Mamia I Gurieli (Georgian: მამია I გურიელი; died 1534), of the House of Gurieli, was Prince of Guria from 1512 until his death in 1534. Succeeding on the death of his father Giorgi I Gurieli, Mamia became involved in the conflict between the two eastern Georgian kingdoms of Kartli and Kakheti in 1520; by force of arms, he compelled David X of Kartli to agree on peace with Levan of Kakheti, his son-in-law. Mamia Gurieli's 1533 campaign, jointly with his namesake Prince of Mingrelia, against the homebase of Circassian pirates ended in a fiasco, with Mamia being captured and ransomed later that year.
MamiaGurieli (Georgian: მამია გურიელი, fl. 1460) was a member of the House of Dadiani and eristavi ("duke") of Guria in western Georgia in the latter...
Mamia III Gurieli (Georgian: მამია III გურიელი), also known as Mamia the Great Gurieli (დიდი გურიელი, Didi Gurieli) or the Black Gurieli (შავი გურიელი...
Mamia V Gurieli (Georgian: მამია V გურიელი; 1789 – 21 November 1826), of the House of Gurieli, became Prince of Guria, in western Georgia, in 1797. From...
Mamia IV Gurieli (Georgian: მამია IV გურიელი) (died 1778 or 1784), of the western Georgian House of Gurieli, was Prince of Guria from 1726 to 1756 and...
Mamia II Gurieli (-1625/1627) is a 17th-century Georgian prince that ruled over the Principality of Guria in Western Georgia. Son of Prince George II,...
principality in southwest Georgia, after having murdered his father, Mamia II Gurieli, and was dethroned and blinded by his brother-in-law Levan II Dadiani...
acquisition from the Gurieli. Giorgi Gurieli died in 1512. He was succeeded, with the blessing of King Bagrat III, by his son MamiaI. Bagrationi 1976, p...
in southwestern Georgia, as a client of Mamia IV Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia, who had deposed Giorgi II Gurieli. Vakhtang was one of the sponsors of the...
in eastern Georgia, as the first wife of King Levan. A daughter of MamiaIGurieli, Prince of Guria, she married Levan c. 1520 and bore him at least two...
the king's defiant vassal, Levan I Dadiani. Rostom was a son of MamiaIGurieli by his wife Ketevan. In 1533, Mamia was taken captive during his disastrous...
documented as having been 'gambros' of Mamia Vardanisdze-Gurieli (c. 1450 - 69), which is interpreted to mean that Mamia married his daughter or sister or...
styled as Gurieli. Kakhaber was a younger son of Giorgi II Dadiani (died 1384), eristavi of Odishi, and brother to Giorgi's successor Vameq I Dadiani....
Malakia in favor of his another nephew, Mamia III Gurieli. Malakia took the monastic vows and was made by MamiaGurieli bishop of Shemokmedi, a position he...
Guria from c. 1469 until his death in 1483. Kakhaber Gurieli was a son and successor of MamiaGurieli and, like his predecessor, was involved in the final...
against Kakheti, but failed to seize Levan and withdrew. In 1520, MamiaIGurieli was approached by Levan, now king of Kakheti in eastern Georgia, with...
under vassalage of the kings of Imereti. In 1533, Mamia Dadiani, in conjunction with MamiaIGurieli, eristavi of Guria, were encouraged by Bagrat III...
first wife is unknown; she may have been an anonymous daughter of MamiaIGurieli. He married secondly to Rusudan Shervashidze (died 1578) and thirdly...
Tinatin Gurieli. As a young prince, Jesse was placed by his father at the head of the Georgian auxiliaries requested by the Safavid shah Tahmasp I during...
the battle of Akhulgo. David was the second child and only son of Mamia V Gurieli, Prince-regnant of Guria, and his wife, Princess Sofia née Tsulukidze...
was succeeded by his son Mamia II Gurieli. Giorgi II Gurieli was married twice. He first married, c. 1566, a daughter of Levan I Dadiani, whom he divorced...
conjunction with some Georgian nobles. In 1533, he persuaded MamiaIGurieli of Guria and Mamia III Dadiani of Mingrelia to organize a combined and eventually...
Yet, several princes of Guria, most notably Giorgi III Gurieli (1669–84), and Mamia III Gurieli (1689–1714) managed to occasionally attain to the crown...
married to a daughter of Rostom Gurieli, Prince of Guria. In 1573 or, according to the historian Cyril Toumanoff, in 1574, Mamia deposed his brother with the...
David I (Georgian: დავით I) (1569 – 21 October 1602), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a king of Kakheti in eastern Georgia from October 1601 until his death...
coup led by his own son, Constantine I. Alexander was a son of King Levan of Kakheti by his first wife Tinatin Gurieli. Upon Levan's death in 1574, Alexander...
Kakheti. Levan was married twice; first to Tinatin Gurieli (died 1591), daughter of MamiaIGurieli, Prince of Guria. She gave birth to at least two sons:...