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  1. His family was the ruling royal family for 200 years, in Armenia, Georgia and Albania. Because of this long rule, they were called king of kings (shahnshah). The son of Smbat VIII, Ashot, became the first Bagratuni king. He had four sons and three daughters, whom he married to Artsruni and Syuni princes.

  2. Bagrat II of Georgia (grandfather of Bagrat, David's adoptee), and Gagik I of Armenia allied themselves with David, who recaptured Manzikert from the Marwanid emir of Diyar Bakr about 993 and raided Akhlat, another important stronghold of this Kurdish dynasty, in 997.

  3. Constantine was the son of King Bagrat V of Georgia by his second wife, Anna of Trebizond. His maternal grandparents were Alexios III of Trebizond and Theodora Kantakouzene . In 1400, Constantine was sent as an ambassador to the Turco-Mongol warlord Timur who continued a relentless and devastating war against the Georgians .

  4. Prince Bagrat III (died 1028) ( Georgian: ბაგრატ) was a Georgian prince of the Bagrationi dynasty from Tao-Klarjeti. [1] He was son of Prince Sumbat III of Klarjeti . Prince Bagrat rebelled against King Bagrat III of Georgia and proclaimed himself as King of Klarjeti. He took refuge in Constantinople .

  5. Bagrat III, of the Georgian Bagrationi dynasty, was a king (mepe) of Abkhazia from 978 on 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. Before Bagrat was crowned as king, he had also reigned in Kartli as co-ruler with his ...

  6. 25 de mar. de 2024 · Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk

  7. Tamar owed her accomplishments most immediately to the reforms of her great-grandfather David IV (r. 1089–1125) and, more remotely, to the unifying efforts of David III and Bagrat III who became architects of a political unity of Georgian kingdoms and principalities in the opening decade of the 11th century.