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Erekle II von Kakheti

Male 1720 - 1798  (77 years)    Has more than 100 ancestors and 70 descendants in this family tree.

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  • Name Erekle II von Kakheti 
    Birth 7 Nov 1720  Telav Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 11 Jan 1798  Telav Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Siblings 1 Sibling 
    Person ID I596533  Geneagraphie
    Last Modified 23 Nov 2009 

    Father Teimuraz II von Kakheti,   b. Aft 1680   d. 8 Jan 1762, St. Petersburg, Ingria, Rossiya Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 81 years) 
    Mother Thamar Kartli,   b. 1696   d. 12 Apr 1746, Tblisi, Sakartwelo, Caucasus Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 50 years) 
    Marriage 2 Feb 1712  Tblisi, Sakartwelo, Caucasus Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F258662  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Ketevan Orbeliani   d. 1750 
    Marriage 1738 
    Divorce 1744 
    Children 
     1. Vakhtang von Kakheti,   b. 1738   d. 1756 (Age 18 years)
     2. Rusadan von Kakheti,   b. Bef 1744
    Family ID F295176  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 22 Nov 2009 

    Family 2 Anna Abashidze,   b. 1730   d. 1749 (Age 19 years) 
    Marriage 1745 
    Children 
     1. Solomon von Kakheti   d. 1765
    +2. Giorgi XII von Kakheti,   b. 10 Nov 1746   d. 28 Dec 1800 (Age 54 years)
     3. Thamar von Kakheti,   b. 1747   d. 1786 (Age 39 years)
    Family ID F295177  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 22 Nov 2009 

    Family 3 Darejan Dadiani,   b. 20 Jul 1734, Daria Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 8 Nov 1808, St. Petersburg, Ingria, Rossiya Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 74 years) 
    Marriage 1750 
    Children 
     1. Mariam von Kakheti,   b. Abt 1750   d. 1829 (Age 79 years)
     2. Helene von Kakheti,   b. 1753   d. 1786 (Age 33 years)
     3. Sophia von Kakheti,   b. Abt 1756
     4. Levan von Kakheti,   b. 1756   d. 1781 (Age 25 years)
     5. Yolon von Kakheti,   b. 1760   d. 1816 (Age 56 years)
     6. Salome von Kakheti,   b. Abt 1761
     7. Vakhtang von Kakheti,   b. 1761   d. 1814 (Age 53 years)
     8. Anastasia von Kakheti,   b. 1763   d. 1838 (Age 75 years)
     9. Teimuraz von Kakheti,   b. 1763   d. 1827 (Age 64 years)
    +10. Kethevan von Kakheti,   b. 1764   d. 5 Jul 1840, Tblisi, Sakartwelo, Caucasus Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 76 years)
     11. Mirian von Kakheti,   b. 1767   d. 1834 (Age 67 years)
     12. Soslan-David von Kakheti   d. Abt 1767
    +13. Alexander von Kakheti,   b. 1770   d. 1844 (Age 74 years)
     14. Archil von Kakheti   d. c. 1771)
     15. Luarsab von Kakheti,   b. 1772
     16. Thekla von Kakheti,   b. 1775   d. 1846 (Age 71 years)
     17. Ekaterine von Kakheti,   b. 1776   d. 1818 (Age 42 years)
     18. Parnaoz von Kakheti,   b. 1777   d. 1852 (Age 75 years)
    Family ID F258663  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 22 Nov 2009 

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  • Notes 
    • King of Kacheti
      King of a United Georgia

      Georgian monarch of the Bagrationi Dynasty , reigning as the king of Kakheti from 1744 to 1762, and of Kartli and Kakheti from 1762 until 1798. In the contemporary Persian sources he is referred to as Erekli Khan, while Russians knew him as Irakli (Irakly). His name is frequently transliterated in a Latinized form Heraclius.
      The penultimate king of the united kingdoms of Kakheti and Kartli in eastern Georgia , his reign is regarded as the swan-song of the Georgian monarchy. Aided by his personal abilities and the unrest in the Persian Empire , Erekle established himself as a de facto independent ruler and attempted to modernize the government, economics, and military. Overwhelmed by the internal and external menaces to Georgia's precarious independence and its temporary hegemony in eastern Transcaucasia , he placed his kingdom under the formal Russian protection in 1783, but the move did not prevent Georgia from being devastated by the Persian invasion in 1795 . Erekle died in 1798, leaving the throne to his moribund heir, George XII .
      Born in Telavi , the center of Kakheti region of Georgia, Erekle was a son Teimuraz II of Kakheti and his wife Tamar, daughter of Vakhtang VI of Kartli . His childhood and early teens coincided with the occupation of Kakheti by the Ottomans from 1732 until 1735 when they were ousted from Georgia by Nader , Shah of Iran , in his two successive campaigns of 1734 and 1735. Teimuraz sided with the Persians and was installed as a Persian wali (governor) in neighboring Kartli . However, many Georgian nobles refused to accept the new regime and rose in rebellion in response to heavy tribute levied by Nadir upon the Georgian provinces. Nonetheless, Teimuraz and Erekle remained loyal to the shah, partly in order to prevent the comeback of the rival Mukhrani branch, whose fall early in the 1720s had opened the way to Teimuraz's accession in Kartli. From 1737 to 1739, Erekle commanded a Georgian auxiliary force during Nadir's expedition in India and gained a reputation of an able military commander. He then served as a lieutenant to his father and assumed the regency when Teimuraz was briefly summoned for consultations in the Persian capital of Isfahan in 1744. In the meantime, Erekle defeated a coup attempt by the rival Georgian prince Abdulah Beg of the Mukhrani dynasty, and helped Teimuraz suppress the aristocratic opposition to the Persian hegemony. As a reward, Nadir granted the kingship of Kartli to Teimuraz and of Kakheti to Erekle, and also arranged the marriage of his nephew Ali-Qoli Khan, who eventually would succeed him as Adil Shah , to Teimuraz's daughter Kethevan.
      Yet, both Georgian kingdoms remained under heavy Persian tribute until Nadir was assassinated in 1747. Teimuraz and Erekle took advantage of the ensuing political instability in Persia to assert their independence and expelled Persian garrisons from all key positions in Georgia, including Tbilisi. In close cooperation with each other, they managed to prevent a new revolt by the Mukhranian supporters fomented by Ebrahim Khan, brother of Adel Shah, in 1748. They concluded an anti-Persian alliance with the khans of Azerbaijan who were particularly vulnerable to the aggression from Persian warlords and agreed to recognize Erekle's supremacy in eastern Transcaucasia. In 1752, the Georgian kings sent a mission to Russia to request 3,000 Russian troops or a subsidy to enable them to hire Circassian mercenaries in order to invade Persia and install a pro-Russian government there. The embassy failed to yield any results, however, for the Russian court was preoccupied with European affairs.

