George VIII
| George VIII გიორგი VIII | |
|---|---|
A royal charter regarding the blood money issued by King George VIII to the priest Giorgi Zhuruli, 1460. | |
| King of Georgia | |
| Reign | 1446–1465 |
| Predecessor | Vakhtang IV |
| Successor | Bagrat VI |
| King of Kakheti | |
| Reign | 1466–1476 |
| Successor | Alexander I |
| Born | 1415/1417 |
| Died | 1476 |
| Burial | |
| Spouse | Nestan-Darejan Tamar |
| Issue Among others | Alexander I of Kakheti |
| Dynasty | Bagrationi |
| Father | Alexander I of Georgia |
| Mother | Tamar of Imereti |
| Religion | Georgian Orthodox Church |
| Khelrtva | |
George VIII (Georgian: გიორგი VIII, romanized: giorgi VIII; 1415/1417–1476), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was the King (mepe) of the Kingdom of Georgia from 1446 to 1465 and later ruled the Kingdom of Kakheti as George I from 1466 until his death in 1476.
A member of the Bagrationi dynasty, he was the third son of Alexander I of Georgia. In 1433, Alexander appointed George as co-ruler alongside his brothers Vakhtang IV, Demetrius, and Zaal, in an attempt to strengthen the royal authority against the growing power of the nobility. However, the young George soon fell under the influence of the nobles, leading to his father’s abdication in 1442. He subsequently assumed administrative control over the northeastern territories of the Caucasus under the supervision of his elder brother, Vakhtang IV. Upon Vakhtang’s death in 1446, George seized the throne, disinherited his elder brother Demetrius, and forced him into exile.
George VIII is remembered as the last monarch to rule over a united Georgian kingdom, although the formal division of the realm was not recognized until 1490. During his reign, he rapidly lost control of Samtskhe in the 1460s, when the atabeg Qvarqvare II Jaqeli declared independence. Subsequently, Western Georgia broke away during the Georgian Triumvirate War, a civil conflict that marked the fragmentation of the kingdom. In 1465, George was captured and imprisoned by the atabeg of Samtskhe, leading to a further weakening of royal power and the rise of semi-independent principalities across Georgia. After his release in 1466, he established control over Kakheti, declared it an independent kingdom, and ruled there peacefully until his death in 1476, laying the foundations for its early institutions.
On the international stage, George VIII witnessed major geopolitical upheavals in the Near East, including the fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the fall of Trebizond in 1461. Despite appeals for assistance from the Byzantines, George chose not to intervene against the Ottoman Empire in either conflict. His plans to organize a crusade against the Ottomans, in cooperation with Rome, ultimately failed due to the reluctance of European states to participate in the campaign.