Cholokashvili
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Cholokashvili (Georgian: ჩოლოყაშვილი) is a former noble family in Georgia.
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[edit] History
Traditional genealogical accounts have it that the family’s ancestor was a Genoese officer who moved, in the 1300s, from a Crimean colony to Dagestan where he was dubbed by locals as Cholagh "for the multitude of sheep and cattle he possessed". Cholagh is said to have quarreled with the local tribesmen and fled into neighboring Georgia through the Derbend road in 1320. King George V of Georgia welcomed Cholagh and granted him an apanage and the princely title of the extinct family of Irubakidze in Kakheti. [1] The family played an important role in later-day Georgia and intermarried with the Kakhetian branch of the Bagrationi Dynasty. Their fiefdom – Sacholokao (საჩოლოყაო) – was annexed to Imperial Russia along with east Georgia in 1801, and the family became mediatized as Russian nobility (Russian: Чолокаевы).
[edit] Notable members
- Garsevan Cholokashvili, a powerful minister at the court of Levan of Kakheti (reigned 1520-74)
- Shermazan Cholokashvili (died after 1612), politician and diplomat
- Kaikhosro Cholokashvili (died 1613), poet and politician
- Revaz Cholokashvili (died 1648), politician and soldier
- Nikoloz Cholokashvili (Niciphores Irbachi; c. 1585-1658), Georgian Orthodox priest, politician and diplomat.
- Bidzina Cholokashvili (died c. 1660), Christian martyr of Persian aggression canonized by the Georgian Orthodox Church
- Jimsher Cholokashvili (died 1756), eristavi of the Aragvi 1743-56
- Davit Cholokashvili (1735-1810), poet and translator
- Ilia Cholokashvili (1824-1877), major general in the Russian army
- Kaikhosro (Kakutsa) Cholokashvili (1888-1930), military commander and national hero of Georgia
[edit] References
- ^ (Georgian) იოანე ბატონიშვილი (Ioane Bagrationi; 1768-1830). "ჩოლაყაშვილი (კახეთის თავადნი)" (Cholakashvili (Princes of Kakheti)). შემოკლებით აღწერა საქართველოსა შინა მცხოვრებთა თავადთა და აზნაურთა გვარებისა (The Brief Description of the Georgian Noble Houses). Retrieved on April 12, 2007.