted son, who would later be known as Bagrat III of Georgia , with his biological father, Gurgen of Iberia , as regent.

  4. Bagrat III of Georgia. English: Bagrat III (c. 960–1014), of the Georgian Bagrationi dynasty, was King of the Abkhazians from 978 on (as Bagrat II) and King of Kings of the Georgians from 1008 on. He united these two titles by dynastic inheritance and, through conquest and diplomacy, added some more lands to his realm, effectively becoming ...

  5. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Bagrat was born in about 960 to Gurgen, a Bagrationi Dynasty prince from Kartli, and his wife, Gurandukht, who was a daughter of the late king George II of Aphkhazeti. Being still in his minority, Bagrat was adopted by his childless kinsman David III Kuropalates (990-1000), presiding prince of Tao/Tayk and the most powerful ruler in the Caucasus.

  6. Bagrat ( Georgian: ბაგრატი) was a Georgian royal prince ( batonishvili) of the Bagrationi dynasty . Son of King Constantine I of Georgia . Bagrat whose revolt against his reigning brother Alexander I of Georgia is recorded in the 18th-century continuation of the Georgian chronicles, but unattested elsewhere. [1]

  7. By 978, Gurgen had become a de facto king of Iberia, while his son Bagrat III had been adopted and designed as heir by David III of Tao, thus setting the stage for future unification of various Georgian polities into a single Bagratid realm. Bagrat had two sons: Gurgen (died 1008), his successor as king of Iberia; Sumbat (died 992) References