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  1. Mariam Dadiani (Georgian: მარიამ დადიანი; born between 1599 and 1609; died 1682) was a daughter of Manuchar I Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia, by his second wife, Tamar Jaqeli. Thrice married, successively to Simon I Gurieli , Prince of Guria , in 1621, King Rostom of Kartli in 1638, and the latter's adopted ...

    • 1638–1658, 1659–1675
    • Tamar Jaqeli
  2. Mariam Dadiani (Georgian: მარიამ დადიანი; 1783 – 19 March 1841) was the last Queen Consort of the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti as the wife of King Solomon II. She was a daughter of Katsia II Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia.

    • 1789–1810
  3. The Female Architectural Patronage in Late Medieval Georgia: Queen Mariam Dadiani. This paper studies the life and architectural patronage of Queen Mariam Dadiani, one of the most prominent female patrons in the Medieval history of Georgia. Like many women in the Medieval world, Mariam was a subject of political marriage, no less than three times.

  4. Mariam Dadiani, a 17th-century princess; Constantine Dadiani, a 19th-century poet and general of Russian army; Andria Dadiani (1850-1910), chess player and tournament patron; Ekaterine Dadiani (1816-1882), Regent Princess of Mingrelia; Salome Dadiani (1848-1913), wife of Prince Achille Murat; Shalva Dadiani (1874-1959), prominent ...

  5. This book explores the viewing and sensorial contexts in which the bodies of kings and queens were involved in the premodern societies of Europe, Asia, and Africa, relying on a methodology that aims to overcoming the traditional boundaries between material studies, art history, political theory, and Repräsentationsgeschichte.

  6. Mariam Dadiani, princesa del siglo XVII. Darejan Dadiani (1738-1807), tercera esposa del rey Heraclio II, rey de Georgia Constantine Dadiani, un poeta del siglo XIX y general del ejército ruso.

  7. მარიამ დადიანი - პოლიტიკური ქორწინება გვიან შუა საუკუნეების საქართველოში Mariam Dadiani - Political marriage in Late Medieval Period Georgia. Irakli Peradze. 2017, International conference, Archival and source studies - trends and challenges, Tbilisi.