Seljuk Turks

Battle of Ertsukhi
11th Century Seljuk Turk Soldiers. ©Angus McBride
1104 Jan 1

Battle of Ertsukhi

Tbilisi, Georgia

The Kingdom of Kakheti-Hereti had been a tributary to the Seljuk Empire since the 1080s. However, in the 1104, the energetic Georgian king David IV (c. 1089-1125) was able to exploit internal unrest in the Seljuk state and successfully campaigned against the Seljuk vassal state Kakheti-Hereti, finally turning it into one of his Saeristavo. The king of Kakheti-Hereti, Agsartan II, was captured by the Georgian nobles Baramisdze and Arshiani and was imprisoned in Kutaisi.


The Seljuk Sultan Berkyaruq sent a large army to Georgia to retake Kakheti and Hereti. The battle was fought in southeastern part of the Kingdom, in the village of Ertsukhi located in the plains southeast of Tbilisi. King David of Georgia personally took part in the battle, where the Seljuks decisively defeated the Georgians causing their army to flee. The Seljuk Turks then turned the Emirate of Tbilisi once again into one of their vassals.

Last Updated: Tue Apr 23 2024

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