Vakhtang is reported by the eighth or …

Years: 472 - 472

Vakhtang is reported by the eighth or eleventh century LIfe of Vakhtang Gorgasali to have succeeded his father King Mihrdat (V) at the age of seven.

His mother, a Christianized Persian Sagdukht, assumed regency in Vakhtang's minority.

The author then describes the grave situation in which Iberia was at that time, troubled by the Sassanids' Zoroastrianizing efforts and a ravaging raid by the "Ossetians" from the north, this letter being a possible reference to the invasion by the Huns (which may have included Alans) through the Caspian Gates mentioned by Priscus.

At the age of sixteen, Vakhtang is said to have led a victorious retaliatory war against the "Ossetians", winning a single combat against the enemy’s giant and relieving his sister Mirandukht from captivity.

At the age nineteen, Vakhtang married Balendukht, "daughter" of the Great King Hormizd (apparently Hormizd III, r. 457–459).

Soon, upon the Great King's request, Vakhtang took part in the campaign in "India", probably in Peroz's abortive expedition against the Hephthalites in the 460s and, and against the Roman Empire in 472, in which Vakhtang is reported to have gained control of Egrisi (Lazica) and Abkhazia (Abasgia).

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