Background
Constantine was the elder son of King Bagrat V of Georgia by his second wife, Anna of Trebizond.
Constantine was the elder son of King Bagrat V of Georgia by his second wife, Anna of Trebizond.
He is the common ancestor of all surviving branches of the Bagrationi dynasty. In 1400, Constantine was sent as an ambassador to the Mongol warlord Timur Leng who continued a relentless war against the Georgians. Afterwards, he vainly demanded from his reigning half-brother George VII to make peace with Timur.
In 1402, Constantine together with the prince Ioane Jakeli of Samtskhe submitted to Timur but never took part in the war against Georgia.
He succeeded on the death of George VII as king in 1407 and launched a program of restoration of what had been ruined during Timur’s campaigns. Towards 1411, he allied with the Shirvanshah Ibrahim I and the ruler of Shaki Sidi Ahmed to counter the Kara Koyunlu Turkmen advance into the Caucasus.
In the captivity, he behaved arrogantly and the infuriated Turkoman prince Kara Yusuf ordered him, David, and 300 Georgian nobles to be executed. Kara Yusuf put Constantine to death by his own hand.
Constantine was married to Natia, daughter of Kutsna, Prince-Chamberlain (amirejibi) of Georgia.
There is little information available regarding Natia"s family: it may have been the house of Khurtsidze from Samtskhe or the Gabelisdze, purported ancestors of the Amirejibi family, from Shida Kartli. Kutsna himself was ambassador at Constantinople around 1386. Alexander (1390–1446) succeeded his father as the king of Georgia and reigned until his abdication from the throne in 1442;
George, prince
Bagrat, prince.