Princess Anastasia | |
Birth Date: | 3 November 1763 |
Birth Place: | Martkopi, Kakheti |
Death Place: | St. Petersburg |
Burial Place: | Church of the Holy Spirit, Alexander Nevsky Lavra, Nevsky Prospekt, St. Petersburg |
House: | Bagrationi |
House-Type: | Dynasty |
Father: | Heraclius II of Georgia |
Mother: | Darejan Dadiani |
Spouse: | Prince Revaz Eristavi |
Issue: | Prince Iese Eristavi Prince Shalva Eristavi Prince Bidzina Eristavi Prince Giorgi Eristavi Princess Tamar Eristavi |
Princess Anastasia of Georgia (Georgian: ანასტასია; 3 November 1763 – 17 May 1838) was a Georgian princess royal (batonishvili), a daughter of King Heraclius II of Georgia of his third marriage to Darejan Dadiani. She was married into the princely family of Eristavi, former Ducal House of Ksani.
Princess Anastasia was born at the village of Martkopi in Kakheti in 1763 as the twelfth child into the family of Heraclius and Darejan. On 12 November 1797, at the age of 34, she married Prince Revaz (Roman) Eristavi (c. 1757–1813), a son of Giorgi, Duke of Ksani, who had been dispossessed by Heraclius II of his hereditary duchy in the Ksani valley. Revaz's sister Ana was married to Anastasia's younger brother Parnaoz.[1] The union was effected to the chagrin of King Heraclius. As she did not receive a dowry from her father, at the time of the Russian annexation of Georgia in 1801, Anastasia's possessions were limited to a garden near Tiflis granted by her half-brother, the late king George XII.[2] In 1802, she was suspected by the Russians of being involved in facilitating the communication between her mother Queen Dowager Darejan in Tiflis and her fugitive anti-Russian brothers, Iulon and Parnaoz, in Imereti.[3]
After the establishment of the Russian rule, Anastasia's husband entered the imperial civil service as a Collegiate Counsellor. Already a widow, Anastasia moved to St. Petersburg in 1825, bringing her younger son, Giorgi, for further education in the imperial capital. She died there of pneumonia in 1838, at the age of 75. She was buried at the Church of the Holy Spirit, Alexander Nevsky Lavra.[4]
Princess Anastasia had five children with Revaz Eristavi.[1]