Giorgi I Dadiani (Georgian: გიორგი I დადიანი; died 1323) was a member of the House of Dadiani and eristavi ("duke") of Odishi in western Georgia from the late 13th century until his death. The principal source on Giorgi Dadiani is the early-18th-century history by Prince Vakhushti, who does not report his parentage; the primary sources available to him have been lost. Giorgi Dadiani is also known from undated inscriptions, in the Georgian asomtavruli script, from the territory of Odishi, which allow reconstruction of his genealogy. He was a son of mandaturt-ukhutsesi ("Lord High Steward") Bediani-Dadiani by his wife Khuashak, daughter of Bega, eristavi of Kartli, and had two brothers, Ioane and Erashahr. Giorgi is depicted in a fresco on the northern wall of the Khobi Cathedral, his own fo
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| - Jordi I Dadiani (ca)
- Giorgi I Dadiani (en)
- Georges Ier de Mingrélie (fr)
- Георгій I Дадіані (uk)
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| - Jordi I Dadiani fou mtavari de Mingrèlia cap al 1300 i fins al 1323. Succeí al seu pare Tsotne Dadiani, que el va associar al govern. El 1320 es va fer independent. Va morir el 1323 i el va succeir el seu fill Mamia I Dadiani. (ca)
- Georges Ier de Mingrélie ou Georges Ier Dadiani (géorgien : გიორგი I დადიანი; mort en 1323) est un membre de la lignée des Dadiani qui est eristavi (c'est-à-dire : duc) d'Odishi en Géorgie occidentale au début du XIVe siècle jusqu'à sa mort. (fr)
- Георгій I Дадіа́ні (груз. გიორგი I დადიანი; д/н — 1323) — еріставі Одіши (Мегрелії) у 1260—1323 роках. (uk)
- Giorgi I Dadiani (Georgian: გიორგი I დადიანი; died 1323) was a member of the House of Dadiani and eristavi ("duke") of Odishi in western Georgia from the late 13th century until his death. The principal source on Giorgi Dadiani is the early-18th-century history by Prince Vakhushti, who does not report his parentage; the primary sources available to him have been lost. Giorgi Dadiani is also known from undated inscriptions, in the Georgian asomtavruli script, from the territory of Odishi, which allow reconstruction of his genealogy. He was a son of mandaturt-ukhutsesi ("Lord High Steward") Bediani-Dadiani by his wife Khuashak, daughter of Bega, eristavi of Kartli, and had two brothers, Ioane and Erashahr. Giorgi is depicted in a fresco on the northern wall of the Khobi Cathedral, his own fo (en)
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| - Jordi I Dadiani fou mtavari de Mingrèlia cap al 1300 i fins al 1323. Succeí al seu pare Tsotne Dadiani, que el va associar al govern. El 1320 es va fer independent. Va morir el 1323 i el va succeir el seu fill Mamia I Dadiani. (ca)
- Giorgi I Dadiani (Georgian: გიორგი I დადიანი; died 1323) was a member of the House of Dadiani and eristavi ("duke") of Odishi in western Georgia from the late 13th century until his death. The principal source on Giorgi Dadiani is the early-18th-century history by Prince Vakhushti, who does not report his parentage; the primary sources available to him have been lost. Giorgi Dadiani is also known from undated inscriptions, in the Georgian asomtavruli script, from the territory of Odishi, which allow reconstruction of his genealogy. He was a son of mandaturt-ukhutsesi ("Lord High Steward") Bediani-Dadiani by his wife Khuashak, daughter of Bega, eristavi of Kartli, and had two brothers, Ioane and Erashahr. Giorgi is depicted in a fresco on the northern wall of the Khobi Cathedral, his own foundation, with a model of the church in his hands. An accompanying inscription identifies him as mandaturt-ukhutsesi. Giorgi is further mentioned in two agapes from the Monastery of the Cross in Jerusalem. Giorgi Dadiani held sway over his patrimonial princedom of Odishi, latter-day Mingrelia, in the time when the Kingdom of Georgia, under the heavy-handed hegemony of the Mongol Ilkhans, suffered political division and was embroiled in a series of internecine feuds. Its western moiety, Imereti, of which Odishi was part, had also been fighting its own civil war between the successors of King David Narin—Constantine and Michael. Giorgi Dadiani capitalized on these disorders to assert more autonomy for himself. He, further, seized the duchy of Tskhumi and the Black Sea coastline in Abkhazia up to Anacopia. According to Vakhushti, Giorgi died in 1323 and was succeeded by his son, Mamia I. (en)
- Georges Ier de Mingrélie ou Georges Ier Dadiani (géorgien : გიორგი I დადიანი; mort en 1323) est un membre de la lignée des Dadiani qui est eristavi (c'est-à-dire : duc) d'Odishi en Géorgie occidentale au début du XIVe siècle jusqu'à sa mort. (fr)
- Георгій I Дадіа́ні (груз. გიორგი I დადიანი; д/н — 1323) — еріставі Одіши (Мегрелії) у 1260—1323 роках. (uk)
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