Sargis II Jaqeli

Georgian prince From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sargis II Jaqeli (Georgian: სარგის II ჯაყელი) (1271[citation needed] – 1334) was a Georgian prince (mtavari) and ruler of Principality of Samtskhe from 1308 to 1334.[1]

Reign1308–1334
PredecessorBeka I
SuccessorQvarqvare I
Born1271 (1271)
Quick facts Atabeg of Samtskhe, Reign ...
Sargis II Jaqeli
Fresco of Sargis II Jaqeli from the Sapara Monastery.
Atabeg of Samtskhe
Reign1308–1334
PredecessorBeka I
SuccessorQvarqvare I
Born1271 (1271)
Died1334 (aged 6263)
IssueQvarqvare I Jaqeli
DynastyJaqeli
FatherBeka I Jaqeli
ReligionOrthodox Christianity
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Biography

He was a son of Prince Beka I Jaqeli. During his father's reign Sargis participated in many campaigns. In 1290s Azat Mousa, leader of the Anatolian Turkoman tribes, attacked Samtskhe. Beka Jaqeli appointed Sargis as a commander of army and ordered him to stop Turks near village Vashlovani. Around 1303, Sargis defeated Turkoman tribes and expelled them from Meskhetian lands. In 1308, after his father's death, Sargis ascended the Atabeg's throne. He was made Amirspasalar and Atabeg of the Kingdom of Georgia by his nephew, King George V "the Brilliant".[2] After Sargis II's death, his son Qvarqvare became a new Prince of Meskheti, also the vassal of Georgian kingdom.

Paintings of the House of Jaqeli during the period show them wearing the caftan with tiraz bands on the sleeves inscribed with Kufic letters.[3] Their caftan is decorated with the cloud collars made of pearl embroidery, a design of Mongol Ilkhanate origin.[4] This is also the costume worn at the time by the courtiers at the Mongol court in Tabriz.[5]

References

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