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  1. Princess Salomé Dadiani (Georgian: სალომე დადიანი; 13 October 1848 – 23 July 1913) was a Georgian princess, the only sister of Niko Dadiani, the last Prince of Mingrelia.

  2. Salome Dadiani (1848-1913), the daughter of David Dadiani and Ekaterine Chavchavadze, was born in 1848 in Zugdidi, but was in many ways a child of Western Europe. In 1857, when Salome was still a child, the Russian Empire assumed direct administration of the principality of Samegrelo, a prelude to its official abolition ten years later.

  3. Ekaterine Dadiani mit ihrer Familie beim Krönungsball Zar Alexanders II., 1868 Mingrelische Rebellion. Im Jahr 1856 überließ Ekaterine das Fürstentum Mingrelien dem General George Dadiani und zog nach Zarskoje Selo, der Residenz der russischen Zarenfamilie, wo sie sich am Hof aufhielt. Im darauffolgenden Jahr musste sie jedoch nach Georgien ...

  4. Salomé Dadiani ( géorgien : სალომე დადიანი ; 13 octobre 1848 - 23 juillet 1913) [1] est une princesse géorgienne, et la seule sœur de Nicolas de Mingrélie, dernier prince de Mingrélie.

  5. The palace overlooks the pristine waters of the Tsachkhura river, known for its refreshing chill, a silent witness to the fascinating life of the Dadiani nobles. The Salkhino Dadiani Palace, currently serving as the residence for Patriarch Martvili, remains a remarkable monument in the Martvili tourist area.

  6. Visit the historic Salkhino Dadiani residence, once the summer home of the Dadiani princes and their French imperial relatives. Explore the gardens, 18th century Virgin Mary Church and wine cellar.

  7. The former came to the Dadiani Palace via Salome Dadiani Murat, who married Napoleon’s nephew Achille Murat. As for the latter, there are many stories about how it might have arrived in Georgia. According to the most popular of these, it was brought there by an archbishop after the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, along with other sacred items. Every year in August, the ...