by
Damiane - one of Georgia's distinctive medieval artists. Around the time when Mongols
invaded the Slavic northeast of Europe, the nomadic armies simultaneously pushed down south to Georgia.
George IV, son of Queen Tamar, put aside his preparations in support of the
Fifth Crusade and concentrated on fighting the invaders, but the Mongol onslaught was too strong to overcome. Georgians suffered heavy losses in the war and the king himself was severely wounded. As a result, George became handicapped and died prematurely at the age of 31. George's sister
Rusudan assumed the throne but she was too inexperienced and her country too weakened to push out the nomads. In 1236 a prominent Mongol commander
Chormaqan led a massive army against Georgia and its vassals, forcing Queen Rusudan to flee to the west, leaving
eastern Georgia in the hands of noblemen who eventually made peace with the Mongols and agreed to pay tribute; those who resisted were subject to complete annihilation. The Mongol armies chose not to cross the natural barrier of
Likhi Range in pursuit of the Georgian Queen, sparing western Georgia of the widespread rampages. Later, Rusudan attempted to gain support from Pope
Gregory IX, but without any success. In 1243, Georgia was finally forced to acknowledge the
Great Khan as its overlord. Perhaps no Mongol invasion devastated Georgia as much as the decades of anti-Mongol struggle that took place in the country. The first anti-Mongol uprising started in 1259 under the leadership of
David VI and lasted for almost thirty years. The anti-Mongol strife continued without much success under Kings
Demetrius the Self-Sacrificer, who was executed by the Mongols, and
David VIII. Georgia finally saw a period of revival unknown since the Mongol invasions under
King George V the Brilliant. A far-sighted monarch, George V managed to play on the decline of the
Ilkhanate, stopped paying tribute to the Mongols, restored the pre-1220 state borders of Georgia, and returned the
Empire of Trebizond into Georgia's sphere of influence. Under him, Georgia established close international commercial ties, mainly with the
Byzantine Empire - to which George V had family ties - but also with the great
European
maritime republics,
Genoa and
Venice. George V also achieved the restoration of several Georgian monasteries in
Jerusalem to the
Georgian Orthodox Church and gained free passage for Georgian pilgrims to the
Holy Land. The widespread use of the
Jerusalem cross in Medieval Georgia - an inspiration for the modern
national flag of Georgia - is thought to date to the reign of George V. The death of George V, the last of great kings of unified Georgia, precipitated an irreversible decline of the Kingdom. The following decades were marked by
Black Death, which was spread by the nomads, as well as numerous invasions under the leadership of
Tamerlane, who devastated the country's economy, population, and urban centers. After the
fall of Byzantium, Georgia definitively turned into an isolated, fractured Christian enclave, a relic of the faded East Roman epoch surrounded by hostile Turco-Iranic neighbors. Georgia's decline resulted in "emasculation" of its image in
Russian Imperial perceptions, which systematically overlooked the nation's origins and instead portrayed it as a vulnerable, feminine "orient" in need of imperial protection.
Artistic inheritance File:Golden Theotokos from Khobi, Georgia 12th century.jpg|Golden Theotokos of
Khobi Monastery, with some precious stones stolen by the communists File:Georgia Khakhuli triptych.jpg|
Triptych of Khakhuli File:Khakhuli icon. Big cross.jpg|Detail of the Khakhuli
Triptych File:Atskuri icon.jpg|Atskuri
Triptych File:Svetitskhoveli_Cathedral_in_Georgia,_Europe.jpg|The construction of
Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in
Mtskheta, now a
UNESCO World Heritage Site, was initiated in the 1020s by George I. File:Georgia Tondo StMamai 11th century.jpg|Georgian
tondo commemorating Roman martyr
Mammes of Caesarea File:Jvari12cgeorgia.jpg|David IV's processional cross File:Mestia Museum. Crucifixion. 12th c..jpg|Crucifixion from Mestia File:Ubisa monastery fersco (Damiane 14th century).jpg|Fresco from Ubisi, Georgia File:The Last Supper fresco - Ubisa Monastery.png|The Last Supper of Ubisi File:Damiane. The Annunciation.jpg|Annunciation of Ubisi File:Gelati_Monastery_2013-7.jpg|
Gelati Monastery, a
UNESCOWorld Heritage Site File:Khobi monastery. Southern wall.jpg|Walls of the
Khobi Monastery showing strong Roman influence File:Kvatakhevi monastery.jpg|
Kvatakhevi monastery File:Georgian Betania.jpg|
Betania Monastery File:Algetis-xeobis-kulturuli-dzeglebi-rfitareti.jpg|
Pitareti Monastery File:Katskhi Pillar.jpg|
Katskhi Pillar ==See also==