Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Demetrius married thirdly, c. 1280, Natela, a daughter of Beka I Jaqeli, Duke of Samtskhe and Lord High Steward of Georgia. After the death of Demetrius, she returned to her father's court, where the only child of Demetrius and Natela, George V, was reared until his appointment as a co-king with his half-brother David VIII in 1299.

  2. Demetrius (Georgian: დემეტრე, Demetre) (died 1455) was a Georgian royal prince of the Bagrationi dynasty. He was a duke of Imereti , with intermissions, from 1401 to 1455. Demetrius was a son of King Alexander I of Imereti (died 1389), who had broken away from the Kingdom of Georgia during Timur's invasions of that country in 1387.

  3. Prince George was the third son of King Constantine I of Georgia and his wife Natia Khurtsidze. He was co-king of Georgia with his two elder brothers from 1408 to 1412. [1] In 1434, he married Gulashar (Gulkhan) of Imereti, daughter of Demetrius, Duke of Imereti, and had son Bagrat VI of Georgia . After his death which was between 1435 and 1446 ...

  4. Demetrius (Demetre), born c. 1093, was the eldest son of David IV and succeeded him to the throne of Georgia (r. 1125–1155). Vakhtang, whose birth c. 1118 is mentioned in passing by David's chronicler, [10] is further known only from the Will of King David , a 12th-century document of questionable authenticity, which also gives his possible sobriquet Tsuata. [11]

  5. Bagrat had the opposition of: Demetrius of Anacopia (დემეტრე) (1027–42) Magistros, Bagrat's half-brother, and son of Alda of Alania, had the support of his mother, the Byzantine Empire and the Liparitid clan. Prince George (გიორგი) (1050–53) Bagrat's heir, opposed to his father for a brief period. George II.

  6. Mother. Alda of Alania. Religion. Georgian Orthodox Church. Demetrius ( Georgian: დემეტრე, Demetre) (died 1042) was a Georgian prince of the Bagrationi royal dynasty, and a claimant to the throne of Georgia. He was the younger son of George I of Georgia by his second wife Alda, daughter of the king of Alania .

  7. Khelrtva. Bagrat IV ( Georgian: ბაგრატ IV; 1018 – 24 November 1072), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was the King ( mepe) of Georgia from 1027 to 1072. [1] During his long and eventful reign, Bagrat sought to repress the great nobility and to secure Georgia's sovereignty from the Byzantine and Seljuk Empires. In a series of ...