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  1. Avag Zakarian (Georgian: ავაგ მხარგრძელი, romanized: avag mkhargrdzeli; Armenian: Ավագ Զաքարյան) (died 1250 AD) was an Armenian noble of the Zakarid line, and a Court official of the Kingdom of Georgia, as atabeg and amirspasalar of Georgia from 1227 to 1250.

    • unknown
    • Kuashak Zakarian
  2. Avag-Sargis Zakarian or Avag-Sargis Mkhargrdzeli ( Georgian: ავაგ-სარგის მხარგრძელი, romanized: avag-sargis mkhargrdzeli) (died 1268 AD) was an Armenian noble of the Zakarid line, and a Court official of the Kingdom of Georgia bearing titles of mandaturtukhutsesi and amirspasalar (Commander-in-Chief of the army).

    • Shanshe Mkhargrdzeli
  3. This high office was inherited by his son Avag Zakarian in 1227, and by Zakare III Zakarian in 1250. They resisted the invasions of the Khwarizmians of Jalal al-Din as well as the Mongol invasions of Georgia in 1221-1235, but the Mongol victors gave the office to the renegade Sadun of Mankaberd in 1272. [25]

  4. Avag Zakarian, generalísimo después de Ivanê (muerto en 1227/1228), reconoce la soberanía mongol, al igual que el señor de Ani y el hijo de Zakarê (muerto en 1213), Chahenchah Zakarian. El primero va a Karakorum , donde permanecerá durante al menos cinco años, y se le unen los hijos de Jahenchah.

  5. 23 de nov. de 2023 · The first high Georgian noble to capitulate in 1236 was the commander Avag Mkhargrdzeli, son of Ivane. Avag’s possessions were duly confirmed, but he was forced to participate with his own troops in the Mongol attack on Ani, which belonged to his cousin Shanshe Mkhargrdzeli.

  6. Las invasiones mongolas de Anatolia se refiere al conjunto de incursiones que el imperio mongol realizó en la región de Anatolia en diferentes momentos, que empezaron con la campaña de 1241-1243 que culminó con la batalla de Köse Dağ.

  7. Queen Rusudan had to evacuate Tbilisi for Kutaisi, leaving eastern Georgia in the hands of atabek Avag Mkhargrdzeli and Egarslan Bakurtsikheli, who made peace with the Mongols and agreed to pay them tribute. The only Georgian great noble to have resisted was Iwane Jakeli-Tsikhisjvreli, prince of Samtskhe.