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Borena of Alania

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Died
  
1072

Borena of Alania

Spouse
  
Bagrat IV of Georgia (m. 1030–1072)

Children
  
George II of Georgia, Maria of Alania, Maria of Gothia

Grandchildren
  
David IV of Georgia, Constantine X Doukas, Constantine Doukas

Great grandsons
  
Demetrius I of Georgia, Michael VII Doukas

Similar
  
Bagrat IV of Georgia, George II of Georgia, Maria of Alania, David IV of Georgia, George I of Georgia

Borena (Georgian: ბორენა) was a sister of the Alan king Durgulel "the Great", and the Queen consort of Georgia, as the second wife of Bagrat IV (r. 1027-1072).

The medieval Georgian historical tradition exposes little information about Borena. Bagrat married her, in the early 1030s, after the death of his first wife, Elene (niece of the Byzantine emperor Romanos III Argyros). This was just one of the several intermarriages between the medieval Georgian Bagratids and their natural allies, the royal house of Alania. Borena seems to have retained some contacts with her native Alania: the Georgian chronicles report that when Durgulel paid a visit to Bagrat IV, he also arranged an audience with his sister Borena. The last we hear about Borena is her presence at Bagrat's deathbed in 1072.

Borena is primarily known as a patron and promoter of Georgian Orthodox culture and monastic life. She sponsored the construction of the Georgian Kapata Monastery on Mount Sion at Jerusalem. She is frequently identified with the Borena who was an author of a passionate and moving hymn to Virgin Mary, which is found as an inscription on the Theotokos icon from that time (now preserved at the Lenjer Church in highland Svaneti).

Bagrat IV and Borena were the parents of:

  • George II of Georgia, Bagrat's successor to the throne of Georgia
  • Martha-Maria, the future queen consort of the Byzantine Empire
  • In addition to these well-documented children, the couple may have had a daughter, Mariam, possibly a wife of the Byzantine dignitary Theodore Gabras.

    References

    Borena of Alania Wikipedia