Teimuraz I of Kakheti

Teimuraz I
Teimuraz I and his wife Khorashan. A sketch from the album of the contemporaneous Roman Catholic missionary Cristoforo Castelli
King of Kakheti
Reign1605–1616
1625–1633
1634–1648
PredecessorConstantine I
SuccessorArchil
King of Kartli
Reign1629–1633
PredecessorSimon II
SuccessorRostom
Born1589
Iran
Died1663 (aged 73–74)
Gorgan, Iran
Burial
SpouseAna Gurieli
Khorashan of Kartli
Issue
DynastyBagrationi
FatherDavid I of Kakheti
MotherKetevan the Martyr
ReligionGeorgian Orthodox Church
Khelrtva

Teimuraz I (Georgian: თეიმურაზ I; 1589–1663), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a Georgian monarch (mepe) who ruled, with intermissions, as King of Kakheti from 1605 to 1648 and also of Kartli from 1629 to 1633. The eldest son of David I and Ketevan, Teimuraz spent most of his childhood at the court of Shah of Iran, where he came to be known as Tahmuras Khan. He was made king of Kakheti following a revolt against his reigning uncle, Constantine I, in 1605. From 1614 on, he waged a five-decade long struggle against the Safavid Iranian domination of Georgia in the course of which he lost several members of his family and ended his life as the Shah's prisoner at Astarabad at the age of 74.

A versatile poet and admirer of Persian poetry, Teimuraz translated into Georgian several Persian love-stories and transformed the personal experiences of his long and difficult reign into a series of original poems influenced by the contemporary Persian tradition.