The siege of Ani (Georgian: ანისის ალყა) took place in 1124, which the Georgian army under the command of David IV the Builder liberated the ancient capital of Armenia, the city of Ani, and the northern Armenia from the Muslim emirs.[1]
In response, Ani's Armenians appealed to King David IV to capture Ani,[5][7] taking this opportunity in hand, David IV summoned all his armies and entered Armenia with 60,000 men to take the city. Without a single fight, the Armenian population of Ani opened the gates to the Georgians,[8] who captured emir Abu'l-Aswar Shavur ibn Manuchihr and exiled him and his family to Abkhazia, Samuel Anetsi notes that "not a single soul was harmed by blood". The region was then left to the governance of the Meskhetian nobility, to General Abuleti and his son Ivane.[9]
Armenian families (including many dispossessed nobles[10]) subsequently established themselves in Georgia proper and the royal power built the city of Gori for them.[11] Northern Armenia was thus annexed and incorporated into the Kingdom of Georgia, increasing the power of David IV in the region.[12] Georgia's conquest of Northeast Armenia finally completed the ultimate project of securing South Caucasus against the Turkish threat. For the first time, the entire Caucasus is unified culturally, spiritually and politically under a single scepter, this being Georgia.[13]
King David IV freed the Cathedral of Ani, after which the cathedral returned to Christian usage.[5][14] Katranide, the queen of the Greeks who built the Cathedral, was buried there. David, together with the Catholicos and the bishops, took care of the deceased and called the tomb three times "Rejoice, you holy queen, for God has saved your throne from the hands of the unrighteous."[12]
Hasratyan, Murad (2002). "Անիի Մայր Տաճար (Cathedral of Ani)". In Ayvazyan, Hovhannes (ed.). "Քրիստոնյա Հայաստան" հանրագիտարան ("Christian Armenia" Encyclopedia) (in Armenian). Armenian Encyclopedia Publishing. pp. 63–64.
Pubblici, Lorenzo (2022). Mongol Caucasia: Invasions, Conquest, and Government of a Frontier Region in Thirteenth-Century Eurasia (1204-1295). Brill.