Begtabegishvili
The House of Begtabegishvili, Begtabegov or Bektabekov was a Georgian noble family of Armenian origin.
History
The ancestors of the family fled the Muslim conquest of Armenia and moved to Georgia in the seventeenth century. They were originally known as Shanshean-Martirozashvili, and possibly also as T’aniashvili. The king Teimuraz I elevated the family to a princely dignity, reportedly in 1633, and granted its head the hereditary office of mdivan-begi, i.e., royal secretary, whence the dynastic name adopted by the family. The early 17th-century head of the house, Begtabeg, was a notable copyist who created one of the best manuscripts of the medieval Georgian epic The Knight in the Panther's Skin by Shota Rustaveli.The Begtabegishvili were listed among the Georgian nobility in a special document attached to the Russo-Georgian Treaty of Georgievsk of 1783. They were the grandees of the second class under the Princes Baratashvili. After the Russian annexation of Georgia, the family was confirmed in the princely rank by the Tsar’s degrees of February 25, 1826 and December 6, 1850. Their official title was "Bagtabegov, Princes of Georgia" with a corresponding coat of arms. The best known 19th-century members of this family were the major general Solomon Begtabegov and Alexander Begtabegov, participants of the Caucasian War.