Kaikhosro I Gurieli

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Reign1625–1658
PredecessorSimon I
SuccessorDemetrius
Died1660 (1661)
Kaikhosro I Gurieli
Prince of Guria
Reign1625–1658
PredecessorSimon I
SuccessorDemetrius
Died1660 (1661)
Spouse
Khvaramze Goshadze
(m. 1648)
Issue
Among others
HouseGurieli
FatherVakhtang I Gurieli
MotherTamar Jaqeli
ReligionGeorgian Orthodox Church (Catholicate of Abkhazia)

Kaikhosro I Gurieli (Georgian: ქაიხოსრო I გურიელი; died 1660), of the House of Gurieli, was Prince of Guria from 1625 to 1658. He was installed by Levan II Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia, in place of his deposed predecessor Simon I Gurieli. In his turn, Kaikhosro was overthrown and expelled by King Alexander III of Imereti. His comeback to Guria, in an Ottoman-supported endeavor, concluded with his assassination by a Gurian nobleman.

Kaikhosro Gurieli was the son of Vakhtang I Gurieli. He was installed, in 1625, by Levan II Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia, who had defeated, dethroned, and blinded his brother-in-law Simon I Gurieli. In 1658, Kaikhosro supported his uterine half-brother Liparit III Dadiani against Alexander III, King of Imereti. At the battle of Bandza in June 1658, Alexander won a decisive victory and established loyal regimes in Guria and Mingrelia. Kaikhosro was forced in exile to Istanbul. He then secured support of the Ottoman pasha of Akhaltsikhe Rustam, a Muslim Georgian, and capitalized on the anarchy in Imereti following King Alexander's death to attack his rival prince Demetrius Gurieli in 1660. Vameq III Dadiani intervened with a force of Mingrelians, Imeretians, and Abkhazians to protect Demetrius. Kaikhosro took shelter at the Achi Monastery and counterattacked, succeeding in taking Ozurgeti, Guria's chief town. Kaikhosro's triumph was short-lived; he was treacherously murdered by the Gurian nobleman Machutadze and Guria reverted to Demetrius Gurieli. Kaikhosro's sons George and Malakia fled to Akhaltsikhe.[1][2]

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