Esukan

1241–1270) was a queen consort of Georgia as the fourth and last wife of King David VII Ulu.

[1][2] The marriage was childless and marred by a scandal in 1264, when Basil, a royal chancellor and bishop of Chqondidi and of Ujarma, was accused of adultery with Queen Esukan.

David, habitually gullible and prone to hasty decisions, promptly had Basil executed by hanging in the middle of his capital.

[3] Modern scholars such as Ivane Javakhishvili doubt the truthfulness of these accusations, seeing in them a plot to remove Basil, the author of a controversial project of secularization of a part of the church's land holdings, from the political scene of Georgia.

[4] The medieval annals give no information about the later years of the marital life of David and Esukan, but mention that, when David died (in 1270), rumors held Esukan responsible for poisoning her husband as a revenge for the death of Basil.