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David I of Klarjeti

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David I
დავით I
Prince of Klarjeti
Reign889 – 943
PredecessorBagrat I
SuccessorSumbat II
DynastyBagrationi
ReligionEastern Orthodox Church

David I (Georgian: დავით I) (died February 23, 943) was a Georgian prince of the Bagratid dynasty of Tao-Klarjeti who ruled, with the title of mampali, in Adjara and Nigali from 889 and in Klarjeti from 900 until his abdication in 943.

David was the oldest son of Sumbat I, founder of the Klarjeti line of the Bagratids. Upon Sumbat’s death in 889, David’s younger brother Bagrat I became a successor in Klarjeti, while David’s holdings were confined to the less important territories of Adjara and Nigali. With Bagrat’s death in 900, David retrieved Klarjeti with its key fortress and trading town of Artanuji. He abdicated in favor of his son Sumbat II and died as a monk in 943.

David is mentioned by Constantine Porphyrogenitus in his De Administrando Imperio which renders David's title in Greek as mampalis (μάμπαλις) and incorrectly translates it as "all-holy".[1]

References

  1. ^ Rapp, Stephen H. (2003), Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts, p. 388. Peeters Publishers, ISBN 90-429-1318-5

Genealogy

Georgian monarchs family tree of Bagrationi dynasty of Tao-Klarjeti[1][2]
Ancient
MONARCHS
of Iberia
Adarnase I
founder of the dynasty;
Prince of Tao
r. ~780 (775/786)
d. 807
daughter of
Nerse
Ashot I
Prince of Iberia
r.813–826
Latavri
Princess of Iberia
Adarnase II
co-ruler
r.830–867
Bagrat I
Prince of Iberia
r.826–876
Guaram Mampali
co-ruler
r.830–881
Gurgen I
Grand Duke of Tao
r.881–891
Ashot the Beautiful
d. 867
Sumbat I
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.870–889
AdarnaseDavid I
Prince of Iberia
r.876–881
AshotNasra
Grand Duke of Samtskhe,
Shavsheti and Artaani
r.881–888
Ashot the Immature
Grand Duke of Tao
r.908–918
Adarnase III
Grand Duke of Tao
r.891–896
Bagrat I
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.889–900
David I
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.889–943
Adarnase IV[a]
Prince of Iberia
r.881–888

King of the Iberians
r.888–923
David
Grand Duke of Tao
r.896–908
Gurgen
Grand Duke of Tao
r.918–941
Dinar
Queen of Hereti
Adarnase IIAshot the SwiftDavid
d. 908
Gurgen ISumbat II
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.961–966
David II
King of the Iberians
r.923–937
Bagrat I
Grand Duke of Tao
r.941–945
Sumbat I
King of the Iberians
r.954–958
Ashot II
Grand Duke of Tao
r.937–954
Bagrat
d. 922
Gurgen
d. 968
David II
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.988–993
Bagrat II
d. 988
Adarnase V
Grand Duke of Tao
r. 945–961
Adarnase IV
d. 983
Bagrat II
King of the Iberians
r.958–994
Gurgen[c]Sumbat III[c]
Grand Duke of Klarjeti
r.993–1011
David III[b]
Grand Duke of Tao
r. 966–1001
Bagrat II
Grand Duke of Tao
r. 961–966
Gurgen
King of the Iberians
r.994–1008
Demetrius
d. 1028
Bagrat III of Klarjeti
King of Klarjeti
r.1027–1028
Bagrat III
King of Georgia
r.1008–1014
BAGRATIONI
of united Georgia

Notes

  1. ^
    Adarnase IV restored Georgian kingship in 888[3] as the Kingdom of the Iberians and this would go on to dominate the political life of Georgia for a thousand years.[4]
  2. ^
    David III, being childless, took advice from the Georgian aristocracy and adopted his kin, prince Bagrat in 975.[5] This will lead and pave the way for the unification of Georgia.[6]
  3. ^
    King Bagrat III, the first monarch of unified Georgia was ruthless in his state administration. While visiting Castle of Panaskerti in Tao, king summoned his two cousins, Sumbat III and Gurgen. They were arrested and executed. Sumbat’s son Bagrat, and Gurgen’s son Demetrius, escaped to the Byzantine Empire. The Bagrationi line of Tao was already extinct since 941;[7] now with purging his own cousins the line of Klarjeti was also gone and no rival could ever claim the Georgian throne.[8]

References

  1. ^ Settipani, p. 540
  2. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 9218
  3. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 1337
  4. ^ Rapp (2016) location: 5454
  5. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 1379
  6. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 1338-1384
  7. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 1323
  8. ^ Rayfield (2013) location: 1502

Bibliography