Rusudan of Georgia
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Queen Rusudan (in Georgian: რუსუდანი) (ca. 1194-1245), from the Bagrationi dynasty, ruled Georgia in 1223-1245.
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[edit] Life
Daughter of Queen Tamar of Georgia by David Soslan, she succeeded her brother Giorgi IV Lasha on January 18, 1223. Giorgi’s untimely death marked the beginning of the end of the Georgian “golden age”. Rusudan was too weak to preserve whatever was gained by her predecessors.
In the Autumn of 1225, Georgia was attacked by the Khwarezmian shah Jelal ad-Din Mingburnu, pursued by the Mongols. The Georgians suffered bitter defeat at the Battle of Garni, and the royal court with Queen Rusudan moved to Kutaisi, when the Georgian capital Tbilisi was besieged by the Khwarezmians. A year later Jelal ad-Din took Tbilisi on 9 March 1226. The citizens fought courageously, the city passing from hand to hand. Over 100 thousand lost their lives when the city fell to the Khwarezmians. They were compelled to change religion and become Muslims, but no one did it and thus almost the whole population of Tbilisi was massacred. In February 1227, the Georgians took advantage of Jelal ad-Din’s failures in Armenia, and retook Tbilisi, but soon were forced to abandon a burning city – set on fire by the Georgians themselves. Then, Rusudan made an alliance with the neighbouring Seljuk rulers of Rüm and Khlat, but the Georgians were routed by the Khwarezmians at Bolnisi, before the allies could arrive (1228).
Soon the Khwarezmians were superseded by the Mongols. They advanced into Georgia in 1235. Devastated and plundered by Jelal ad-Din’s incursions, Georgia surrendered without any serious resistance. By 1240 all the country was under the Mongol yoke. Forced to accept the sovereignty of the Mongol Khan in 1242, Rusudan had to pay an annual tribute of 50,000 gold pieces and support the Mongols with a Georgian army.
Fearing that her nephew David VII Ulu would pretend to the throne, Rusudan held him prisoner at the court of her son-in-law, the sultan Kay Khusrau II, and sent her son David VI Narin to the Mongol court to get his official recognition as heir apparent. She died in 1245, still waiting for her son to return.
[edit] Marriage and children
She married in 1224 to the Seljuk prince Muhammad Mughis ud-din Turkan Shah, a grandson of Kilij Arslan II who embraced Christianity on his marriage. They were the parents of David VI Narin and a daughter named Tamar, who married (first) her cousin, the sultan Kay Khusrau II (1237), and (second) Sahib Parvan Muhi ud-Din (after 1245).
Preceded by: Giorgi IV |
Monarch of Georgia 1223 – 1245 |
Succeeded by: David VI |