Mtavari ( Georgian : მთავარი ) was a feudal title in Georgia usually translated into English as Prince or Duke .
3-532: The earliest instances of the use of mtavari are in the early Georgian hagiographic texts dated to the 5th century. From the 11th to the 14th centuries, the title mtavari, along with tavadi , was synonymous with eristavi , and all referred to one of the upper nobles, a prince. Throughout the Golden Age of the Kingdom of Georgia (12th-13th centuries), the title gradually changed from conditional to hereditary tenure,
6-507: A process completed only at the end of the 15th century. In the 15th century the term mtavari was applied only to the five ruling princes of western Georgia ( Samtskhe , Mingrelia , Guria , Svaneti , and Abkhazia ), whose autonomous powers were finally eliminated under Imperial Russia . This article about a member of the Georgian nobility is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Georgian history -related article
9-639: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Tavadi Tavadi ( Georgian : თავადი , "prince", lit. "head/chief" [man], from Georgian : თავი tavi , "head", with the prefix of agent -di ) was a feudal title in Georgia first applied in the Late Middle Ages usually translated in English as Prince (most commonly) and Duke (less commonly). The title was designated for dynastic princes who were heads of families, akin to mtavari who had
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