Alliance and Conflict with Mingrelia Since his military campaign in Western Georgia as a general in 1658, Vakhtang had turned his ambitions toward the
Kingdom of Imereti, a Georgian state ruled by a cadet branch of the
Bagrationi dynasty, under
Ottoman suzerainty and torn by severe internal conflict since the 1620s. Upon ascending to the throne, Vakhtang acted on these ambitions, preparing an invasion plan for Imereti. In March 1660, King
Alexander III of Imereti died and was succeeded by
Bagrat V, widely regarded by the local nobility as incompetent. Vakhtang mobilized his forces and positioned them in the frontier village of Phtsa in preparation for a military expedition, but was forced to abandon the campaign following the outbreak of the
Bakhtrioni uprising. In September 1660, the Dowager Queen
Darejan of Imereti organized a coup d’état against her stepson Bagrat V, who was blinded and deposed in favor of her lover,
Vakhtang Tchutchunashvili. The
Ottoman Eyalet of Childir, which supported Darejan, sought to place her father, the former King
Teimuraz of Kakheti, on the throne of Imereti, but he refused the offer. The nobility of Kartli then urged Vakhtang V to revive his invasion plans and seize Imereti. In the autumn of 1660, Vakhtang crossed the
Likhi Range with an army of approximately 110,000 men and was immediately welcomed by the noble
Tsereteli family, who recognized him as their suzerain. Proceeding to Sazano, he received the allegiance of the Imeretian nobility.
Vameq III Dadiani, Prince of
Mingrelia, broke his alliance with Imereti following the coup and joined forces with Vakhtang V. After negotiations mediated by Catholicos
Domentius III of Georgia, Vakhtang and Vameq divided Imereti between them: Vakhtang annexed all territories east of the Bodja River, including the prosperous province of
Argveti. Vameq III, in turn, took control of the lands west of the Bodja River and strengthened his alliance by offering his only daughter in marriage to the royal prince
Archil, Vakhtang’s eldest son. Vakhtang then returned to
Tbilisi to address matters on the Kakhetian front. During his absence, however, Vameq III—acting on the advice of the Bishop of
Tsageri—betrayed the alliance: he annulled his daughter’s engagement to Prince Archil and married her instead to the minor noble Bezhan
Gogoberidze. He then seized Argveti and launched an attack on
Kutaisi. The Dowager Queen Darejan, defeated and seeking aid, offered the throne of Imereti and the hand of her niece
Ketevan to Prince Archil, but her forces were crushed, and Vameq Dadiani proclaimed himself
King of Imereti. This occurred despite the arrival of 300 musketeers from Tbilisi under the command of Domentius III. Vakhtang soon returned to Imereti, this time with a smaller contingent of Kartlian and Kakhetian nobles, and positioned his forces at the frontier outpost of Ali. Dadiani, accompanied by his Mingrelian guard and the remaining Imeretian troops, moved northward and awaited the royal army at
Sachkhere. However, several prominent nobles of northern Imereti — including
Paata Abashidze, Papuna of
Racha, and Khosia Latchkhichvili of
Lechkhumi — refused to aid him and defected to Vakhtang’s side, forcing Vameq to retreat to Kutaisi. In Argveti, Vakhtang once again received the submission of the Imeretian nobility, while Queen
Mariam, a cousin of Vameq Dadiani, reproached the Bishop of Tsageri for his misguided counsel. Bezhan Gogoberidze, Vameq’s new son-in-law, also submitted to Vakhtang but was nevertheless executed on the king’s orders. From Kutaisi, Vameq dispatched a spy to observe Vakhtang’s army. Identifying weaknesses in the royal forces, he planned a counterattack but was compelled to abandon it after the defection of the
Mikeladze and Chiladze families, as well as the Bishop of Chqondidi. Retreating once more to Kutaisi, Vameq ordered the destruction of the city’s main bridge, leaving his vizier as governor before fleeing to
Abkhazia to seek assistance from Prince Solomon II
Sharvashidze. He was soon joined by reinforcements of
Svans,
Ossetians, and
Dvals, initiating a renewed invasion of Western Georgia. Meanwhile, Khosia of Lechkhumi captured the Bishop of Tsageri, whom Vakhtang imprisoned in
Armenia.
