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  1. Demetrius, born in 1259, was the second son and third child of King David VII of Georgia. His mother was David's third wife Gvantsa née Kakhaberidze. He was 2 years old when Gvantsa was put to death by the Mongols as a reaction to David's abortive rebellion against the Ilkhan hegemony. David himself died in 1270.

  2. Vakhtang II (died 1292), of the dynasty of Bagrationi, was king 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 of Western and Eastern Georgia, but he died in 1292 ...

  3. George II ( Georgian: გიორგი II, Giorgi II ), of the Leonid dynasty was a king of Abkhazia from 923 to 957 AD. [A] His lengthy reign is regarded as a zenith of cultural flowering and political power of his realm. Despite being independent and locally titled as a Mepe (king), he is also regarded as Exousiastes, [B] the title that was ...

  4. 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.

  5. George II Gurieli. Giorgi II Gurieli ( Georgian: გიორგი II გურიელი; died 1600), of the House of Gurieli, was Prince of Guria from 1564 to 1583 and again from 1587 to 1600. Succeeding on the death of his father Rostom Gurieli, Giorgi's rule over his small principality, located in southwest Georgia, was a period of ...

  6. Bagrat III (Georgian: ბაგრატ III) (c. 960 – 7 May 1014), of the Georgian Bagrationi dynasty, was a king of Abkhazia from 978 on (as Bagrat II) and King of Georgia from 1008 on. He united these two titles by dynastic inheritance and, through conquest and diplomacy, added more lands to his realm, effectively becoming the first king of the Kingdom of Georgia .

  7. Named after King George II of Great Britain, the Georgia Colony covered the area from South Carolina south to Spanish Florida and west to French Louisiana at the Mississippi River. On January 2, 1788, Georgia became the fourth state to ratify the United States Constitution . [7]