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・ Bagrat Galstanyan
・ Bagrat I
・ Bagrat I of Abkhazia
・ Bagrat I of Iberia
・ Bagrat I of Imereti
・ Bagrat I of Klarjeti
・ Bagrat I of Tao
・ Bagrat I, Prince of Mukhrani
・ Bagrat II
・ Bagrat II Bagratuni
・ Bagrat II of Iberia
・ Bagrat II of Klarjeti
・ Bagrat II of Tao
・ Bagrat III
・ Bagrat III of Georgia
Bagrat III of Imereti
・ Bagrat III of Klarjeti
・ Bagrat Ioannisiani
・ Bagrat IV
・ Bagrat IV of Georgia
・ Bagrat IV of Imereti
・ Bagrat Khutaba
・ Bagrat of Tao
・ Bagrat Oghanian
・ Bagrat Shinkuba
・ Bagrat Ulubabyan
・ Bagrat V
・ Bagrat V of Georgia
・ Bagrat V of Imereti
・ Bagrat VI of Georgia


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Bagrat III of Imereti : ウィキペディア英語版
Bagrat III of Imereti

Bagrat III ((グルジア語:ბაგრატ III)) (1495-1565), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a King of Imereti from April 1, 1510, to 1565. He succeeded upon the death of his father, Alexander II, and faced repeated assaults from the Ottoman Turks as well as the conflicts with his ostensible vassal princes of Mingrelia, Guria, and Abkhazia who were frequently joining the enemy.
== Reign ==

In 1512, the Ottomans invaded Imereti through its southern neighbor Samtskhe and unexpectedly struck Bagrat’s capital Kutaisi.
After the Ottoman army left Imereti, Bagrat launched a program of restoration, reorganized the church, and enforced a law condemning to death all who engaged in slave trading practiced by the Turks in conjunction with some Georgian nobles. In 1533, he persuaded Mamia I Gurieli of Guria and Mamia III Dadiani of Mingrelia to organize a combined and eventually disastrous expedition against the piratical North Caucasian tribe of Zichi which had come under the Turkish influence. Despite this setback, Bagrat now decided to deliver a blow to the Ottoman positions in southern Georgia. In 1535, he invaded the principality of Samtskhe, which was exploited by the Turks as a portal for their incursions into inner Georgian lands. At the Battle of Murjakheti near Akhalkalaki, Bagrat defeated and captured Qvarqvare V Jaqeli, prince-atabeg of Samtskhe, and annexed a bulk of his possessions to Imereti. At the request of Qvarqvare’s son Kaikhosro, the Ottoman army invaded Imereti, only to put to flight by Bagrat and his ally Rostom, prince of Guria. The prince of Mingrelia, Levan I Dadiani, however, defied Bagrat’s call to arms, and later sided with the Ottomans, even traveling to Istanbul, where he received gifts and assurances of protection.〔Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994), ''The Making of the Georgian Nation: 2nd edition', p. 47. Indiana University Press, ISBN 0-253-20915-3〕
In 1545, Bagrat and his ally Luarsab I of Kartli suffered a bitter defeat at the Battle of Sokhoista in 1545. As a result, Samtskhe wrested of Bagrat’s control, and came under the Ottoman hegemony. In the following years, the principalities of Mingrelia and Guria also asserted their de facto independence from the crown of Imereti, further reducing the royal power. In 1555, in the Treaty of Amasya, the Ottoman and Persian empires divided Georgia, with Imereti falling into the Ottoman sphere of influence. Bagrat attempted to disrupt the Turco-Persian deal by pushing claims to the town of Surami which lay in the Persian zone in eastern Georgia. The move brought to nothing, however, and Bagrat was forced to pay tribute to the Ottomans. He died in 1565 and was succeeded by his son, George II.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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