Venerable (Monastic) 11th century

Venerable George of Mount Athos

c. 1009 – 1065

Also known as George the Athonite · George the Hagiorite

A Georgian raised in the monastic life from childhood who became a great light of the Iveron monastery on Athos, completing the translation of the Scriptures and the service-books into the Georgian tongue.

Feast Day
June 27
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father George the Hagiorite of Iviron

Life

George the Hagiorite (also called George of Athos or George of Iviron) was an eleventh-century Georgian monk, abbot, and translator whose work established the Iveron monastery on Mount Athos as a leading center of Georgian Orthodox learning. Raised in the monastic life from childhood, he became renowned for rendering the Scriptures and the service-books of the Church into the Georgian tongue.

Born into an aristocratic family in the southern Georgian province of Trialeti, he was educated from boyhood in Georgian monasteries and later in Constantinople, where he mastered Greek and Byzantine theology. After tonsure and travels through Jerusalem and the Black Mountain near Antioch, he settled at Iviron on Athos, where he served as hegumen and devoted himself to translation and monastic reform until his death in 1065.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1009 Born in Trialeti Born in Trialeti, a southern province of the Kingdom of Georgia, to the nobleman Jacob and his wife Mariam.
  2. c. 1016 Sent at about age seven to the Sent at about age seven to the monastery of Tadzrisi to begin his education; after three years moved to Khakhuli.
  3. c. 1022 Sent to Constantinople Sent to Constantinople, where he mastered Greek and Byzantine theology.
  4. 1034 Returned to Georgia and took monastic tonsure Returned to Georgia and took monastic tonsure at Khakhuli; afterward made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and became a disciple of George the Recluse on the Black Mountain near Antioch.
  5. 1040 Established himself at the Iviron monastery on Established himself at the Iviron monastery on Mount Athos.
  6. c. 1044 Consecrated hegumen of Iviron upon the death Consecrated hegumen of Iviron upon the death of his predecessor Stephanos.
  7. 1065 Died at Athens Died at Athens; the Athonite monks interred him at the Iviron monastery.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Education

George was born around 1009 in Trialeti, a southern province of the Kingdom of Georgia, into the aristocratic family of Jacob — sometime an envoy of King Bagrat III of Georgia to Iran — and his wife Mariam.

At about the age of seven he was sent to the monastery of Tadzrisi to begin his education, and after three years moved to Khakhuli. Around 1022 he was sent to Constantinople, where he mastered Greek and acquired a profound knowledge of Byzantine theology before returning to Georgia in 1034.

Monastic Life and the Iviron Abbacy

On returning to Georgia in 1034 George took monastic tonsure at Khakhuli. He then made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and spent a period as the disciple of another Georgian monk, George the Recluse, on the Black Mountain near Antioch.

In 1040 he established himself at the Iviron monastery on Mount Athos — its name meaning 'of the Georgians.' About four years later, upon the death of the hegumen Stephanos, George was consecrated as his successor. As abbot he reorganized and refurbished the cloister and developed it into a vibrant center of Georgian Orthodox culture.

Translations and Writings

George was among the foremost translators of the Georgian tradition. He produced an updated translation of the Gospels and rendered extensive material from Greek into Georgian, including the Psalms, works of exegesis, synaxaria, and the writings of the Fathers of the Church — among them Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, Athanasius, and John of Damascus. He also revised the work of his predecessors and translated anti-Latin writings attributed to Photius.

His principal original composition is the Vitae of Our Blessed Fathers John and Euthymius, written after 1040 — a manuscript of some twelve thousand words that serves as both a history and a praise of the Iviron community and its Georgian founders.

Relics & Shrines

George died at Athens in 1065 while on a journey, and the Athonite monks interred him at the Iviron monastery on Mount Athos, the community he had led and enriched.

Veneration

George the Hagiorite was canonized by the Georgian Orthodox Church. He is commemorated on June 27; the Georgian Church also keeps his memory on July 10.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Translation of the Gospels into Georgian — An updated Georgian translation of the Gospels, part of his broader work of rendering the Scriptures and service-books of the Church into Georgian.
  • The Vitae of Our Blessed Fathers John and Euthymius — His major original work, composed after 1040; a manuscript of some 12,000 words that is both a history and a praise of the Iviron monastic community.
  • Translations of the Church Fathers — Georgian translations of patristic writings, including works of Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, Athanasius, and John of Damascus, alongside the Psalms, exegetical works, and synaxaria.
Notes

George the Hagiorite of Iveron; not the Great Martyr George.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints