In the first half of the 17th century, Kakhetian king
Teimuraz I had conducted resistance against his Persian overlords, which culminated in the bloody and devastating years of the mid-1610s; after
successfully repelling an expedition sent by
Shah Abbas I, Kakheti was invaded once again by the Shah himself in 1616, much of its population massacred or deported. In the following years,
Qizilbash lords were appointed as governors of Kakheti, while a large number of Qizilbash tribal folk were relocated to Georgia to strengthen the central control. In the early 1630s, the Persians tried to put Kakheti under control of the more submissive
Kingdom of Kartli, led by Georgian prince
Rostom, a convert to Islam. When such control had been installed, Teimuraz fled to Western Georgia. In the 1650s, the Persians implemented a policy of colonization of Kakheti by Qizilbash
Turkoman tribes, for several reasons. One of these reasons was to repopulate this part of the province, while another was to keep an eye on the restless nobles. Yet another reason was because the Safavid possessions in Georgia were geographically close to the
Daghestan province. From Daghestan, Lezgian marauders frequently organized raids into parts of the northwestern Safavid domains, including
Safavid Georgia. Lastly, it was also decided as a measure against
Russia, which had increased its pressure on Daghestan (see also;
Russo-Persian War of 1651–1653), a neighboring province of the Georgia province. The forced installation of the Qizilbash was the immediate motive for the uprising. Kakheti had been divided into two administrative regions: he south-eastern part was under the power of the
beylerbey of
Karabakh, the rest under that of
Nakhchivan. Up to 80,000 Turkomans migrated to Kakheti. They started building a fortress at Bakhtrioni and transforming the ancient monastery of
Alaverdi into one. == Uprising ==