Zakare II Zakarian explained

Zakare II Zakarian
Զաքարե Բ Զաքարյան
Office1:Mandaturtukhutsesi
Term Start1:1195
Term End1:1202/03
Predecessor1:Chiaber
Successor1:Shalva Akhaltsikheli
Birth Date:Unknown
Death Date:1212
Resting Place:Sanahin Monastery
Battles:Battle of Shamkor
Battle of Basiani
Siege of Kars (1206–1207)
Georgian campaign against the Eldiguzids
Children:Shahnshah Zakarian
Predecessor:Chiaber
Successor:Ivane I Zakarian
Term Start:1191
Term End:1212
Office:Amirspasalar
Parents:Sargis Zakarian (father)
Saakdukht Artsruni (mother)

Zakare II Zakarian (Armenian: Զաքարե Զաքարյան or Զաքարե Երկայնաբազուկ,) or Zakaria II Mkhargrdzeli, was an Armenian prince and a Court official of the Kingdom of Georgia holding the office of amirspasalar (Commander-in-Chief) of the Georgian army for Queen Tamar of Georgia, during the late 12th and early 13th centuries.[1] [2] He was a member of the Zakarid dynasty, and ruler of feudal lands in the Kingdom of Georgia.

Biography

Zakare along with his father Sargis supported the rebellion of Prince Demna and the Orbelian family in 1177, however they soon sided with George III and fought for the monarchy against the insurgents. The rebellion was suppressed, and King George III elevated the Zakarid–Mkhargrdzeli family.[3]

Following the death of George III, Queen Tamar elevated Sargis Zakarian (Mkhargrdzeli)— a well-born valorous man, well-trained in battle — to the office of Amirspasalar (Lord High Constable) and granted him possessions over Lori (which was deprived of from Kubasar). She gave presents to his elder son, Zakare, and his younger son, Ivane, and she made him a member of the Darbazi. During a revolt of Queen Tamar's disgraced husband, George the Rus', around 1191, Zakare Zakarian (Mkhargrdzeli) was one of the few nobles who remained loyal to the queen. Tamar gradually expanded her own power-base and elevated her loyal nobles to high positions at the court, most notably the Mkhargrdzeli.[4]

In the ninth year of Tamar's reign, the Mandaturtukhutsesi and Amirspasalar Zakaria (Zakare) Mkhargrdzeli and his brother Ivane the atabeg took Dvin in 1193. They also took Gelakun, Bjni, Amberd, and Bargushat, and all the towns along Araxes basin, up to the Khodaafarin bridge. Around the year 1199, a Georgian army under Zakare's command took the city of Ani from Shadaddid control, and in 1201, Tamar gave it to him as a fief.[5] [6] Zakare commanded the Georgian army for almost three decades, achieving major victories at Shamkor in 1195 and Basian[7] in 1203 and leading raids into northern Iran[8] who played a significant role.[9]

In 1208/1209, the Georgian army marched to Ahlat under the command of his brother Ivane to help the Armenian rebels against the Ayyubids. On the way, they captured Archesh and then marched to Ahlat. The city was besieged, but Ivane Mkhargrdzeli's horse fell into a ditch while encircling the city. The defenders of Ahlat saw this, rushed out and captured Ivan. When Zakare, learned about his brother's capture, he was furious and told the Ayyubids.

The Ayyubids demanded a Thirty Years' Truce in exchange for Ivan's release.

In 1210, Zakare led the Eldiguzid campaign of Tamar of Georgia, devastating Tabriz, Khoy, Ardabil and reaching as far as Qazvin.

Monastic contributions

Zakare left several bilingual inscriptions across the Armeno-Georgian borderlands and built several churches and forts, such as the Harichavank Monastery and Akhtala Monastery in northern Armenia.[10] After Zakaria's death, his holdings were inherited by the aging Ivane, who had given Ani to his nephew Shahnshah, son of Zakare.

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopaedia of Islam. — E. J. BRILL, 1986. — Vol. I. — P. 507 "Ani was for the first time conquered by the Georgians in 1124, under David II, who laid the foundation of the power of the Georgian kings; the town was given as a fief to the Armenian family of the Zakarids, (in Georgian: Mkhargrdzeli = Longimani) "
  2. Cyril Toumanoff. Armenia and Georgia // The Cambridge Medieval History. — Cambridge, 1966. — vol. IV: The Byzantine Empire, part I chapter XIV. — p. 593—637 "Later, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the Armenian house of the Zachariads (Mkhargrdzeli) ruled in northern Armenia at Ani, Lor'i, Kars, and Dvin under the Georgian aegis."
  3. Book: Kuehn . Sara . The Dragon in Medieval East Christian and Islamic Art: With a Foreword by Robert Hillenbrand . 12 July 2011 . BRILL . 978-90-04-18663-7 . 28 . en . David II laid the foundation for the power of the Georgian pan-Transcaucasian monarchy (in Peter Golden's term) that reached its zenith under queen T'amar (1184–1211/2). The queen's victories were chiefly due to the military successes of the Christianised Kurdish generals Zak'are and Ivane, whose family name in Georgian is Mkhargrdzeli "Longomani". The brothers took Ani in 1199 or 1201 and the queen bestowed it on them as fief. Under the rule of the Zak'arids (the dynastic name of the Mkhargrdzelis), which survived for a while even after the Mongol conquest in 1239, the city experienced a renaissance and became again an important centre of international trade..
  4. Book: Suny, Ronald Grigor. Ronald Grigor Suny. 1994. 1988. 2nd. The Making of the Georgian Nation. Bloomington and Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. 0-253-20915-3. 39.
  5. Book: Minorsky, Vladimir. Studies in Caucasian History. Taylor’s Foreign Press. 1953. 0-521-05735-3. New York. 102–103.
  6. Book: Lordkipanidze, Mariam. Georgia in the XI-XII Centuries. Genatleba. 1987. Tbilisi. 150.
  7. Alexander Mikaberidze, Historical Dictionary of Georgia, (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015), 184.
  8. Book: Lordkipanidze, Mariam . Georgia in the XI-XII Centuries . Genatleba . 1987 . Tbilisi . 150.
  9. Book: Mikaberidze, Alexander . Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia . 2011-07-22 . ABC-CLIO . 978-1-59884-336-1 . en.
  10. Web site: Kirakos Ganjakets'i's History of the Armenians. Bedrosian. Robert. https://web.archive.org/web/20070716173134/http://rbedrosian.com/kg8.htm. 2007-07-16. dead. 2007-10-03.