Bagrat ll, of Abkhazia

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Bagrat ll, of Abkhazia

French: Bagrat II, d'Abkhazie
Also Known As: "Bagrat Anchabadzé", "Bagrat Achba", "Bagrat II d'Abkhazie"
Birthdate:
Death: 930
Immediate Family:

Son of King Constantin III of Abkhazia and Daughter of King Adarnase
Husband of daughter of Gourgen ll
Brother of Princess of Abkhazia and George II, King of Abkhazia

Occupation: co-king of Abkhazia
Managed by: Erica Howton
Last Updated:

About Bagrat ll, of Abkhazia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_II_of_Abkhazia

In 923, King Constantine III of Abkhazia (r. 894–923) died, and George, then George II Abkhazia succeeded him. However, Bagrat, George's youngest brother, also claimed the crown, the latter engineered a coup with the support of a party of nobles, most importantly his father-in-law, Gurgen II of Tao (r. 918–941). The conflict lasted for nearly seven years and ended with the sudden death of Bagrat in 930.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gurgen_II_of_Tao

Bagrat est le fils cadet du roi Constantin III d'Abkhazie et de son épouse inconnue. Il descend des grands-ducs impériaux Léon Ier et Léon II, qui ont gouverné l'Abkhazie pour le compte de Byzance dans la seconde moitié du viiie siècle.
Gurgen was married to a daughter of Ashot the Swift, member of the Bagratid line of Klarjeti. They had the only daughter who married the Abasgian prince Bagrat, son of King Constantine III. With Gurgen’s death in 941, the Bagratid line of Tao became extinct and his state was divided among other branches of the dynasty.[1][2]


https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagrat_Anchabadzé

Bagrat est le fils cadet du roi Constantin III d'Abkhazie et de son épouse inconnue. Il descend des grands-ducs impériaux Léon Ier et Léon II, qui ont gouverné l'Abkhazie pour le compte de Byzance dans la seconde moitié du viiie siècle.
Le conflit dure pendant près de sept ans et ne s'achève qu'avec la mort soudaine de Bagrat, en 930. De son épouse, la fille unique de Gourgen II d'Artani, il ne laisse aucun enfant. Son frère règne jusqu'en 957.

Bibliographie

  • Cyrille Toumanoff, Les dynasties de la Caucasie chrétienne de l'Antiquité jusqu'au xixe siècle : Tables généalogiques et chronologiques, Rome, 1990, p. 75 et 535.
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