Siege of Ganja | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Kingdom of Georgia | Eldiguzids | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
George IV | Uzbek | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
4,000 (assault) | 10,000 |
The siege of Ganja was the successful siege of the city of Ganja, by the Georgians under King George IV in 1213.
Background
After Queen Tamar's death, the kingdom was inherited by her son George IV. The young king was no sooner crowned than Uzbek, Eldiguzid ruler of Ganja revolted and stopped bringing tribute to the King.[1] Learning of this, King George called Darbazi – the supreme royal council – where he proposed punishing the atabeg of Ganja immediately. The nobles approved a campaign and with an ample army George IV set out to ravage Ganja.
Siege
The Georgian army under Ivane Mkhargrdzeli immediately sent troops to Ganja and enforced Georgian suzerainty by besieging, instead of storming the city. George lost patience with his generals’ decision, detached 4,000 men from the siege force and circled Ganja.[1] he asked help to Durgulel (Dorgolel) "The Great" the Alan king. He helped Georgians to siege Ganja. from the plain alongside the river Kura, to attack from behind.[2] The Ganja garrison realized George’s vulnerability: 10,000 well-armed men left the citadel and attacked. The ensuing fighting, although the Georgians won, caused heavy casualties. Because Ganja’s besieged citizens were starving, Uzbek called for a truce. The atabeg of Ganja was compelled to continue paying the tribute and acknowledge himself a subject of Georgia. George IV was reprimanded and had to apologize when the military authorities scolded him for his wayward and willful behavior.[1] The Eldiguzids would later once again stop paying tribute and rebel against the Georgians.
References
- 1 2 3 Rayfield 2012, p. 118.
- ↑ Georgian National Academy of Sciences, Kartlis Tskhovreba (History of Georgia), Artanuji pub. Tbilisi 2014
Sources
- Rayfield, Donald (2012). Edges of Empire (Kindle ed.). Reaktion Books.