Heraclius II, the penultimate king of the …

Years: 1770 - 1770
April
Heraclius II, the penultimate king of the united kingdoms of Kakheti and Kartli in eastern Georgia, focuses his foreign policy on seeking a reliable protector that will guarantee Georgia’s survival.

He has chosen Russia not only because it is Orthodox Christian, but according to British historian David Marshall Lang also because it will serve as a link to Europe, which he thinks a model for Georgia’s development as a modern nation.

Yet, Heraclius’s initial cooperation with Russia proves disappointing.

His participation in the Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774) does not lead to an anticipated reconquest of the Ottoman-held southern Georgian lands, for the Russian commanders in Georgia behave in a highly condescending, often treacherous way, and Empress Catherine II treated the Caucasus front as merely a secondary theater of military operations.

Heraclius asks Russian general Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben for aid against the Ottomans in the pending battle of Aspindza; in return Erekle will do his best to cultivate good relations with Russia.

General Totleben agrees to help.

Just as the small army of Heraclius and the large army of Totleben are about to meet and merge, Totleben and his army change course and return to Russia.

Totleben's plan is to let the Ottoman Empire completely destroy the Kartli-Kakhetian army along with the king; Russia can then easily incorporate the kingdom into the country.

Heraclius, along with his outnumbered army, is devastated.

Nevertheless, the morale of the Georgians manages to override that of the Ottoman Turks, and the battle ends in a Georgian victory.

The battle is the subject of the patriotic ode "On the Battle of Aspindza" by Besiki.

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