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Medieval
Georgia
In the late seventh century, a new
political and military power appeared on the international scene. United by a
powerful religious message, Arab tribes proved to be a force to be reckoned
with as they overrun the eastern provinces of the Byzantine Empire and Sasanid
Persia and carved out their own domain. The first Arab raiding parties
appeared in Georgia in 642-643 but, following the conquest of Armenia in 652,
Arabs arrived in force. In 654, the Arab commander Habib ibn-Maslam negotiated
a treaty of protection (datsvis sigeli) with Erismtavari Stefanoz II, who
agreed to pay a jizya or protection tax levied on non-Muslim nations. Two
years later, Iberian authorities took advantage of the internal dissension in
the Caliphate to cease paying tribute. However, Arabs soon returned with a
vengeance and began a systematic conquest of eastern Georgia in the 680s. In
685, the Byzantine Empire and the Caliphate agreed to share the tribute from
Armenia and Kartli but the local population rose in rebellion in 686 and
Erismtavari Nerseh of Kartli defeated the Arab forces in Armenia. Yet, in 697,
the ruler of Egrisi, Sergi Barnukis-dze invited Arabs to western Georgia to
help him fight the Byzantine forces; Arabs occupied the capital city of
Tsikhegoji and other key fortresses but failed to firmly establish themselves
in the region and soon withdrew.
Unlike western Georgia, Kartli remained under Arab domination and, starting in
704-705, Arabic coins were minted in Tbilisi. The Arabs treated Armenia and
Georgia as a single frontier province and subjected it to heavy tributes.
Discontented with new taxes and alien authorities, the local population rose
in rebellions and the struggle against the Arabs soon assumed a popular
character. In 681-682, Adarnase II of Kartli and Prince Grigor Mamikonian of
Armenia held off the Arabs, but eventually perished in this struggle. In 689,
the Byzantine Emperor Justinian II forced the Arabs to cede Georgia and
recognized Guaram II (684-693) as curopalates of Kartli. In 693, the Arabs
recovered their possessions in Kartli and Armenia and the vicious circle of
fighting began anew.
In the early eighth century, Iberians and Armenians organized several
unsuccessful revolts against the Arabs. In 735, the Arab commander Marwan ibn-Muhammad
led another punitive expedition into Kartli, sacking Tbilisi and capturing the
fortresses of Tsikhegoji and Sukhumi in western Georgia. He left such
devastation and desolation in his wake that his nickname Murwan Qru (Murwan
the Deaf, i.e. deaf to pleas) still survives in popular tradition. A new Arab
emirate led by the amir of Tbilisi was established in Kartli. In addition to
jizya and kharaj (tax on land) taxes, Georgians were forced to provide troops
for the Arab armies and a labor force for various projects. Conversion to
Islam was widely encouraged and Christianity persecuted, producing many
Christian martyrs, including Abo Tbileli, Princes David and Constantine of
Argveti. As the Arab dominance intensified, the Georgian and Armenian forces
often united under the banner of Christianity. The amirs of Tbilisi eventually
became powerful enough to defy the Abbasid caliphs for decades. The caliphs
finally tried to restore their authority in Georgia and, in 853, a large Arab
army led by Bogha al-Kabir (Bugha Turki) ravaged Kartli and sacked Tbilisi on
5 August. However, in 914, another Arab expedition under command of Abu al-Kasim
failed in subduing Kartli and proved to be the last such attempt on the part
of the Caliphate. With the Abbasid Caliphate gradually declining, several
semi-independent principalities emerged on the territory of Georgia. The
Kingdom of Abkhazia covered most of western Georgia, the Bishopric of Kakheti
and Principality of Hereti rose in the east and Tao Klarjeti dominion in the
southwest.
Of the emerging Georgian principalities, Tao (known as Tao-Klarjeti in
Georgian sources) proved to be the most important by far. Ruled by the
Bagration (Bagrationi) princely family, Tao gradually expanded its sphere of
influence. In the second half of the 10th century, during the rule of one of
its greatest princes, David Curopalates, Tao turned into a large and powerful
principality, whose borders reached Lake Van. The growth and consolidation of
this realm contributed to closer cultural and economic ties with other
kingdoms and principalities. The might of the new Georgian principality was
clearly demonstrated in 979, when the Byzantine Emperor Basil, facing a large
rebellion, appealed for help to David Curopalates. A Georgian expeditionary
corps under Tornike Eristavi defeated the insurgents and restored authority to
the emperor. Throughout his reign, David Curopalates pursued his great design
of the political unification of Georgia. Supported by Ioane Marushisdze, a
powerful eristavi of Kartli, he succeeded in having his grandson Bagrat placed
on the throne of Kartli in 975 and of Abkhazia in 978. Following David’s
death in 1001, King Bagrat III inherited Tao and later annexed Kakheti and
Hereti in 1008-1010, thereby uniting eastern and western Georgia into a single
state with a capital in Kutaisi. The united kingdom of Georgia was born.
The rise of the Georgian kingdom worried the Byzantine Empire. In the 1000s,
its Emperor Basil II, despite Georgian military aid in 979, occupied Tao and
the Georgian-Byzantine disputes over this region soon escalated into a war.
King Giorgi I (1014-1027) initially defeated the imperial army but, once the
Byzantine conquest of Bulgaria was completed in 1018, Emperor Basil II
diverted his resources against Georgia. In 1021-1022, his forces defeated King
Giorgi I and his Armenian allies and occupied the provinces of Tao, Artaan and
Javakheti. The new Georgian King Bagrat IV (1027-1072) continued the war but
faced powerful opposition of feudal lords who refused to recognize his
suzerainty and joined the Byzantine army in 1028; the lords of Kakheti and
Hereti were particularly defiant and broke away from the Georgian kingdom. The
Georgian-Byzantine war eventually ended in 1029 after the Georgian Queen
Mariam visited Constantinople and negotiated a peace treaty with Emperor
Romanus III. Bagrat IV then turned to internal problems subduing rebellious
feudal lords, including the mighty Eristavis Rati and Liparit Baghvash of
Kldekari. Bagrat was preparing for another campaign against the lords of
Kakheti and Hereti when a more serious threat thwarted his plans.
In the early 11th century, the Seljuk tribes began massive migration to the
Asia Minor and the Caucasus. After founding the Seljuk Sultanate in 1055, they
expanded their sphere of influence to Iran, Iraq and Syria. In 1064, the
Seljuk Sultan Alp Arslan led a successful incursion into the southern regions
of Georgia and, four years later, he ravaged eastern Georgia, even reaching
Imereti in the west. In 1071, the Seljuk victory over the Byzantine army at
the crucial battle of Manzikert opened the way for their systematic conquest
of the Caucasus. In 1080, the so-called didi turkoba (‘the Great Turkish
Troubles’) period began in Georgia when the Turkish tribes arrived in large
numbers to settle on Georgian lands and turned the occupied territory into
pastures, undermining the local agriculture and economy. King Giorgi II
(1072-1089) was forced to recognize their supremacy and paid tribute to the
Seljuk sultan.
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