Capture of Kutaisi The retreat of
Vameq opened the way for Vakhtang to launch his invasion in 1661. He quickly captured the villages of
Sachkhere, Sveri, and Katskhi before laying siege to the fortress of Skanda, located east of
Kutaisi. The citadel was then occupied by
Teimuraz, the former
King of Kakheti, who had resided there since his return from
Russia in 1659. The siege was brief: despite being advised to flee and seek refuge with Otar of
Aragvi to avoid a potential Persian invasion, Teimuraz refused to leave and eventually surrendered to Givi
Amilakhvari, Vakhtang’s chief adviser. Vakhtang then sent Revaz
Sidamoni as his envoy to Shah
Abbas II to determine the fate of the former monarch, who was subsequently imprisoned in Tbilisi before being transferred to
Isfahan. After the fall of Skanda, Vakhtang marched on Kutaisi and laid siege to the city. A brief confrontation with the
Mingrelian guard ended in a decisive royal victory. With the Imeretian capital captured and Vameq in flight, Vakhtang became the first Georgian monarch to control the capitals of
Kakheti,
Kartli, and
Imereti since
George VIII in the 15th century. Without reinforcements, the remaining Imeretian fortresses quickly surrendered to Vakhtang. He stationed Kartlian garrisons throughout the region and, in Kutaisi, captured
Darejan,
Vakhtang Tchutchunashvili, and the deposed
Bagrat V, imprisoning them in the fortress of Boboti in Mingrelia. With Imereti under his control, Vakhtang V continued his campaign into Mingrelia to punish Vameq. At Maghlaki, he received the submission of Otia
Mikeladze before advancing toward
Khoni, where the local lord, Jolia Deismani, joined his military expedition.
Conquest of Mingrelia Lacking sufficient funds to pay for military assistance from
Abkhazia,
Vameq Dadiani fortified himself in
Zugdidi in preparation for Vakhtang’s invasion, entrusting his wife and daughter to the noble Rostom
Apakidze. Shortly after the capture of Kutaisi, Vakhtang launched his campaign and advanced rapidly with Kartlian and Imeretian troops toward
Bandza, near the Mingrelian frontier. There, Apakidze betrayed his lord and surrendered Vameq’s wife and daughter to Vakhtang V. After taking Bandza, Vakhtang proceeded to Tsakuji, where the former Dowager Queen
Darejan was being held prisoner. Following a brief siege, he captured the fortress, released Darejan in exchange for the loyalty of the nobles who still supported her, and paid his troops with the treasury seized from the citadel. Leaving Darejan in charge of Tsakuji, he marched on Zugdidi, only to find the city deserted, as Vameq had fled to avoid capture. Vakhtang easily occupied the Mingrelian capital and then took the final anti-Kartlian stronghold, the fortress of Rukhi. In Zugdidi, the monarch proclaimed Shamadavle Dadiani, the nephew of Queen
Mariam and a refugee at the royal court of
Tbilisi since Vameq III’s rise to power in 1658, as the new
Prince of Mingrelia, crowning him
Levan III Dadiani, his vassal, and appointing the noble Jolia Deismani as his vizier. The coronation was attended by Prince Solomon II of
Abkhazia, who presented gifts and pledged allegiance to the throne of Kartli, and by
Demetrius of Guria. In consultation with Queen Mariam, Vakhtang arranged the marriage of his niece
Tamar, daughter of his brother
Constantine, to the new prince, thereby consolidating his control over the principality. Departing from Zugdidi, Vakhtang advanced to besiege Chakviti, where Vameq’s children had refused to surrender. After capturing the town, he imprisoned the family of the deposed prince and seized his treasures, including the Icon of Okona, a
Byzantine image brought to Georgia in the 11th century and to Mingrelia in the 16th century. Vameq himself took refuge in the mountainous province of
Svaneti, an area difficult for royal forces to access. A group of armed
Svans, led by Khosia of
Lechkhumi, eventually located and assassinated him. Khosia also captured the Bishop of Chqondidi, a loyal supporter of Vameq, and delivered him to Vakhtang, who imprisoned him in Cholaveri, a fortress south of Tbilisi.
