Martyr 17th century

Martyrs Bidzina Elizbar, and Shalva of Georgia

died 1661

Also known as ბიძინა, ელიზბარ და შალვა · Bidzina Cholokashvili · Elizbar of Ksani · Shalva of Ksani

Georgian nobles — Prince Bidzina Cholokashvili and the brothers Elizbar and Shalva, lords of Ksani — who led resistance to Persian domination in Kakheti and were executed in Persia in 1661.

Feast Day
September 18
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Bidzina, Elizbar, and Shalva, Princes of Georgia

Life

Bidzina, Elizbar, and Shalva were Georgian noblemen of the seventeenth century who led armed resistance to Persian domination in the eastern Georgian kingdom of Kakheti and were put to death in Persia in 1661 for refusing to renounce the Christian faith. Bidzina Choloqashvili was a prince of Kakheti, while Elizbar and Shalva were lords of the Ksani region. They are venerated together as martyrs, and their commemoration is kept on September 18.

In the mid-seventeenth century Kakheti lay under Persian rule, and the Persian governor Salim Khan encouraged Tatar tribesmen to settle the land and to profane its Christian churches. According to the synaxarion, the three princes united the forces of their regions and, on the moonless night of September 15, 1659, assembled an army drawn from across eastern Georgia and launched a surprise assault on the occupying forces from the area of Bakhtrioni Fortress and Alaverdi Church. The Persian army was routed so completely that Salim Khan barely escaped, abandoning his family and troops.

In reprisal, Shah Abbas II demanded that King Vakhtang V of Kartli deliver up the leaders of the uprising. The shah is said to have received the three princes with apparent respect and offered them gifts, but he required that they abandon Christianity. When they refused, they were subjected to torture. Elizbar and Shalva were beheaded, and Bidzina was killed after prolonged mutilation. Their relics were afterward gathered and, by tradition, brought to the Ikorta Church of the Archangels in Georgia.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. September 15, 1659 The Bakhtrioni uprising The princes lead a surprise night assault on the Persian forces of Salim Khan in Kakheti, routing the occupiers.
  2. 1661 Martyrdom in Persia Summoned before Shah Abbas II and refusing to renounce Christianity, the three princes are tortured and put to death.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Bakhtrioni Uprising

The resistance for which the three princes are remembered is traditionally associated with the region of Bakhtrioni in Kakheti. Sources relate that Bidzina Choloqashvili, a prince of Kakheti, joined with Elizbar and Shalva, lords of the Ksani region, to organize a coordinated revolt against the Persian administration of Salim Khan, which had been settling Tatar tribesmen on Georgian land and desecrating churches.

The synaxarion places the decisive assault on the moonless night of September 15, 1659, when a combined force from across eastern Georgia struck the occupiers near Bakhtrioni Fortress and the church of Alaverdi. The defeat of the Persian forces was severe enough that the governor Salim Khan fled the field, leaving behind his household and his army.

Martyrdom

Following the uprising, Shah Abbas II ordered King Vakhtang V of Kartli to surrender those responsible. The three princes were brought before the shah, who, according to the tradition, first treated them with honor and offered them gifts, then demanded that they renounce Christ. When they would not, they were imprisoned and tortured.

Elizbar and Shalva were beheaded, and Bidzina was put to death after enduring further mutilation. The accounts report that their bodies were discovered illuminated by a great light, after which Christians secretly buried them. Tradition holds that the wife and son of Shalva later recovered the relics and conveyed them to the Ikorta Church of the Archangels. The martyrdom is dated to 1661.

Notes

Reposed 1661 in Persia. One commemoration of three named martyrs.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org); OrthodoxWiki