Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Constantine I of Imereti

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Reign
  
1293–1327

Mother
  
Tamar Amanelisdze

Parents
  
David VI of Georgia

Predecessor
  
David I

Name
  
Constantine of

House
  
Bagrationi dynasty

Successor
  
Michael

Role
  
King

Father
  
David VI Narin

Died
  
1329


Constantine I of Imereti

Religion
  
Georgian Orthodox Church

Grandparents
  
Rusudan of Georgia, Ghias ad-din

Great-grandparents
  
Tamar of Georgia, David Soslan

People also search for
  
David VI of Georgia, Michael of Imereti

Place of burial
  
Gelati Monastery, Georgia

Constantine I (Georgian: კონსტანტინე I, Konstantine I; died 1327), from the House of Bagrationi, was king of the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti from 1293 to 1327.

Contents

Accession and civil war

A son of the Georgian king David VI Narin and his wife, Tamar Amanelisdze, or a Palaeologian princess. Constantine succeeded to the throne of Imereti upon his father's death in 1293. Unlike his eastern Georgian counterparts, Constantine remained independent from the Ilkhanid hegemony, but he faced serious internal unrest as his younger brother Michael opposed his accession and seized control of the regions of Racha, Lechkhumi, and Argveti. In vain did the nobles of Imereti try to reconcile the brothers and internecine conflict continued to upset the country.

The great nobles took advantage of the situation to assert their autonomy. Giorgi I Dadiani, Duke of Mingrelia, subjugated much of the duchy of Tskhumi and expanded his possessions up to Anacopia. The Shervashidze entrenched in Abkhazia, the Gurieli in Guria, and Vardanidze in Svaneti, showing little subservience to the royal authority. Constantine died amid these disturbances in 1327, having had no children, and his brother Michael succeeded him as king.

Culture

Constantine is known to have restored Monastery of the Cross in Jerusalem to the Georgian ownership in 1305. He also had the monastery refurbished and repainted. His contributions are emphasized in a document instituting the Agape feast, in his own lifetime, on 21 May, the feast day of Constantine the Great. Constantine might have been an unidentified royal person depicted on a fresco in Ienashi in Upper Svaneti. His links to that region is also known from a charter issued by Constantine to the Svan Goshkoteliani clan.

References

Constantine I of Imereti Wikipedia