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  1. Georgian Orthodox Church. George I ( Georgian: გიორგი I, აღწეფელი) was King of the Abkhazian from circa 864 to 871. He was the third son of Leon II of the Anchabadze dynasty. He succeeded his brother Demetrius II. His nickname " Aghts’epeli " ( Georgian: აღწეფელი) is linked to his former domain of ...

  2. A white flag with a blue stripe on the bottom. The canton contains a white hand with seven stars in a semicircle above the hand. The flag of the Republic of Abkhazia was created in 1991 by Valeri Gamgia. [1] It was officially adopted on 23 July 1992. [citation needed] The design of the red canton is based on the banner of the medieval Kingdom ...

  3. Gurandukht, a daughter of "the supreme leader of the Kipchaks" Otrok (Atraka), was the only wife of David mentioned by his medieval Georgian biographer. He married her years before the recruitment of around 40,000 of the Kipchaks in the Georgian service, which David effected c. 1118.

  4. 27 de feb. de 2022 · Representative of the Kartli line of the Georgian Bagratids (Bagrationi) of Tao-Klarjeti, Gurgen was the son of Bagrat II, who reigned as King of the Georgians from 958 to 994. Gurgen was married to Gurandukht, a daughter of the Abkhazian king George II. She gave birth, in circa 960, to a son called Bagrat.

  5. The Kingdom of Abkhazia ( Georgian: აფხაზთა სამეფო, romanized: apkhazta samepo; lit. 'Kingdom of the Abkhazians' ), was a medieval feudal state in the Caucasus which was established in the 780s. Through dynastic succession, it was united in 1008 with the Kingdom of the Iberians, forming the Kingdom of Georgia .

  6. The population of the Sukhumi district (Abkhazia) was about 100,000 at that time. Greeks, Russians and Armenians composed 3.5%, 2% and 1.5% of the district's population. By the end of the nineteenth century, Abkhazians made up slightly more than 53% of the population of Abkhazia. According to the 1917 agricultural census organized by the ...

  7. 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.