Alexander I of Georgia

Alexander I the Great
ალექსანდრე I დიდი
King of Kings of Georgia
King of Georgia
Reign 1412–1442
Predecessor Constantine I
Successor Vakhtang IV
Born 1386
Died between August 26, 1445 and March 7, 1446
Burial Svetitskhoveli Cathedral, Mtskheta
Spouse Dulandukht Orbeliani
Tamar of Imereti
Issue Vakhtang IV
Demetrius
George VIII
David
Zaal
Bagrationi (daughter)
Full name
Alexander I the Great
Aleksandre I Didi
Athanasius (monastic name)
Dynasty Bagrationi
Father Constantine I of Georgia
Mother Natia Amirejibi
Religion Georgian Orthodox Church
Signature

Alexander I the Great (Georgian: ალექსანდრე I დიდი Aleksandre I Didi) (1386 – between August 26, 1445 and March 7, 1446), of the Bagrationi house, was king of Georgia from 1412 to 1442. Despite his efforts to restore the country from the ruins left by the Turco-Mongol warlord Timur's invasions, Georgia never recovered and faced the inevitable fragmentation that was followed by a long period of stagnation. Alexander was the last ruler of a united Georgia which was relatively free from foreign domination.[1] In 1442, he abdicated the throne and retired to a monastery.

Life

Alexander was the eldest son of Constantine I of Georgia and his wife Natia, daughter of the Georgian diplomat prince Kutsna Amirejibi. He was brought up by his grandmother (Natia's mother) Rusa (died 1413), an educated and religious noblewoman, who greatly influenced the future king’s preoccupations and his enthusiasm for religious building.

With his ascension to the throne (1412), Alexander moved to western Georgia and mediated a peace between his vassals, the rival princes of Mingrelia and Abkhazia. Then he, in 1414, met the rebellious prince Atabeg Ivane Jaqeli of Samtskhe on battlefield and forced him into submission. Having dealt with these powerful feudal lords, he, aided by Catholicos Patriarch Shio II, began a program the restoration of major Georgian fortresses and churches. He imposed a temporary building tax on his subjects from 1425 to 1440, but despite the king’s efforts many towns and villages, once flourished, were left in ruin and overgrown by forest.

In 1431, he re-conquered Lorri, a Georgian marchland occupied by the Kara Koyunlu Turkoman tribesmen of Persia who had frequently raided the southern Georgian marches from there and had even sacked Akhaltsikhe in 1416.[2] Around 1434/5, Alexander encouraged the Armenian prince Beshken II Orbelian to attack the Kara Koyunlu clansmen in Syunik (Siunia) and, for his victory, granted him Lorri under terms of vassalage. In 1440, Alexander refused to pay tribute to Jahan Shah of the Kara Kouynlu. In March, Jahan Shah surged into Georgia with 20,000 troops, destroyed the city of Samshvilde and sacked the capital city Tbilisi. He massacred thousands of Christians, put heavy indemnity on Georgia, and returned to Tabriz.

In order to reduce the power of frequently rebellious aristocracy, he opposed them by appointing his sons – Vakhtang, Demetre, and George – as his co-rulers in Kakheti, Imereti and Kartli, respectively. This, however, proved to be even dangerous to the kingdom's integrity and the fragile unity kept by Alexander would soon disappear under his sons. For this reason, Alexander the Great is frequently claimed to have disintegrated Georgia and said not to deserve his epithet "the Great" his people bestowed on him.[3] This appellation dates almost from his own day, however, and as the modern Georgian historian Ivane Javakhishvili presumes, might have been related to the large-scale restoration projects launched by the king and his initial success in the struggle with the Turkmen nomads.[4]

As worldly problems overwhelmed his kingdom, Alexander abdicated the throne in 1442 and retired to a monastery under the monastic name of Athanasius.

Marriages and children

He married c. 1411 Dulandukht, daughter of Beshken II Orbelian, by whom he had two sons:

Alexander's second marriage with Tamar (died after 1441), daughter of prince Alexander I of Imereti, took place around 1414. Their children were:

See also

Notes

  1. Colin P. Mitchell. New Perspectives on Safavid Iran: Empire and Society. Taylor & Francis, 3 mrt. 2011 ISBN 1136991948 p 66
  2. According to the 15th-century Armenian historian Thomas of Metsoph (T’ovma Metsobets’i), the Kara Kouynlu leader Kara Yusuf invaded Samtskhe and pillaged its capital Akhaltsikhe in 1416 in response to the profanation inflicted by the local Christian Georgians and Armenians on a mosque.
  3. Suny (1994), page 45
  4. Ivane Javakhishvili (1982), page 243
  5. Toumanoff, Cyril (1949–51). "The Fifteenth-Century Bagratids and the Institution of Collegial Sovereignty in Georgia", Traditio 7: 181-3.
  6. Toumanoff, "The Fifteenth-Century Bagratids", Traditio 7: 190.

References

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Preceded by
Constantine I
King of Georgia
1412–1442
Succeeded by
Vakhtang IV
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