Simon I of Kartli
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Simon I (Georgian: სიმონ I) also known as Svimon (სვიმონ) (1537 ― 1611), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a Georgian king of Kartli from 1556 to 1569 and again from 1578 to 1599. He spent most of his reign in an incessant war against the Persian and Ottoman domination of Georgia.
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[edit] First reign and struggle against Persia
The eldest son of the heroic king Luarsab I of Kartli, he commanded his father’s army at the Battle of Garisi against the Persian invaders, 1556. He was proclaimed by his father co-ruler and heir apparent just prior to the action. Though Luarsab was mortally wounded, the battle was won by Simon, who soon ascended the throne on the death of his father. As the Kartlian capital Tbilisi remained in the Persian hands, Simon had a residence in Gori, whence he ruled over the territories recaptured from the occupants. In 1559, he allied himself with another Georgian sovereign, Levan I of Kakheti, and married his daughter Nestan-Darejan. Beginning in 1560, Simon launched a series of battles to recover Tbilisi, but suffered a defeat at the Battle of Tsikhedidi, April 1561. His brother, David, presently submitted to the Safavid Shah Tahmasp I, converted to Islam, and returned with a Persian army to claim the crown. Simon blockaded Tbilisi and won the battles at Dighomi (1567) and Samadlo (1569), but he was finally defeated and taken prisoner at P’artskhisi, 1569. David, now known as Daud Khan, was made by Persians a tributary king of Kartli. Simon was sent to Persia where he refused to convert to Islam and was imprisoned at the fortress of Alamut for nine years.
[edit] Second reign and struggle against the Ottomans
When the peace between the Safavids and the Ottomans collapsed and the Turkish general Lala Mustafa Pasha drove the Persians out of Georgia, Tahmasp I released Simon to fight the Ottomans and reinstated him as king of Kartli. Simon led a successful guerilla war against the Turks, recovered most of Kartli by 1579, and put a siege to Tbilisi. At the same time, he induced the prince Manuchar II Jakeli to revolt against the Ottoman rule in Akhaltsikhe, and attempted to get support from Pope Clement VIII, Emperor Rudolph II and Philip II of Spain. The negotiations, however, failed to yield any serious results 1. From 1588 to 1590, Simon interfered on three occasions into a power struggle in the western Georgian kingdom of Imereti, and though victorious over Levan of Imereti at the Battle of Gop’anto (1588), he was finally defeated at Op’shkviti and driven out with the help of the Turks. Finally, the Ottomans prevailed and their recently appointed commander, Ferhad Pasha, was able to conquer Kartli by 1588. Simon had to make peace with the Sublime Porte and agreed to pay an annual tribute. By a peace treaty signed in Istanbul on March 21, 1590, the Safavids also recognised all of Georgia as an Ottoman possession. Simon, however, resumed his struggle against the occupants in 1595, and retook Gori after a long-lasting siege in 1599. The sultan Mehmed III sent a large punitive force led by Jafar Pasha, beylerbey of Van. Simon met it at the Battle of Nakhiduri, but he was severely defeated and taken captive while retreating, 1599. He was sent in chains to Istanbul where he died as a prisoner at the fortress of Yedikule. His body was then redeemed by the Georgians and buried at the Svetitskhoveli Cathedral at Mtskheta.
[edit] Family and children
He married in 1555 Nestan-Darejan, daughter of Levan I of Kakheti. Their children were:
- George X of Kartli
- Prince Luarsab (born 1566)
- Prince Vakhtang
- A daughter who married in 1582 a Persian prince Shahzad Sultan Hamza Mirza
- Princess Elene who married on March 24 1583 Manuchar II Jakeli, atabeg of Samtskhe
[edit] Note
[edit] References and further reading
- Svimon I (In Georgian)
- (English) Kings of Kartli at Royal Ark website
- (English) History of Iranian-Georgian relations by Keith Hitchins at Iranica.com
- Jews, Christians, and Muslims in the Mediterranean World After 1492, edited by Alisa M Ginio, first edition (1992), Routledge, hardcover, ISBN 0-7146-3492-1
Preceded by Luarsab I |
King of Kartli 1556-1569 (first rule) |
Succeeded by Daud Khan |
Preceded by Daud Khan |
King of Kartli 1578-1599 (second rule) |
Succeeded by George X |