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Notes on Don Juan of Persia's Account of Georgia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

In one of the recently published volumes of the Broadway Travellers Series (Don Juan of Persia; a Shi'ah Catholic, 1560—1604, translated and edited with an introduction by G. Le Strange) is an interesting account of Georgia and of some of the events of the Turko- Persian War which endured between the years 1578 and 1587. The Persian account throws much light on the state of Georgia at the end of the sixteenth century, and it serves as a valuable supplement to von Hammer Purgstall's history of the war, based mainly on Turkish sources, and published as books 38 and 40 of his Histoire de l'Empire Ottoman (in Vol. viii of the French edition).

Neither the historian of Turkey nor the editor of Don Juan appear to have made use of the material from Georgian sources which is available for this period, namely the provincial histories of Kartli, Samtzkhé, Kakheti and Imereti collated by Prince Wakhusht of Kartli during the eighteenth century, and published by Brosset in his Histoire de la Géorgie, 2ième partie, 1iere livraison, Spb. 1856.

Type
Papers Contributed
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1930

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References

page 183 note 1 On the same ground where the great battle was fought between the Byzantine Emperor Basil Bulgaroktonos and King Giorgi II of Kartli-Abkhazia in the autumn of 1021. (See Schlumberger, , L'Epopée Byzantine, 2, chap, xi.Google Scholar)