ABSTRACT

By the early 16th century the loosely knit kingdom of Georgia had disintegrated from the strong monarchy of the middle ages to a number of small states and principalities. This internal disunity made the Georgians easy victims of the power politics of the neighbouring Ottoman and Safavid empires and by the end of the century the southward drive of the Russians intensified the struggle for military and diplomatic control over the whole of the Caucasian isthmus. As a result of this struggle 17 embassies were exchanged between the Russian tsars and the Georgian kings ruling in Kakheti during the years 1564-1605. Mr Allen and Mr Mango (who undertook the translation) have selected the documents relating to the embassies of 1589-90 and 1604-05. Although the writers seem to be frequently preoccupied with questions of protocol, their observations give a clear picture of both current Russian administrative and diplomatic practice and of the life and customs of the peoples of the Caucasus and Georgia. The texts are further enlivened by dramas such as the murder of the Kakhian king Alexander II and the secret negotiations for the marriages of the son and daughter of the Tsar Boris Godunov. The documents are of considerable geographical interest as they provide the earliest extant accounts of the crossing of the main chain of the Caucasus from north to south. Mr Allen provides both a detailed background introduction and full commentary and notes on the texts. Volume II also contains some valuable genealogical tables which clarify the complicated relationships between the Caucasian royal and princely families and their connection with the Russian, Ottoman and Persian ruling families. The main pagination is continuous with the previous volume (Second series 138). This is a new print-on-demand hardback edition of the volume first published in 1970.

chapter 1|7 pages

Historical background

chapter 2|4 pages

Geographical background

chapter 3|6 pages

The Terek route through the Caucasus

chapter 4|2 pages

'The free Terek Cossacks'

chapter 5|5 pages

'Terek-town'

chapter 9|14 pages

The Georgian kingdoms

chapter 10|6 pages

Early relations of Kakheti with Russia

part |2 pages

The Texts: Part I The Embassy of Zvenigorodski and Antonov (1589-90)

chapter 1|20 pages

Instructions for the road

chapter 2|27 pages

Journey through Kabarda

chapter 3|22 pages

The road to Gremi

chapter 4|25 pages

Negotiations with King Alexander

chapter 5|12 pages

Matters temporal and spiritual

chapter 6|29 pages

World affairs and the falconer's son

chapter 7|12 pages

Armour and argamalcs

chapter 4|1 pages

The Kizilbashes

chapter 6|2 pages

The Russian conquest of Sibir

chapter 7|14 pages

The towns along the Volga route

chapter 8|9 pages

Shah Abbas and his Georgian connections

chapter 9|1 pages

Derbent and Baku

chapter 10|3 pages

Furs, fish teeth and cuirasses (WEDA/AM)

chapter 11|1 pages

Murat Giray

chapter 12|15 pages

The princely families of Kabarda

chapter 13|1 pages

The term kholopy

chapter I|2 pages

5. Metsk, Batsk

chapter 19|10 pages

The Daryal Gorge: its history and topography

chapter 20|13 pages

20.

chapter 22|2 pages

The horses called argamalcs

chapter 23|1 pages

St George of Alaverdi

chapter 25|2 pages

The town of Krym= Gremi

chapter 27|1 pages

King Simon I of Kartli

chapter 28|1 pages

The village of T og or Torga

chapter 29|1 pages

The organization of the Kakhian army

chapter 30|1 pages

The banner of Kisik (G. Kisiqi)

chapter 31|2 pages

The town of Zaem, Zagem, Zegan, Zakam

chapter 32|3 pages

Genzha and Areshi

chapter 33|5 pages

Some churches and bishoprics of Kakheti

chapter 35|1 pages

The title 'Krym-Shevkal'

chapter 36|1 pages

Prince Suliman

chapter 37|2 pages

Georgian merchants abroad

chapter 38|1 pages

The Iron Gates of Derbent

chapter 39|1 pages

Moscow as the Third Rome (WEDA/AM)

chapter 40|1 pages

On the idea of a Russian Pope (WEDA/AM)

chapter 41|1 pages

The Dido tribe

chapter 42|3 pages

King Alexander's account of his own life

chapter 43|2 pages

Kizilbash damask and carpets

chapter 44|5 pages

The Kalkan or Karakalkan mountaineers

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |5 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |6 pages

Table of Contents

part |2 pages

The Texts: Part II The Embassy of Tatishchev and Ivanov (1604-5)

chapter 8|22 pages

Georgians at the Court of Boris Godunov

chapter 9|14 pages

Minutiae

chapter 10|19 pages

The old road to Soni

chapter 11|20 pages

Crises in Kakheti

chapter 12|17 pages

Parricide in Zagem

chapter 13|14 pages

The move to Kartli

chapter 14|22 pages

A plethora of princes

chapter 15|17 pages

Disaster on the Terek

chapter 45|1 pages

The Posolski Prikaz (AM)

chapter 46|1 pages

On the rank of Yaselnichi (AM/WEDA)

chapter 47|3 pages

'The Turkish Pasha of Genzha, Kaikhosr'

chapter 49|1 pages

The feud between the Kakhian princes

chapter 50|1 pages

The Gold Painted Hall (AM)

chapter 51|1 pages

The approaches to Tarku

chapter 52|2 pages

'Alexander's fort'

chapter 53|1 pages

The route from Tarku to Zagem

chapter 54|1 pages

Vasili and Andrey Shchelkalov (WEDA/AM)

chapter 57|1 pages

Samskaya zemlya=the land of Samsk

chapter 58|2 pages

'The Turks' town of Tiflis'

chapter 59|1 pages

'The Sovereign Tsar ... Dmitri Ivanovich'

chapter 60|3 pages

Russo-Persian relations in 1604 (WEDA/AM)

chapter 61|2 pages

The names of Prince Giorgi's councillors

chapter 62|1 pages

The city of Ardabil (Erdebil)

chapter 65|1 pages

The town of Gori

chapter 66|1 pages

Precedence among the kings in Georgia

chapter 67|2 pages

The Bagratid royal children

chapter 69|4 pages

Tsar Boris's daughter Xenia

chapter 70|1 pages

Buturlin's catastrophe at Tarku

chapter 71|2 pages

Castelli and his drawings

chapter 1|2 pages

The adventures of the Georgian Lukoyanko

chapter 2|2 pages

The problem of translators

chapter 1|8 pages

Archival sources (AM/WEDA)

chapter 1|1 pages

The Russian Royal Houses

chapter 2|1 pages

The Ottoman Sultans

chapter 4|1 pages

The Giray Khans of the Crimea

chapter 5|1 pages

The Bagratids of Kartli

chapter 6|1 pages

The Bagratids of Mukhrani

chapter 7|1 pages

The Bagratids of Kakheti

chapter 8|2 pages

The Shamkhals (Shevkals) of Tarku

chapter |26 pages

Bibliography and abbreviations

chapter |2 pages

Note on maps consulted