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Abashidze

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abashidze familycoat of arms.
Abashidze-Gorlenko familycoat of arms.

TheHouse of Abashidze(Georgian:აბაშიძე) is aGeorgianfamily and a former princely house. Appearing in the 15th century, they achieved prominence in theKingdom of Imeretiin western Georgia in the late 17th century and branched out in theeastern Georgiankingdoms ofKakhetiandKartlias well as the then-Ottoman-held southwestern region ofAdjara.After theRussianannexation of Georgian polities, the family was confirmed asKnyazAbashidze (Russian:Абашидзе) by theTsar’s decree of 1825.

History

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The Abashidze family possibly derived from the medieval Georgian noble house ofLiparitid-Orbeliani,but the family legend holds that it descended from anAbyssinian[1]officer named Abash who had allegedly accompaniedMarwan ibn Muhammad’sArabarmy to Georgia in the 8th century; Abash is said to have remained in Georgia and ennobled when he saved the life of a Georgian crown prince from a wolf.

The first recorded account about the Abashidze dates back to the latter part of the 15th century. By the 1540s, they had already been in possession of a sizeable fiefdom within the Kingdom of Imereti located in its eastern part and called Saabashidzeo (სააბაშიძეო; literally, "[the land] of Abashidze" ). The family reached a climax of its might at the turn of the 18th century, when it possessed 78 villages, several castles, fortresses, churches and monasteries as well as 1,500 serf households. PrinceGiorgi-Malakia Abashidzewas not only the most powerful vassal of the crown of Imereti, but himself acted as a kingmaker and evende factoking from 1702 to 1707. The family branched out in eastern Georgia whenErekle II,King of Kartli and Kakheti,granted, in 1774, to his father-in-law Prince Zaal Abashidze and his male descendants estates in Kakheti. A branch had also been established in Kartli in the person ofVakhushti Abashidze.Earlier in the 18th century, one representative of the Imeretian line went over to the Ottoman government and settled atBatumiwhere his descendants attained to the office ofsanjak-bey.

The Russian annexation of Imereti in 1810 brought the princedom of Saabashidzeo to an end. Henceforth, the family was equated to other noble families of the Russian Empire and confirmed as princes on September 20, 1825. On July 29, 1876, Prince Simon Abashidze (1837–1891) was granted the right to assume the surname and coat of arms of his father-in-law, the lateUkrainiannobleman Semen Davydovych Gorlenko, for himself and his male-line descendants (Abashidze-Gorlenko, Абашидзе-Горленко), but he died without a male heir.

The family has survived into the 21st century and has produced several notable writers, public figures and politicians.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Bagrationi, Ioane(1768-1830).Abashidze.The Brief Description of the Georgian Noble Houses.Retrieved on January 16, 2010

Bibliography

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  • (in Russian)Абашидзе.In: Холюшкин Юрий Павлович. Титулованные Роды Российской империи. Accessed on September 3, 2007.
  • WikisourceThis article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domain:"Абашидзе".Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary(in Russian). 1906.