Prince Levan, aged 25, died on 5 February 1781 at the mansion of Prince Ioane Abashidze in the village of
Vejini in Kakheti, under circumstances that have remained unresolved. Although a homicide was immediately suspected, the inquiry into the case failed to reveal a murderer. Allegations that Levan was stabbed to death by Prince Asat
Vachnadze for taking liberties with his wife, that Levan died after "eating too much salmon" that day, or that he was poisoned by Prince Shermazan
Abkhazi were never confirmed, but suspicion that Levan fell victim to political intrigues has persisted to this day. The loss of his favorite son was a blow to the aging King Heraclius and the regular army which Levan had commanded gradually crumbled after his death. The 19th-century British historian and
Indian Army officer
William Monteith, who met Heraclius's son,
Alexander, in Iran in the 1820s, wrote of Levan: "He appeared to be endowed with most of the better qualities and much of the talent of his father, who might have hoped to find in him a successor capable of governing his distracted country; but he was assassinated at
Telav by a Georgian, and with him perished the last hopes of Heraklius." Levan's death was mourned in their elegies by his contemporary poets such as his personal friend
Besiki,
David the Rector,
Molla Panah Vagif, and
Molla Vali Vidadi. He is also praised in folk poetry. ==Family==