In June 1367, at the age of 10 years and two months, she became the second wife of King
Bagrat V of Georgia, also known as
Bagrat the Great. His first wife
Helen had died the previous year of
bubonic plague, leaving behind one son. Anna was accompanied to Georgia by her father and formidable paternal grandmother,
Irene of Trebizond. At an unknown date, sometime after 1369, Anna gave birth to a son, Constantine (died 1412). He would later reign as King
Constantine I of Georgia, succeeding his childless half-brother, King
George VII in 1407. According to
Cyril Toumanoff, Anna had two other children by Bagrat: David and Olympias. In November 1386,
Tbilisi was besieged and captured by the invading forces of Turco-Mongol conqueror
Timur; and she, along with her husband and son were taken prisoner. As a means of securing their release, King Bagrat agreed to become a Muslim, and Timur sent them back to Georgia with 20,000 Mongol troops. However,
Prince George, her husband's son from his first marriage, was able to completely destroy the Mongol army and released the king and queen from captivity. In the end they didn't convert to
Islam, although further battles were fought with Timur before he allowed the kingdom of Georgia to remain
Christian. Anna's husband died in 1393; she died sometime after 1406. == References ==