army circa 1579-80.
Secaatname (1586) When the peace between the Safavids and the Ottomans collapsed and the Turkish general
Lala Mustafa Pasha drove the Persians out of Georgia in 1578, it roused the Safavids to come to take further action. Then incumbent Safavid king
Mohammad Khodabanda wanted a puppet ruler in Kartli that was popular amongst the local population. Therefore, he ordered for Simon I to be released from prison and offered him the crown of Kartli on the demand that he would convert to Islam. Having been imprisoned for nine years, Simon I's resolve was weakened. In the same year he accepted the Safavid king's demands, and, in order to invade Tbilisi, he received cannon and 5,000
Qizilbash soldiers led by general
Ali-Qoli Khan. Simon led a successful guerilla war against the Turks, recovered most of
Kartli by 1579, and put a siege to Tbilisi. At the same time, he induced the prince
Manuchar II Jaqeli to revolt against the Ottoman rule in
Akhaltsikhe, and attempted to get support from
Pope Clement VIII, Emperor
Rudolph II and
Philip II of Spain. The negotiations, however, failed to yield any serious results. In 1580 Simon I repulsed Ottoman invasion of Kartli, and in 1582 defeated main Ottoman army on the field of Mukhrani, which had a lasting impact as Ottomans were at the height of their power and such a defeat shuttered the myth of their invincibility. Simon I's
Persian monolingual
seal of the same period reads: "
Allah, who has no equal, knows that Semiyun (Simon) is a slave of the
Shah from the bottom of his heart, 933 (1585)". From 1588 to 1590, Simon interfered on three occasions into a power struggle in the western Georgian kingdom of
Imereti, and though victorious over
Levan of Imereti at the
Battle of Gopanto (1588), he was finally defeated at
Opshkviti and driven out with the help of the Turks. Finally, the Ottomans prevailed and their recently appointed commander, Ferhad Pasha, was able to conquer Kartli by 1588. Simon had to make peace with the
Sublime Porte and agreed to pay an annual tribute. By a
peace treaty signed in
Constantinople on March 21, 1590, the Safavids also recognised all of Georgia as an Ottoman possession. Simon, however, resumed his struggle against the occupants in 1595, and retook Gori after a long-lasting
siege in 1599. In response, Sultan
Mehmed III sent a large punitive force led by
Jafar Pasha, the
beylerbey of
Tabriz, in 1599. Simon met them at Nakhiduri, but he was severely defeated in the
battle and taken captive while attempting to escape. Upon the Simon's arrest the Sultan
Mehmed III made the following order: Simon was sent to Constantinople where the Georgian noblewoman
Gulchara was brought to care for the aged king. He died in 1611 as a prisoner at the
Fortress of the Seven Towers (Yedikule) without converting to
Sunni Islam, shortly before the
cessation of the Ottoman–Safavid hostilities. His body was then redeemed by the Georgians and buried at the
Svetitskhoveli Cathedral at
Mtskheta next to his father. ==Family==