Archil was the son of
Vakhtang V of
Kartli, who, under the
Persian protection, attempted to reunify a fragmented
Kingdom of Georgia under his crown. His mother was Rodam
Kaplanishvili-Orbeliani. Having brought the neighboring eastern kingdom of Kakheti under his control, his father marched into western Georgia in 1661, deposed King
Bagrat V of Imereti, and crowned his fourteen-year-old son Archil king at
Kutaisi, capital of Imereti. The
Ottoman government strongly objected to what it considered a Persian-inspired incursion into the Turkish zone of influence. A Turkish ultimatum was soon received in
Isfahan, threatening a declaration of war if Shahnavaz maintained his son on the throne of western Georgia. Shahnavaz was forced to recall Archil from Kutaisi in 1663 and to restore the rightful king, Bagrat. Instead, Vakhtang installed Archil as king of Kakheti in 1664. To gain the shah's consent, Archil was prevailed upon, much against his will, to become a nominal convert to
Islam, assuming the title of Shah-Nazar-Khan. In 1664, Archil defeated an attempt by the rival Kakhetian prince and his brother-in-law,
Erekle, to regain his father's crown, and achieved a degree of stability and prosperity in Kakheti. In 1675, however, due largely to the intrigues by the Persian
grand vizier Shaykh' Ali Khan, Archil abandoned Kakheti and, with his brother
Luarsab, defected to the Turkish frontier
pasha of
Akhaltsikhe who promised him the crown of Imereti. He was soon reestablished in Kutaisi with the aid of the pasha of Akhaltiskhe, though without the consent of the
Sublime Porte. The Ottoman agents had the pasha executed, and deposed Archil in 1679. He fled to Russia, but was not allowed to
Moscow until 1686. Encouraged by his brother, King
George XI of Kartli, Archil returned to Georgia in 1690 and succeeded in regaining the Imeretian throne, only to be deposed again by the local nobility in 1691. During the next few years, he made several attempts to seize the crown, waging a guerrilla war against the Turks and the aristocratic opposition led by Prince
Abashidze. Eventually Archil gave up hope of reestablishing himself in Imereti and, in 1699, crossed the
Caucasus Mountains once more into Russia where he settled in
Vsesviatskoye near Moscow. == Life in Russia ==