as part of the Mongol
Il-Khanate (dotted line), after 1256. , 1270s The Kingdom of Eastern Georgia was under the direct authority of the Mongol ruler
Hulagu Khan (r 1256–1265), founder of the
Ilkhanate, and was considered as a vassal of the Īlkhānid state. The Mongols also took direct control of the
Samtskhe region in southwestern Georgia, as an autonomous principality under Il-khanate rule. The successive kings of Eastern Georgia from 1256 to 1329 were
David VII,
Demetrius II,
David VIII,
Vakhtang III and
George V. At times, Georgia became a battleground between rival Mongol authorities, and in 1265,
Berke Khan, the ruler of the
Golden Horde, ravaged Eastern Georgia from the north.
Mongol control The Mongol maintained control over the Eastern Georgian territory, by maintaining the original kingship within the original Bagratid family, while appointing their own supporters for the offices of the
Atabeg (Governor General) and the
Amirspasalar (Commander-in-Chief) of the army, as seen with the appointments of
Sadun Artsruni (r.1272–1282) or his son
Khutlubuga (r.1270–1293). Throughout the 13th century, the high offices
Atabeg (Governor General) and
Amirspasalar (Commander-in-Chief of the Georgian army) had been held by the
Zakarids, but following the Mongol takeover of Eastern Georgia, the Mongol victors gave these offices to the "renegade"
Sadun of Mankaberd in 1272. When
Abaqa became the new Mongol ruler, Sadun received from him the title of
Atabeg Amirspasalar for the Georgian
Bagratid Kingdom. He was said to be close to the Mongols, and had been promoted by them: "Sadun Artsruni was appointed as atabeg of Georgia by Abaqa Khan". The Mongols of the
Il-Khanate also had a Military Governor or "Viceroy" of Georgia in place, such as
Alinaq Noyan (–1289) and his successor
Qurumushi (1289–1318).
Military operations The Eastern Georgians provided substantial military support to the Mongols: they supported the
Siege of Baghdad in 1258, and the
Mongol campaigns in Syria from 1259 into the 1260s, leading to thousands of casualties.
Sadun Artsruni, future
Atabeg for Eastern Georgia, is known to have accompanied
Hulegu in his military campaigns in
Syria in 1259, in the conquest of
Sasun, and in the
Siege of Aleppo (1260). But when in 1260
Hulegu Khan requested the presence of
Georgians and
Armenians for the
Mongol invasions of the Levant, remembering the losses of his troops in the 1258
Siege of Baghdad, David Ulu rebelled. A large Mongol army led by General
Arghun Aqa invaded Georgia from the south, inflicted a heavy defeat on David and
Sargis I Jaqeli in a battle near
Akhaldaba, and then brutally plundered the country. The Mongol campaign continued during the winter, and the following year the king was forced to flee to
Imereti, which the Mongols failed to conquer. David's family was captured, and his wife
Gvantsa was killed. Peace with the Mongols was achieved in 1262, when David Ulu returned to
Tbilisi to reclaim his crown as a Mongol vassal, pledging allegiance to
Hulegu, while David Narin only nominally recognized Mongol rule in Imereti. The reason for Hulegu's tolerance towards the rebel lies in the fact that since 1261, the Il-kan was at war with the
Golden Horde, which was on a larger scale.
Demetrius II participated to all Mongol campaigns from 1275 to 1281. Georgian troops were present in great number at the
Second Battle of Homs (1281). Suddenly, Christians and Jew were segregated against, and had to wear distinctive types of dresses. They are contemporary with the murals at
Kobayr by the family of the
Zakarids, nominal vassals of the Georgian crown. ==Il-Khanid dismemberment==