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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AmanelisdzeAmanelisdze - Wikipedia

    Amanelisdze (Georgian: ამანელისძე) were a noble family in medieval Georgia with a surge in prominence in the 12th and 13th centuries. The 13th-century anonymous Georgian chronicle The Histories and Eulogies of the Sovereigns mentions the Amanelisdze, together with the Vardanisdze and Saghiridze, as participants of the sword-girdling ceremony of Queen Tamar upon her ...

  2. Hijo del rey de Georgia David VI Narin y su mujer, Tamar Amanelisdze, o de una princesa Palaeóloga. [1] [2] Constantino sucedió a su padre en el trono de Imereti en 1293.

  3. Culture. References. Constantine I of Imereti. Constantine I ( Georgian: კონსტანტინე I, Konstantine I; died 1327), from the Bagrationi dynasty, was king of Western Georgia from 1293 to 1327. Accession and civil war. A son of the Georgian king David VI Narin and his wife, Tamar Amanelisdze, [1] or a Palaeologian princess. [2] .

  4. Early life and Rebellion. Michael was a son of the Georgian king David VI Narin and his wife, Tamar Amanelisdze, [1] or a Palaeologian princess. In the latter case, Michael might have been named after his Byzantine ancestor, the Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos. [2]

  5. Miguel (en georgiano: მიქელი, Mik'el; fallecido en 1329) fue rey de Imericia o Georgia Occidental desde 1327 hasta 1329. Miguel era hijo del rey georgiano David VI Narin y su esposa, Tamar Amanelisdze, 1 o de una princesa bizantina de la dinastía de los Paleólogos.

  6. 10 de jun. de 2020 · from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Michael (Georgian: მიქელი, Mik'el) (died 1329), from the House of Bagrationi, was king of the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti from 1327 to 1329. A son of the Georgian king David VI Narin and his wife, Tamar Amanelisdze, [1] or a Palaeologian princess.

  7. 29 de ene. de 2018 · Constantine was married to a woman named Tamar, with whom he had 11 children. By then the Kingdom of Georgia had fallen into three independent Kingdoms, Kartli (central to eastern Georgia), Kakheti (eastern Georgia), and Imereti (western Georgia).