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Ekaterine Chavchavadze

Ekaterine Chavchavadze

FieldValue
nameEkateriné Dadiani-Chavchavadze
full nameEkateriné Alexandres asuli Dadiani-Chavchavadze
titlePrincess of Mingrelia
imageFranz Xavier Winterhalter. Princess Catherine Dadiani.jpg
captionPortrait by Franz Xaver Winterhalter
spouseDavid Dadiani, Prince of Mingrelia
issuePrince Niko
Princess Salomé
Prince Andria
houseChavchavadze
fatherPrince Alexander Chavchavadze
motherPrincess Salomé Orbeliani
birth_date
birth_placeTsinandali
death_date

Princess Salomé Prince Andria

Ekateriné Dadiani, Princess of Mingrelia (ეკატერინე დადიანი; née Chavchavadze; March 19, 1816August 13, 1882) of the House of Dadiani, was a prominent 19th-century Georgian aristocrat and the last ruling princess (as regent) of the Principality of Mingrelia in Western Georgia. She was regent during the minority of her son between 1853 and 1857. She played an important role in resisting Ottoman influence in her principality and was at the center of Georgian high society, both inside the country and abroad.

Family and marriage

Ekateriné's father, Prince [[Alexander Chavchavadze

Ekateriné was born to the distinguished House of Chavchavadze from Eastern Georgia. Her father was Prince Alexander Chavchavadze, a noted Georgian general and godson of Catherine the Great of Russia. Her mother was Princess Salomé Orbeliani (1795-1847), a great-granddaughter of Erekle II (Heraclius II) of Eastern Georgia. Her elder sister Princess Nino married the famous Russian playwright, composer and diplomat Aleksandr Griboyedov, while her younger sister Princess Sophie was married to Count Alexandr Nikolai, the minister of education of Imperial Russia.

On December 19, 1838, Ekateriné married the Hereditary Prince of Mingrelia, David Dadiani. In 1840, he became ruler of the principality upon the retirement of his father, Levan V Dadiani.

In August 1853, David died and Ekateriné quickly assumed the responsibilities of her late husband, rising from relative obscurity. Recognizing her as regent of Mingrelia on behalf of her elder son, Prince Niko, Nicholas I of Russia assigned her a regency council which included her late husband's brothers, Prince Grigol Dadiani and Prince Konstantin Dadiani.

Instability during the Crimean War

During the Crimean War, the Turks sent a considerable force to Mingrelia, occupying significant parts of the principality and forcing Ekateriné to flee for security reasons. She soon received a threatening letter from the commanding Turkish general Omar Pasha demanding her surrender, as well as the transfer of her son's principality to the Ottoman Empire. Refusing to dignify Pasha's letter with a response, Ekateriné assumed control of the Mingrelian forces and organized successful counter-attacks that inflicted serious damage on the invading Turks.

The Crimean War soon ended in 1856 with the Treaty of Paris and Ekateriné was reinstated as regent, receiving an invitation to the coronation of Emperor Alexander II of Russia. She attended the ceremony with her children, as well as her sister, Nino. According to the Russian memoirist K.A. Borozdin, Ekateriné retained "the luster of her beauty" and looked extraordinary in her "original and richly decorated costume." The memoirist, like many others in modern-day Georgia, refers to her as the "Mingrelian Queen" and states that at the coronation ball, everyone was "delighted with [Ekateriné], her sister, children, and entourage."

Mingrelian rebellion and Russian encroachment

Ekateriné at the coronation ball in the [[Winter Palace
Princess Ekateriné's salon in [[Tsarskoe Selo

In 1856, Ekateriné left the Mingrelian principality to her brother-in-law, General Grigol Dadiani and moved to live in Tsarskoe Selo, the residence of the Russian Imperial Family, where she became one of the "ladies of the court." In 1857, she was forced to return to Georgia because of the peasant uprising organized by a Mingrelian smith, Uta Miqava. On May 12, the rebels took control of the province's capital Zugdidi, forcing Ekateriné to request help from Russia. Having already effectively annexed Eastern Georgia, Russia eagerly intervened, subdued the uprising, and asked Ekateriné to move to Saint Petersburg on the pretext of facilitating her children's education and upbringing there. Her departure and the establishment of a "temporary" Russian military authority in Mingrelia marked the de facto abolition of the principality.

Final years

After moving to Russia, Ekateriné kept her private salon in Tsarskoe Selo open to the Georgian and Russian intelligentsia. After living there for nearly ten years, she moved to Paris, where her daughter Princess Salomé already lived with her French husband, Prince Achille Murat. In the final years of her life, Ekateriné moved back to Western part of Georgia, then officially part of the Russian Empire, and lived there to the end. She was interred in the medieval Eastern Orthodox monastery of Martvili.

Issue

ImageNameBirthDeath
Princess Maria18401842
Princess Nina18411848
Prince Levan18421844
[[File:Portrait of the great Prince Niko Dadiani (1853-1903).jpg90px]]Prince Niko4 January 184722 January 1903
[[File:Саломе дадиани-мюрат.jpg90px]]Princess Salomé12 January 184827 July 1913
[[File:Andria Dadiani.jpg90px]]Prince Andria18501910
Princess Tamara18531859

References

References

  1. Kveselava, M (2002), ''Anthology of Georgian Poetry'', The Minerva Group, Inc., {{ISBN. 0-89875-672-3, p. 175
  2. Kveselava, M (2002), ''Anthology of Georgian Poetry'', The Minerva Group, Inc., {{ISBN. 0-89875-672-3, p. 181
  3. Office of Policy & Analysis, ''[http://www.achp.si.edu/dadiani/david.html Dadiani Dynasty – David Dadiani] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-08-11 '', The Smithsonian Institution in Association with the National Parliamentary Library of Georgia, retrieved 27 March 2011)
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