      In 1762, Teimuraz II died while on a diplomatic mission to the court of St. Petersburg , and Erekle succeeded him as King of Kartli, thus uniting Georgia politically for the first time in three centuries.
      While maintaining certain Persian-type pomp at his court, he launched an ambitious program of "Europeanization" which was supported by the Georgian intellectual élites, but was not overwhelmingly successful because Georgia remained physically isolated from Europe and had to expend all available resources on defending its precarious independence. He strove to enlist the support of European powers, and to attract Western scientists and technicians to give his country the benefit of the latest military and industrial techniques. His style of governing resembled that of contemporary enlightened despots in Central Europe . He exercised executive, legislative, and judicial authority and closely supervised the activities of government departments. Erekle's primary objective in internal policy was to further centralize the government through reducing the powers of the aristocracy. For this purpose, he attempted to create a governing élite composed of his own agents to replace the self-minded aristocratic lords in local affairs. At the same time, he encouraged peasant-vassals to supply the military force necessary to overcome the aristocracy's resistance and protect the country from incessant marauding assaults from Dagestan known to Georgians as Lekianoba . In the words of the British historian David Marshall Lang , "his vigilance in the care of his people knew no bounds. On campaign, he would sit up at night watching for the enemy, while in time of peace, he spent his life in transacting business of state or in religious exercise, and devoted but a few hours to sleep."

      In foreign policy, Erekle was primarily focused on seeking a reliable protector that would guarantee Georgia's survival. He chose Russia not only because it was Orthodox Christian , but also because it would serve as a link to Europe, which he thought a model for Georgia's development as a modern nation. Yet, Erekle's initial cooperation with Russia proved disappointing. His participation in the Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774) did not lead to an anticipated reconquest of the Ottoman-held southern Georgian lands, for the Russian commanders in Georgia behaved in a highly condescending, often treacherous way, and Empress Catherine II treated the Caucasus front as merely a secondary theater of military operations. Still, Erekle continued to seek firmer alliance with Russia, his immediate motivation being the Persian ruler Karim Khan 's attempts to bring Georgia back into the Persian sphere of influence. Karim Khan's death in 1779 temporarily relieved Erekle of these dangers, as Persia again became engulfed into chaos.
      In 1783, the Russian expansion southward into the Crimea brought the Caucasus into Catherine II's area of interest. In the Treaty of Georgievsk of 1783, Erekle finally obtained the guarantees he had sought from Russia, transforming Georgia into a Russian protectorate, as Erekle formally repudiated all legal ties to Persia and placed his foreign policy under the Russian supervision. However, during the Russo-Turkish War (1787-1792) , a Tbilisi-based small Russian force evacuated Georgia, leaving Erekle to face new dangers from Persia alone. Mohammad Khan Qajar , who had managed to bring most of central Iranian plateau under his firm control by 1794, was inclined to revive the Persian Empire with the Caucasus as its part. In 1795, he demanded that Erekle acknowledged Persian suzerainty, promising in return to confirm him as wali. Erekle refused, and in September 1795, the Persian army of 35,000 moved into Georgia. After the valiant defense of Tbilisi at the Battle of Krtsanisi , in which the king participated personally in the advance guard, Erekle's small army of 5000 men was almost completely annihilated. While becoming a witness of the fearful devastation of his capital and slaughter of its civilians, king Erekle, who did not want to leave the battlefield and the city was spirited away by the very last of his bodyguards and a few family members. The Persian invasion delivered a hard blow to Georgia from which it was not able to recover. Despite being abandoned at the critical moment, he still had to rely on belated Russian support and fought, in 1796, alongside the Russian expeditionary forces sent by Catherine into the Persian territories. But her death that year brought an abrupt change of policy in the Caucasus, and her successor Paul I withdrew all Russia troops from the region. Aga Mohammad launched his second campaign to punish the Georgians for their alliance with Russia. However, his assassination in 1797 spared Kartli-Kakheti more devastation.

      Erekle died in 1798 still convinced that only Russian protection could ensure the continued existence of his country. He was succeeded by his weak and sickly son, George XII , after whose death Tsar Paul I annexed, in 1801, Kartli-Kakheti to Russia, terminating both Georgia's independence and a millennium-long rule of the Bagrationi Dynasty .



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