Prince Rostom of Imereti explained

Rostom
Prince of Imereti
More:no
Spouse:Elisabed Mkheidze
Issue:Simon (born 1812)
Mzekhatun (born 1814)
Irine (born 1816)
Ephrosine (born 1818)
Anastasia (Pakhua) (born 1820)
Father:Prince Simon of Imereti
Birth Date:1791
Religion:Eastern Orthodox Church
Occupation:Soldier

Rostom (Georgian: როსტომი) (1791 –) was a Georgian royal prince (batonishvili) of the royal Bagrationi dynasty of Imereti.[1]

Rostom was a son of Prince Simon, a natural son of Prince Bagrat. He was, thus, a great-grandson of King Alexander V of Imereti. In 1819, Rostom, aged 20, joined his cousins, David and Vakhtang, in a revolt against the Russian Empire, which had absorbed Imereti in 1810. The revolt spread to Guria and Mingrelia, but was squashed by the Russian troops under General Velyaminov by July 1820. The remaining rebels retreated to the mountains of Racha, where they were finally defeated. Prince David died on the battlefield and Vakhtang fled to the Ottoman Empire.[2] Rostom was captured and, together with his family, sent in exile to Russia proper, where he was enlisted as a private in the Sumsky Hussar Regiment.[3]

Rostom was married to Elisabed Mkheidze (1794–1862) and had 5 children with her.[4]

Rostom is sometimes confused with his namesake Imeretian prince, who was a natural son of David II of Imereti and ancestor of the Imeretian family of Bagration-Davydov.[3]

Notes and References

  1. ბაგრატიონები: სამეცნიერო და კულტურული მემკვიდრეობა, იმერეთის მეფეები ბაგრატიონთა დინასტიიდან, თბილისი, 2003 The Bagrations: Scientific and Cultural heritage, Kings of Imereti from Bagrationi dynasty, Tbilisi, 2003
  2. Book: Rayfield, Donald. Donald Rayfield. Edge of Empires: A History of Georgia. 2012. Reaktion Books. 978-1780230306. 276.
  3. Book: Khomeriki. Manana. იმერეთის დე იურე მეფე ვახტანგ ბაგრატიონი. 2012. Universali. Tbilisi. 978-9941-17-655-5. 4–7. Georgian. De jure King of Imereti Vakhtang Bagrationi.
  4. Book: Dumin, S.V.. ru:Дворянские роды Российской империи. Том 3. Князья. Noble families of the Russian Empire. Volume 3: Princes. 1996. Linkominvest. Moscow. 89. Russian.