Ekvtime III
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The heads of the Georgian Orthodox Church and its predecessors in the ancient Georgian
Kingdom of Iberia In Greco-Roman geography, Iberia (Ancient Greek: ''Iberia''; la, Hiberia) was an exonym for the Georgians, Georgian kingdom of Kartli ( ka, ქართლი), known after its Kartli, core province, which during Classical Antiquity and the E ...
(i.e. Kartli) have borne the title of Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia since 1010, except between 1811 and 1917, when the Church was subordinated to the Russian Orthodox Church as part of the Russian colonial policies. The current style of the head of the Georgian Orthodox Church is as follows:


Archbishops of Mtskheta (326–467)

* Ioane I (326–363) * Iakobi (363–375) *Iobi (375–390) *Elia I (390–400) *Svimeon I (400–410) *Mose (410–425) *Iona (425–429) *Ieremia (429–433) *Grigol I (433–434) *Vasili I (434–436) *Glonakor (436–448) *Iovel I (448–452) *Mikael I (452–467)


Catholicoi of Iberia (467–1010)

*Petre I (467–474) *Samoel I (474–502) *Gabriel I (502–510) *Tavfechag I (510–516) *Chirmagi–Chigirmane (516–523) *Saba I (523–532) *Evlavi (532–544) *Samoel II (544–553) *Makari (553–569) *Svimeon II (569–575) *Samoel III (575–582) *Samoel IV (582–591) *Bartlome (591–595) *Kirion I (595–610) *Ioane II (610–619) *Babila (619–629) *Tabor (629–634) *Samoel V (634–640) *Evnon (640–649) *Tavfechag II (649–664) *Evlale (664–668) *Iovel II (668–670) *Samoel VI (670–677) *Giorgi I (677–678) *Kirion II (678–683) *Izid–Bozidi (683–685) *Teodore I (Teodose) (685–689) *Petre (Svimeoni) II (689–720) *Talale (720–731) *Mamai (731–744) *Ioane III (744–760) *Grigol II (760–767) *Sarmeane (767–774) *Mikael II (774–780) *Samoel VII (780–790) *Kirile (791–802) *Grigol III (802–814) *Samoel VIII (814–826) *Giorgi II (826–838) *Gabriel II (838–850) *Ilarion I (850–860) *Arsen I (860–887) *Evsuki (887–900) *Klementos (900–914) *Basili II (914–930) *Mikael III (930–944) *Davit I (944–955) *Arseni II (955–980) *Oqropiri (Ioane I) (980–1001) *Svimeon III (1001)


Catholicos-Patriarchs of Georgia (1010–1811)

* St. Melkisedek I (1001–1030) *Okropir (Ioane) II (1031–1039) **Melkisedek I (1039–1045), restored **Okropir (Ioane) II (1045–1049), restored *Ekvtime I (1049–1055) *Giorgi III (Taoeli) (1055–1065) *Gabriel III (Safareli) (1065–1080) *Dimitri (1080–1090) *Basili III (Karichisdze) (1090–1100) *Ioane IV (Safareli) (1100–1142) *Svimeon IV (Gulaberisdze) (1142–1146) *Saba II (1146–1150) *Nikoloz I (Gulaberize) (1150–1178) * Michael IV (1178–1186) * Theodore II (1186–1206) *
Basil IV Vasili IV Shuisky (russian: Василий IV Иванович Шуйский, ''Vasiliy IV Ivanovich Shuyskiy'', c. 155212 September 1612) was Tsar of Russia between 1606 and 1610 after the murder of False Dmitri I. His rule coincided w ...
(1206–1208) * John VII (1208–1210) *Epiphane (1210–1220) *Ekvtime II (1220–1222) *Arseni III (1222–1225) *Giorgi IV (1225–1230) *Arseni IV (Bulmaisisdze) (1230–1240) *Nikoloz II (1240–1280) *Abraam I (1280–1310) *Ekvtime III (1310–1325) *Mikel V (1325–1330) *Basil V (1330–1350) *Doroteoz I (1350–1356) *Shio I (1356–1364) *Nikoloz III (1364–1380) *Giorgi V (1380–1399) *Elioz (Gobirakhisdze) (1399–1411) *Mikel VI (1411–1426) * David II (1426–1428) * Teodore III (1428–1435) *
David III David III Kuropalates (, ''Davit’ III Kurapalati'') or David III the Great (დავით III დიდი, ''Davit’ III Didi''), also known as David II, (c. 930s – 1000/1001) was a Georgian prince of the Bagratid family of Tao, a histori ...
(1435–1439) * Shio II (1439–1443/47 ) * David IV (1443/47–1459) *Markoz (1460–1466) *Davit IV (1466–1479) *Evagre (1480–1492) *Abraam II (Abalaki) (1492–1497) *Efrem I (1497–1500) **Evagre (1500–1503), restored *Doroteoz II (1503–1510) *Dionise (1510–1511) **Doroteoz II (1511–1516), restored *Basil VI (1517–1528) *Malachia (1528–1538) * Melkisedek II (Bagrationi) (1538–1541) *Germene (1541–1547) *Svimeon V (1547–1550) *Zebede I (1550–1557) * Domenti I (1557–1562) *Nikoloz IV (Baratashvili) (1562–1584) * St. Nikoloz V (1584–1591) *Doriteoz III (1592–1599) * Domenti II (1599–1603) *Zebede II (1603–1610) *Ioane VI (Avalishvili) (1610–1613) *Kristefore I (1613–1622) * Zachary (1623-1630) * St. Evdemoz I (Diasamidze) (1630–1638) *Kristefore II (Urdubegisdze Amilakhvari) (1638–1660) * Domenti III (Kaikhosro Mukhran Batonisdze) (1660–1675) *Nikoloz VI (Magaladze) (1675–1676) *Nikoloz VII (Amilakhvari) (1676–1687) *Ioan VII (Diasamidze) (1687–1691) **Nikoloz VII (Amilakhvari) (1691–1695), restored **Ioan VII (Diasamidze) (1696–1700), restored *Evdemoz II (Diasamidze) (1700–1703) * Domenti IV (1704–1725) *Besarion (Orbeliani) (1725–1737) *Kirile (1737–1739) **Domenti IV (1739–1741), restored *Nikoloz VIII (Kherkheulidze) (1742–1744) *
Anton I Anton may refer to: People *Anton (given name), including a list of people with the given name *Anton (surname) Places *Anton Municipality, Bulgaria **Anton, Sofia Province, a village *Antón District, Panama **Antón, a town and capital of th ...
(1744–1755) *Ioseb (Jandieri) (1755–1764) * Ioseb of Abkhazia (1769-1776) **
Anton I Anton may refer to: People *Anton (given name), including a list of people with the given name *Anton (surname) Places *Anton Municipality, Bulgaria **Anton, Sofia Province, a village *Antón District, Panama **Antón, a town and capital of th ...
(1764–1788), restored * St. Anton II (1788–1811)


