Battle of Tsitsamuri

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Battle of Tsitsamuri
Part of
Date1615
Location41°51′39″N 44°43′57″E / 41.86083°N 44.73250°E / 41.86083; 44.73250Coordinates: 41°51′39″N 44°43′57″E / 41.86083°N 44.73250°E / 41.86083; 44.73250
Result Georgian victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of Kakheti Safavid Persia
Commanders and leaders
Teimuraz I
Strength
5,000 to 6,000[1] 15,000[2]
Casualties and losses
low very heavy

The Battle of Tsitsamuri (Georgian: წიწამურის ბრძოლა) was fought in 1615[clarification needed] between the armies of Kingdom of Kakheti under Teimuraz I and Persian Empire led by .

Battle[]

The battle took place after the initiation of the rebellion by Teimuraz I of Georgia, and in September 15, 1615. Shah Abbas I sent his general, with 15,000 Qizilbash militants to crush the uprising, who set up fortifications near the village of Tsitsamuri. The Georgians attacked the Persian encampment at noon. Teimuraz I personally led the center of his army, while David and Nodar commanded right and left flanks respectively.[1] After destroying the center of the Qizilbash army, the Persian flanks were routed with ease. Georgians ran down the retreating Persians and killed most of them, while others drowned in the Kura and Aragvi rivers.[3] The Georgians were left with a large loot. According to contemporary Georgian historian Parsadan Gorgijanidze, "the prices of camels were halved after salvaging the stashes from Persian camps".[3]

Aftermath[]

Despite the important victory won by the Georgians in 1615, the rebellion was crushed the following year when Shah Abbas I personally led the second invasion with a much larger army. Teimuraz I fled to Imeretia once again. The Shah, unable to halt the partisan warfare of the rebels, burned down villages and towns one by one, killing 100,000 Kakhetians and deporting 150,000 to 200,000 to Persia. According to a contemporary historian , "the day had come for second coming for the Georgians".[1][3][4]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c [1] Life of Giorgi Saakadze, Kaspi, 2014.
  2. ^ [2] Kings of Kakheti, Dumbadze-Ioseliani, 1973-1976.
  3. ^ a b c [3] I. Javakhishvili, Essays of Georgian History, Part IV, Soviet Georgia Publishing, Tbilisi 1970, pg 230-233.
  4. ^ [4] Georgia in the first half of 17th century, 2010
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