George IV of Georgia
George IV of Georgia
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George IV of Georgia

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George IV of Georgia

George IV (Georgian: გიორგი IV, romanized: giorgi IV; 1192 – 18 January 1223), also known as Lasha Giorgi (Georgian: ლაშა გიორგი), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was the king (mepe) of the Kingdom of Georgia from 1213 to 1223.

George was the son of Queen Tamar of Georgia and her consort David Soslan, George was declared as a coregent by his mother in 1207. According to the Georgian chronicles, the prince's second name Lasha meant 'illuminator of the world' in the Abkhaz language (a-lasha meant light).

He had a princely domain in Javakheti, centered around Alastani, for which he was known by the title of javakht' up'ali, i.e., "the Lord of the Javakhians" as suggested by a type of silver coins struck in his name.

After Tamar's death, George IV became the ruler of Kingdom of Georgia, George continued Tamar's policy of strengthening the feudal Georgian state.

The feudal lords supporting George were Sargis Tmogveli, Shalva and Ivane Akhaltsikheli, Sula Surameli, Botso and Memna Jaqeli. Lasha's opponents were Ivane I Mkhargrdzeli and Varam Gageli.

At Tamar's death, the atabeg of Ganja, Muzaffar al-Din Uzbek, stopped paying tribute. King George called Darbazi – the supreme royal council – where he proposed punishing the atabeg of Ganja immediately. The nobles approved a campaign and George IV set out to ravage Ganja with an ample army. The Georgian army under Ivane Mkhargrdzeli immediately sent troops to Ganja and enforced Georgian suzerainty by besieging, instead of storming the city. George lost patience with his generals’ decision, detached 4,000 men from the siege force and encircled Ganja. The Ganja garrison realized George’s vulnerability: 10,000 well-armed men left the citadel and attacked. The ensuing fighting, although won by the Georgians, caused heavy casualties, but the atabeg of Ganja agreed to pay tribute again.

The economy of Georgia's vassal states suffered from inflation in the 1210s. The nineteen lines inscribed on the stone block of the ruined church of Ani record the head of the Georgian Church, Catholicos Epiphanes, a dyophysite layman. The fees for baptism, marriage and burial increased threefold and reached 100 Tbilisi's drams. Priests also demanded a banquet or a whole cow for their service. The clergy refused to accept less, which made the laity boycott the church. Epiphanes ordered the tithe to be reduced by two-thirds: any extra should be within the layman's means. If this inflation was general, it explains the reluctance of Armenian cities to pay taxes to Tbilisi. Unlike in the east, where the Khwarazmians blocked Georgia's advances, in the south the Georgian army could enforce its will.

In 1219, George campaigned against Erzurum, Nakhchivan and Ahlat and forced them to pay annual tribute. The king once again confirmed the Georgian dominance in Anatolia and Iran.

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