Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. David V de Georgia (en georgiano: დავით V) (m. 1155) fue rey de Georgia durante 6 meses. Biografía. Miembro de la dinastía Bagrátida, David era hijo del rey Demetrio I. Obligó a su padre a abdicar pero solo reinó 6 meses, hasta su fallecimiento en 1155. Tras su muerte, Demetrio I recuperó el trono y designó a su hijo Jorge III.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › David_VDavid V - Wikipedia

    David V (Georgian: დავით V, romanized: davit V; 1113 — 1155), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a 7th king of Georgia in 1154 before his death in 1155.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › David_IVDavid IV - Wikipedia

    • Sobriquet and Regnal Ordinal
    • Family Background and Early Life
    • Accession to The Throne
    • Revival of The Georgian State
    • Military Campaigns
    • Cultural Life
    • Family
    • Burial
    • Legacy

    The epithet aghmashenebeli (აღმაშენებელი), which is translated as "the Builder" (in the sense of "built completely"), "the Rebuilder", or "the Restorer", first appears as the sobriquet of David in the charter issued in the name of "King of Kings Bagrat" in 1452 and becomes firmly affixed to him in the works of the 17th- and 18th-century historians ...

    The year of David's birth can be calculated from the date of his accession to the throne recorded in the Life of King of Kings David (ცხორებაჲ მეფეთ-მეფისა დავითისი), written c. 1123–1126, as k'oronikon (Paschal cycle) 309, that is, 1089, when he was 16 years old. Thus, he would have been born in k'oronikon 293 or 294, that is, c. 1073. According t...

    Watching his kingdom slip into chaos, George II ceded the crown to his 16-year-old son David in 1089. Although the historical tradition founded by Prince Vakhushti in the 18th century and followed by Marie-Félicité Brosset in the 19th states that David succeeded George upon his death, a number of surviving documents suggest that George died around ...

    Despite his age, he was actively involved in Georgia’s political life. Backed by his tutor and an influential churchman George of Chqondidi, David IV pursued a purposeful policy, taking no unconsidered step. He was determined to bring order to the land, bridle the unsubmissive secular and ecclesiastic feudal lords, centralize the state administrati...

    Following the annexation of Kingdom of Kakheti, in 1105, David routed a Seljuk punitive force at the Battle of Ertsukhi, leading to momentum that helped him to secure the key fortresses of Samshvilde, Rustavi, Gishi, and Loribetween 1110 and 1118. Problems began to crop up for David now. His population, having been at war for the better part of twe...

    King David the Builder gave close attention to the education of his people. The king selected children who were sent to the Byzantine Empire"so that they be taught languages and bring home translations made by them there". Many of them later became well-known scholars. At the time of David the Builder there were quite a few schools and academies in...

    Marriages

    1. Rusudan, an Armenianprincess (divorced in 1107) 2. Gurandukht, daughter of the Kipchak chief Otrok(c. 1107)

    Issue

    1. Demetrius I 2. Prince Vakhtang(1112-1138) 3. Prince George (1114-1129) 4. Princess Rusudan, who was married to Prince Jadaron of Alania. They had a son David Soslan, who would go on to marry Tamar of Georgia 5. Zurab, son of David IV of Georgia 6. Princess Tamar, who married Shirvanshah Manuchehr III(died c. 1154), and became a nun in widowhood. 7. Princess Kata, who has been theorized to be the same person as Irene who married the Byzantine prince Isaakios Comnenus.

    A tombstone at the entrance of Gelati monastery, bearing a Georgian inscription in the asomtavruli script, has traditionally been considered to be that of David IV. Although there are no clear and reliable indications that David was indeed buried in Gelati and that the present epitaph is his, this popular belief had already been established by the ...

    Also known as David the Builder, he occupies a special place among the kings of the Georgian “Golden Age” in the period of the defense against the Seljuqs. The "Order of David the Builder"is given to regular citizens, military and clerical personnel for outstanding contributions to the country, for fighting for the independence of Georgia and its r...

  4. David V, of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a 7th king (mepe) of Georgia in 1154 before his death in 1155.

  5. David V ( Georgian: დავით V, born as Khariton Devdariani (ხარიტონ დევდარიანი) (April 6, 1903 – November 9, 1977) was a Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia from July 2, 1972, until his death. His full title was His Holiness and Beatitude, Archbishop of Mtskheta - Tbilisi and Catholicos ...

  6. The Georgian nationalist underground claimed in their samizdat publications that corruption and moral depravity flourished in the church under David V who was also accused of being involved, along with the Georgian Communist party officials and the Russian KGB, in the plunder of the Georgian church treasures. [1]

  7. David V (Georgian: დავით V, Davit' V; died 1155), of the Bagrationi Dynasty, was a 7th king of Georgia in 1154 before his death in 1155 He was an elder son of King Demetre I. Fearing that Demetre would make his younger son Giorgi an heir to the throne, David attempted a revolt in 1130.