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  1. Vakhtang II Gurieli. Vakhtang II Gurieli ( Georgian: ვახტანგ II გურიელი; died 1814 or 1825 [1] ), of the House of Gurieli, was Prince of Guria, in western Georgia, from 1792 to 1797. He succeeded on the death of his elder brother Simon II Gurieli and was deposed by a younger brother Kaikhosro. Vakhtang's subsequent ...

  2. Alexander II (Georgian: ალექსანდრე II; died April 1, 1510) was a king of Georgia in 1478 and of Imereti from 1483 to 1510. Son of Bagrat VI of Georgia , he briefly succeeded his father in 1478 during the Georgian civil war of 1463–1491 which divided the kingdom into several independent states.

  3. Vakhtang II nacque dall'unione tra il sovrano della Georgia occidentale ( Imerezia) Davide VI Narin e sua moglie Tamara, figlia del principe Amanelisdze. Nel 1289 ascese al trono della Georgia, con il consenso dei mongoli, dopo che il suo predecessore e cugino, Demetrio II, fu giustiziato per volere dell' ilkhan Arghun.

  4. In 1791, he helped bring about the temporary reconciliation in western Georgia between his sisterly nephew King Solomon II of Imereti and his rival David II. [1] At the time when Anton became the catholicos, the Georgian Orthodox Church had been split into two separate patriarchates along the political divide, one for eastern Georgia and one for western Georgia.

  5. 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.

  6. Vakhtang era il figlio maggiore del re Alessandro I e della sua prima moglie Dulandukht Orbelian. Nel 1433 il padre lo nominò co-regnante. Quando Alessandro I abdicò nel 1442, Vakhtang prese il suo posto sul trono di Georgia, lasciando i suoi fratelli, Demetrio e Giorgio, come coregnanti. Il governo di Vakhtang IV fu minacciato dalle ...

  7. Established in 2004, the Order of the National Hero of Georgia is the country's highest state decoration exclusively granted for heroism. Among others, it was awarded to Zhiuli Shartava (posthumously, 2004), Zaza Damenia (posthumously, 2008), John McCain (2010), Lech Kaczyński (posthumously, 2010), Giorgi Antsukhelidze (posthumously, 2013), Zurab Iarajuli (posthumously, 2013).