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  1. 5 de may. de 2024 · Kingdom of Kartli: Tamar Davitishvili (d.4 December 1683) 1676 two children Khoreshan Mikeladze (d.24 February 1695) 1687 Kojori one child He is best known for his struggle against the Safavids which dominated his weakened kingdom and later as a Safavid commander-in-chief in what is now Afghanistan.

  2. Tamar of Imereti may refer to: Tamar of Imereti (died 1455), queen consort of Georgia, as the second wife of Alexander I of Georgia; Tamar of Imereti (died 1556), wife of King Luarsab I of Kartli

  3. Hace 3 días · A Georgian tradition first attested in the medieval chronicle Lives of the Kings of Kartli (c. 800), assigns a much earlier, pre-Christian origin to the Georgian alphabet, and names King Pharnavaz I (3rd century BC) as its inventor.

  4. 5 de may. de 2024 · Tbilisi, capital of the republic of Georgia, on the Mtkvari River at its dissection of the Trialeti and Kartli ranges. Founded in 458, when the capital of the Georgian kingdom was transferred there from Mtskheta, the city had a strategic position, controlling the route between western and eastern Transcaucasia.

  5. 23 de abr. de 2024 · On his behest, Rostom Khan, the King of Kartli and the Safavid vassal, invaded the Kingdom of Kakheti in 1648 and sent the rebellious monarch Teimuraz I into exile; in 1651, Teimuraz tried to reclaim his lost crown with the support of the Russia Tsardom, but the Russians were defeated by Abbas' army in a short conflict fought between 1651 and 1653; the war's major event was the destruction of ...

  6. 21 de abr. de 2024 · Tamar the Great, reigning from 1184 to 1213, was a significant monarch of Georgia, marking the peak of the Georgian Golden Age. As the first woman to rule the nation independently, she was notably referred to by the title "mepe" or "king," emphasizing her authority.

  7. 23 de abr. de 2024 · However, most scholars link the creation of the Georgian script to the process of Christianization of Iberia, a core Georgian kingdom of Kartli. The alphabet was therefore most probably created between the conversion of Iberia under Mirian III (326 or 337) and the Bir el Qutt inscriptions of 430, contemporaneously with the Armenian alphabet.