| Georgy Ilyich Orbeliani | |
|---|---|
Prince Georgy Ilyich Orbeliani | |
| Native name | Гео́ргий Ильи́ч Орбелиа́ни |
| Born | 1853 |
| Died | 1924 (aged 70–71) |
| Place of birth | Tbilisi, Georgia Governorate, Russian Empire |
| Place of death | Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union |
| Allegiance | |
| Service/branch | Imperial Russian Army |
| Rank | Lieutenant general |
| Battles/wars | |
Prince Georgy Ilyich Orbeliani (Georgian language: გიორგი ორბელიანი
- Russian
- Гео́ргий Ильи́ч Орбелиа́ни; 1853–1924) was general in the Imperial Russian Army during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.
Biography[]
Of ethnic Georgian birth, Orbeliani was the son of General Prince Ilya Dmitriyevich Orbeliani, a scion of the noble House of Orbeliani, and Princess Varvara Gruzinskaya, daughter of Prince Ilia of Georgia. Born in 1853, after graduating from the Page Corps, he entered service as a junior officer in the prestigious Hussar Regiment of the Imperial Life Guards.
Prince Orbeliani first saw combat in the Caucasus theater of the Russo-Turkish War (1877-1878), during which he was awarded the Order of St. Anne (4th class) and Order of St. Vladimir (4th class with swords and bow) for bravery in combat. He was subsequently posted to the Transcaspian Region after the Panjdeh Incident as part of the commission to fix the border of the Russian Empire with Afghanistan. From 1898 to 1899, Prince Orbeliani was a military attache posted to British India where he observed the maneuvers of the British Indian Army. Prince Orbeliani was promoted to major general in 1904 and assigned command of the Caucasian Cavalry Brigade, which played an active role in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 in Manchuria. War correspondent Francis McCullagh commented on the diverse ethnic backgrounds of Oebeliani's Brigade in his book With the Cossacks, but also mentioned that most of his men could not communicate well with other units due to their lack of ability in the Russian language.[1] Prince Orbeliani was awarded with the Order of St. Stanislav (1st class with swords) and Order of St. Anne (1st class with swords) and the Golden Sword of St. George for bravery.
Following the end of the war, Prince Orbeliani was appointed commander of the Kuban Cossack Army in 1910 with the rank of lieutenant general. He went into the reserves in November 1913.
Prince Orbeliani returned to active duty at the start of World War I, and was appointed supreme commander of medical evacuation services. He died in 1924.
Honors[]
Order of St. Anne 4th degree 1878
Order of St Vladimir, 4th degree, 1878Order of St. Stanislaus 1st degree 1904.
Order of St. Anne 1st degree 1904
- Golden Sword of St. George «for courage», 1904
Family[]
Prince Orbeliani was married to Princess Mariam Alexandrovna Orbeliani (1868–1915). Their children were:
- Irakly G. Orbeliani (1890–1937) was married by civil ceremony to Ariadna Dmitriyevna Rimsky-Korsakov (1899-?); no offspring
- Mariam G. Orbeliani (1899–1947), was married to Prince Nikolai (Tengiz, Tatarkhan) Alexandrovich (Tsiokhovich) Dadeshkeliani (1893–1961).
References[]
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Giorgi Orbeliani. |
- ↑ McCullagh, Francis. With the Cossacks. Being the Story of an Irishman Who Rode With the Cossacks Throughout the Russo-Japanese War
The original article can be found at Georgy Orbeliani and the edit history here.