Military Service and the Banner of Shamkor
Shalva belonged to the generation of commanders who carried the Kingdom of Georgia to the height of its medieval power. The sources connect his name above all with the victory at Shamkor (Shamkori) in 1195, a battle in the Ganja region in which the Georgian forces defeated an army of the Eldiguzid atabegs. In the fighting Shalva seized a war banner that had been dispatched by the caliph to the enemy, an act that the tradition treats as a token of the triumph of the Christian cause.
Rather than keep the captured standard as a personal trophy, Shalva offered it, along with the spoils he had won, to the Khakhuli Icon of the Theotokos, one of the most revered icons of medieval Georgia. The accounts of his life place this dedication at the center of his memory, presenting it as the gesture of a soldier who attributed his success to divine help. His standing at court is reflected in the high state offices he held, those of Lord High Treasurer and Lord High Mandator.