Alexander II of Kakheti
| Alexander II | |
|---|---|
Fresco of King Alexander II, Philotheou Monastery, dated between 1561 and 1574.[1] | |
| King of Kakheti | |
| 1st Reign | 1574–October 1601 |
| Predecessor | Levan of Kakheti |
| Successor | David I of Kakheti |
| 2nd Reign | 21 October 1602 – 12 March 1605 |
| Predecessor | David I of Kakheti |
| Successor | Constantine I of Kakheti |
| Born | 1527 |
| Died | 12 March 1605 (aged 77–78) Dzegami |
| Spouse | Tinatin Amilakhvari |
| Issue | David I of Kakheti Constantine I of Kakheti |
| Dynasty | Bagrationi dynasty |
| Father | Levan of Kakheti |
| Mother | Tinatin Gurieli |
| Religion | Georgian Orthodox Church |
| Khelrtva | |
Alexander II (Georgian: ალექსანდრე II) (1527 – March 12, 1605) of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a king (mepe) of Kakheti in eastern Georgia from 1574 to 1605. In spite of a precarious international situation, he managed to retain relative economic stability in his kingdom and tried to establish contacts with the Tsardom of Russia. Alexander fell victim to the Iran-sponsored coup led by his own son, Constantine I.
Early reign and political alliances
Alexander was a son of King Levan of Kakheti by his first wife Tinatin Gurieli. Upon Levan's death in 1574, Alexander secured his succession in a power struggle with his half-brothers – El-Mirza and Kaikhosro – and their party. He was aided by his kinsman and western neighbor, David XI of Kartli (Daud Khan), who sent auxiliary troops under the princes Bardzim Amilakhvari and Elizbar of the Ksani, and helped Alexander crush the opponents at the Battle of Torgi.
Alexander II continued a traditional policy of his predecessors aimed at keeping peace with the neighbors of Kakheti. This, for the time being, secured the economic stability and prosperity in the kingdom. However, he faced a difficult task of maneuvering between the Ottomans and Safavid Iran as both empires vied for the hegemony in the Caucasus. Although Alexander was initially a vassal, at least nominally, of the Safavids, he repudiated his allegiance to the Shah of Iran and accepted the Ottoman suzerainty when the latter empire gained the upper hand in 1578. The move did not prevent, however, Kakheti from being attacked by the mountainous subjects of the Shamkhal of Tarki who was apparently instigated by the Ottoman agents. Alexander decided to resume his father's efforts to establish alliance with the Tsardom of Russia. After exchanging ambassadors in 1586–1587, Alexander received the protection of Tsar Feodor I of Russia, signing the Book of Pledge in 1589. Russian troops were sent against the shamkhal in a brief campaign of 1592. Little else came of the Russian promises, leading to a series of complaints by Alexander to the tsar's ambassadors.[2]
Between 1596 and 1597, envoys of Alexander II, Simon I of Kartli, and Manuchehr of Samtshke arrived at the Safavid court, including slave boys and girls, who were entertained by Prince Constantine (also known as Kunstandil), the son of Alexander II himself, who had been brought up at the Safavid court.[3]
War with Kabardians
In 1596, Kabardian forces led by princes Solokh and Aitek-Murza advanced through the Daryal Gorge, seizing fortified settlements (’‘kabaki’’) belonging to the Vainakh noble Sultan-Murza. After establishing control in the highlands, they moved southward into Kartli's mountainous borderlands, specifically targeting the Sioni and Ksani regions.[4][5][6][7][8]
The same report noted that another Kabardian noble, referred to as “Gosudar Alkas,” had warned King Alexander about Solokh's actions and even released many of the captives taken during the raid. In retaliation, Solokh attempted to incite Russian voivodes stationed in Terek to join him in military action against Alkas.[8]
In response, Alexander sent a letter to the Russian commanders urging them not to act against Alkas. He assured them that if Alkas had offended the Russian Tsar in any way, he would soon “correct his mistake, fully submit to the Tsar, and remain eternally loyal.”[8]
Downfall
In October 1601, Alexander's son, David, revolted from the royal authority and seized the crown, forcing his father to retire to a monastery. David died a year later, on October 2, 1602, and Alexander was able to resume the throne. Meanwhile, Iran started to regain what had earlier been lost to the Ottomans. The energetic Shah Abbas I laid a siege to the Ottoman-held fortress of Erivan in November 1603 and summoned Alexander to his headquarters. After months of hesitation, Alexander acceded, massacred the Ottoman garrison in Tiflis,[9] and arrived at Erivan in April 1604. Early in 1605, Shah Abbas sent him back with orders to raid Shirvan. He was accompanied by his son, Constantine, who had been raised at the Safavid court as a convert to Islam.
