Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. After the death of the controversial Patriarch David V, he was elected the new Catholicos-Patriarch of Georgia on 25 December 1977. The new patriarch began a course of reforms, enabling the Georgian Orthodox Church, once suppressed by the Soviet ideology, to largely regain its former influence and prestige by the late 1980s.

  2. David IV or V ( Georgian: დავით IV/V, davit' IV/V) was a 15th-century Catholicos-Patriarch of Georgia known from the group of documents dated from 1447 to 1457. They testify to David's efforts to restore the patriarchal see of Mtskheta from the devastation of Timur's invasions earlier that century. [1]

  3. Demetrius I ( Georgian: დემეტრე I, romanized: demet're I) ( c. 1093 – 1156), from the Bagrationi dynasty, was King ( mepe) of Georgia from 1125 to 1156. He is also known as a poet. He was King of Georgian kingdom two times, first in 1125 to 1154 and second in 1155 before his death in 1156.

  4. Still a minor, was deposed by George V. David IX (დავით IX) Before 1346 Son of George V: 1346–1360 1360 aged at least 13–14: Kingdom of Georgia: Sindukhtar before 1360 two children The prosperity of the kingdom did not last, as the Black Death swept through the area in 1348. In 1360, Georgia lost Armenia. Bagrat V the Great

  5. Father. David V of Georgia. Religion. Georgian Orthodox Church. Demna ( Georgian: დემნა, a hypocorism for Demetrius, დემეტრე) (born before 1155 – died c. 1178) was a Georgian royal prince and pretender to the throne proclaimed as king during the failed nobles’ revolt of 1177/8.

  6. Vakhtang III (Georgian: ვახტანგ III; 1276–1308), of the dynasty of Bagrationi, was the king of Georgia from 1302 to 1308. He ruled during the Mongol dominance of Georgia . A son of Demetrius II of Georgia by his Trapezuntine wife , Vakhtang was appointed, in 1302, by the Ilkhan Ghazan as a rival king to his brother David VIII , who had revolted against the Mongol rule.

  7. Kata or Katay ( Georgian: კატა, კატაჲ) was a daughter of David IV, King of Georgia. She was married off by her father into the Byzantine imperial family c. 1116, but the identity of her husband is not revealed in the medieval sources. There are three modern hypotheses regarding her marriage.