Vakhtang, Suzeraint of All Georgia Before consolidating his control over western Georgia, Vakhtang faced one final rebellion at Tsakuji, where
Darejan attempted, unsuccessfully, to reconquer Imereti. She was swiftly defeated and temporarily imprisoned in the local citadel along with her husband, Vakhtang Tchutchunashvili, and the former king,
Bagrat V the Blind. Vakhtang then left Tsakuji for Kutaisi, where he was joined by Queen
Mariam. In the western Georgian capital, Vakhtang received
Demetrius Gurieli, ruler of a powerful principality on the
Black Sea, who offered valuable gifts and acknowledged Vakhtang as his suzerain. Following an agreement between the king and the prince, Vakhtang V, together with Queen Mariam, proclaimed his fourteen-year-old son
Archil as
King of Imereti. Vakhtang crowned the young monarch, appointed Khosia of Lechkhumi as Archil’s chief adviser, and tasked his trusted noble Givi Amilakhvari with strengthening the new king’s authority. At this point, Vakhtang V had become the
de facto ruler of all Georgia.
King of Kartli since 1659, he extended his power over
Kakheti after the defeat of the rebels at
Bakhtrioni in 1661, secured Imereti under the nominal rule of his minor son, controlled
Mingrelia through his protégé Levan III, and received the allegiance of the princes of
Abkhazia and
Guria in 1661. These early successes made Shah Navaz Khan (Vakhtang’s Persian title) the first monarch since the
Georgian Triumvirate War of the 15th century to hold authority over nearly all Georgian lands, with the exception of the
Eyalet of Childir. On the religious front, while the
Georgian Orthodox Church remained divided between the
Catholicate of Abkhazia and that of Kartli, contemporary documents indicate that under Vakhtang’s rule, the right to appoint a new catholicos of Abkhazia passed to the Prince of Mingrelia, thereby diminishing the institutional power of the King of Imereti. After this brief yet remarkable campaign, Vakhtang returned to
Tbilisi. On his journey, he met Queen Mariam in
Gori and entrusted her with the custody of Elene, widow of
Vameq III of Mingrelia, and her daughter Darejan. From the capital, the king sent a final report of his campaign to Shah
Abbas II, who received it at the Persian village of Baghi-Mulk through the ambassadors Revan and Jesse
Sidamoni. Upon learning of the capture of the former King
Teimuraz of Kakheti, the shah showed clemency, granting Vakhtang a large sum to fund Teimuraz’s transfer to
Isfahan, under the supervision of Givi Amilakhvari and accompanied by Mingrelian prisoners of war taken as slaves. The fate of the former rulers of Imereti remains somewhat uncertain.
Prince Vakhushti, Vakhtang’s great-grandson, wrote that Bagrat V, Vakhtang Tchutchunashvili, and Darejan were imprisoned together in Gori until the dowager queen and Tchutchunashvili escaped in 1668.
Parsadan, a contemporary of Vakhtang, reports that Tchutchunashvili was blinded on royal orders and fled with Darejan to
Ottoman territory, where they remained until their return to power in 1668, while Bagrat remained a prisoner in Tbilisi until 1663. One of Vameq Dadiani’s sons was also imprisoned in Tbilisi before seeking refuge in Russia, where he founded the Russian branch of the
Dadiani family, which lasted until 1829. == Later reign ==