Back in Kakheti, Alexander found a new Russian embassy requesting his support in a projected campaign against the shamkhal. The Russian envoys had already been favorably received by Alexander's son, George, who ran the kingdom in his father's absence. Dissatisfied by this maneuver, Constantine demanded the loyal execution of the shah's orders. On March 12, 1605, Alexander summoned a council at Zagem. Within hours, Constantine led his Qizilbash entourage into a bloody coup against his own father; Alexander, George and several of their nobles were massacred. Constantine was made by the shah king of Kakheti, and the Safavid suzerainty was, for the time being, reasserted in the kingdom.[2][11]
Family
Alexander II was married to Princess Tinatin Amilakhvari, daughter of Prince Bardzim Amilakhvari, who bore him five or six sons and two daughters:
- Prince Heraclius (1568–1586);
- David I of Kakheti (1569–1602), King of Kakheti;
- Crown Prince George (1570–1605);
- Constantine I of Kakheti (1571–1605);
- Prince Rostom (died 1579)
- Anton (died 1590), not mentioned in Cyril Toumanoff's traditional genealogy
- Anna; married Bagrat VII of Kartli;
- Nestan-Darejan (died 1591); married Manuchar I Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia;
- Tinatin, married in 1579 Sultan Hamza Mirza (1568–1586), a son of Shah Mohammad Khodabanda.[12]
Ancestry
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References
- ^ Dionysopoulos, Nikolaos (1 January 2024). "Adapting to the Athonite Visual Tradition: Portraits of Georgian Rulers in the Refectory of the Philotheou Monastery (16th Century)". Hilandarski zbornik 16: 147.
- ^ a b Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994), The Making of the Georgian Nation: 2nd edition, pp. 48-50. Indiana University Press, ISBN 0-253-20915-3
- ^ Willem Floor,Edmund Herzig. Iran and the World in the Safavid Age I.B.Tauris, 30 jan. 2015. ISBN 1780769903 p 481
- ^ Мизиев, И. М. (2008-06-28). "Исторические и политические страницы балкарского народа [Historical and Political Pages of the Balkar People]". Balkaria.info (in Russian). Wayback Machine (Internet Archive). Archived from the original on 28 June 2008.
- ^ Belokurov, S. A. (1888). Сношения России с Кавказом [Relations of Russia with the Caucasus] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: Типография Императорской Академии наук. pp. 304–305.
- ^ Gutnov, F. Kh. (2015). "Северный Кавказ в статейных списках конца XVI — середины XVII в. [The North Caucasus in the article lists of the late XVI - mid XVII century]". Izvestiya Yuzhnogo Otdeleniya Instituta Nauk O Rannei Rossii RAN (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2017-11-12.
- ^ Gutnov, F. Kh. (2015). "Северный Кавказ в статейных списках конца XVI - середины XVII в [The North Caucasus in the Posol'skiye Spiski of the Late 16th – Mid-17th Centuries]". Izvestiya Yuzhnogo Otdeleniya Instituta Nauk O Rannei Rossii RAN (in Russian). 16 (55). Retrieved 2025-05-02.
- ^ a b c Brosset, M. (1861). Переписка, на иностранных языках, грузинских царей с российскими государями от 1639 г. по 1770 г. [Correspondence in Foreign Languages of Georgian Kings with Russian Sovereigns from 1639 to 1770] (in Russian). Saint Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences Press.
- ^ Blow 2009, p. 78.
- ^ Leunclavius, Johannes (24 September 2019). Türk Milletinin Tarihi (Yeditepe Yayınevi) [“History of the Turkish Nation] (in Arabic). Yeditepe Yayınevi. ISBN 978-625-7705-75-2.
- ^ (in Russian) Вахушти Багратиони (Vakhushti Bagrationi) (1745)."История царства грузинского. Возникновение и жизнь Кахети и Эрети. Ч.1". Archived from the original on 2010-09-05. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) . Accessed October 5, 2007. - ^ Gabashvili, Valerian N. (2007). "The Undiladze Feudal House in the Sixteenth to Seventeenth-Century Iran According to the Georgian Sources". Iranian Studies. 40 (1): 37–58. doi:10.1080/00210860601138616. JSTOR 4311874.
Sources
- Blow, David (2009). Shah Abbas: The Ruthless King Who became an Iranian Legend. London, UK: I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. ISBN 978-1845119898. LCCN 2009464064.