Exarchs of Georgia (1811–1917)

''Autocephalous status abolished and administration placed under the Russian Orthodox Church, 1811–1917'' * Metropolitan Barlaam (Eristavi) (1811–1817) * Metropolitan Theophilact (Rusanov) (1817–1821) * Metropolitan Jonah (Vasilevsky) (1821–1834) * Archbishop Moses (Bogdanov-Platonov) (1832–1834) * Archbishop Eugene (Baganov) (1834–1844) * Archbishop Isidore (Nikolsky) (1844–1858) * Archbishop Ebsebius (Ilinsky) (1858–1877) * Archbishop Joannicius (Rudnev) (1877–1882) * Archbishop Paul (Lebedev) (1882–1887) * Archbishop Palladius (Raev) (1887–1892) * Archbishop Vladimir (Bogojavlensky) (1892–1898) * Archbishop Flavian (Gorodetsky) (1898–1901) * Archbishop Alexis I (Opotsky) (1901–1905) * Archbishop Nicholas (Nalimov) (1905–1906) * Archbishop Nikon (Sofiisky) (1906–1908) * Archbishop Innocent (Beliaev) (1909–1913) * Archbishop Alexis II (Molchanov) (1913–1914) * Archbishop Piterim (Oknov) (1914–1915) * Archbishop Platon (Rozhdestvensky) (1915–1917), Primus (chairman) of the Russian Holy Synod


Catholicos-Patriarchs of All Georgia (1917–present)

* St. Kirion II (1917–1918) * Leonid (1918–1921) * St. Ambrosius (1921–1927) *
Christophorus III Christophorus III ( ka, ქრისტეფორე III, ''K'ristep'ore III'') (27 March 1873 – 10 January 1932) was a Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia from 1927 until his death. He was born as Kristepore Tsitskishvili (ქრისტე ...
(1927–1932) * St. Callistratus (1932–1952) * Melchizedek III (1952–1960) * Ephraim II (1960–1972) *
David V David V ( ka, დავით V, ''Davit' V''; died 1155), of the Bagrationi Dynasty, was a 7th king of Georgia in 1154 before his death in 1155 He was an elder son of King Demetre I. Fearing that Demetre would make his younger son Giorgi an hei ...
(1972–1977) * Ilia II (1977–present)


Sources

* * {{cite book, title=საქართველოს მართლმადიდებელი ეკლესიის ისტორია, last=თორაძე, first=ვახტანგ, last2=თორაძე, first2=ნინო, language=Georgian, trans-title=, year=2006, publisher=გამომცემლობა „ელფი“, location=თბილისი, ISBN=99940-65-67-X, pages=554–557, url=https://dspace.nplg.gov.ge/handle/1234/323881 Georgian Orthodox Church * Primates of the Georgian Orthodox Church Lists of patriarchs Georgia Lists of popes, primates, and patriarchs
Georgian Georgian may refer to: Common meanings * Anything related to, or originating from Georgia (country) ** Georgians, an indigenous Caucasian ethnic group ** Georgian language, a Kartvelian language spoken by Georgians **Georgian scripts, three scrip ...