Chosroid dynasty | |
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Parent house | House of Mihran |
Country | Kingdom of Iberia Principality of Iberia Kakheti |
Founded | 284 |
Founder | Mirian III of Iberia |
Final ruler | Juansher of Kakheti |
Style(s) | Style of the Georgian sovereign |
Dissolution | c. 807 |
Cadet branches | Guaramid dynasty |
Part of a series on the |
History of Georgia |
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The Chosroid dynasty (a Latinization of Khosro[v]ianni, Georgian: ხოსრო[ვ]იანები), also known as the Iberian Mihranids, were a dynasty of the kings and later the presiding princes of the early Georgian state of Iberia from the 4th to the 9th centuries. The family, of Iranian Mihranid origin, accepted Christianity as their official religion c. 337 (or 319/326), and maneuvered between the Byzantine Empire and Sassanid Iran to retain a degree of independence. After the abolition of the Iberian kingship by the Sassanids c. 580, the dynasty survived in its two closely related, but sometimes competing princely branches—the elder Chosroid and the younger Guaramid—down to the early ninth century when they were succeeded by the Georgian Bagratids on the throne of Iberia.