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Equal-to-the-Apostles 4th century

Nina Enlightener of Georgia

c. 280 – c. 335

Also known as St. Nino

A young woman whose preaching converted the kingdom of Georgia.

Feast Day
January 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Holy Mother Nina (Nino), Equal-to-the-Apostles and Enlightener of Georgia

Come to them for
Missionary Work

Life

Nina, also called Nino, was a fourth-century missionary whose preaching led to the conversion of the kingdom of Georgia (Iberia) to Christianity. Honored as Equal-to-the-Apostles and as the Enlightener of Georgia, she is commemorated on January 14 and is venerated as the patroness of the Georgian people.

By tradition Nina was born in Cappadocia in Asia Minor and was a relative of the Great-Martyr George. Her father, Zabulon, is described as a Roman commander, and her mother, Susanna (Sosana), as a sister of Patriarch Juvenal of Jerusalem. While she was still young her parents dedicated themselves to the service of God and went to Jerusalem, where Nina was raised in the Christian faith by an elderly woman named Sara. From Sara she learned that the Robe of Christ had been carried to Georgia, a pagan land, and conceived the desire to go there.

The tradition relates that the Mother of God appeared to Nina in a vision, telling her to go to the land allotted to the Theotokos and preach the Gospel, and giving her a cross woven of grapevines, which Nina bound together with strands of her own hair. Travelling toward the Caucasus she was associated with the virgin-martyrs Rhipsime and Gaiana and their companions, who were put to death in Armenia; Nina alone escaped and continued on into Georgia.

Entering Georgia through the mountains of Javakheti, Nina settled near the royal city of Mtskheta, learned the Georgian language, and began to preach. Her ministry was accompanied by miraculous healings, and through her the royal house was converted: she healed Queen Nana, who became a Christian, and King Mirian embraced the faith after a sign during a hunt. Mirian made Christianity the religion of his kingdom and supported the building of the first churches. After years of preaching across Georgia, Nina reposed and was buried at Bodbe in Kakheti.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 280 Born in Cappadocia Nina is born in Cappadocia in Asia Minor, by tradition a relative of the Great-Martyr George.
  2. early life Raised in Jerusalem Her parents dedicate themselves to God and go to Jerusalem, where Nina is brought up in the faith by the woman Sara.
  3. c. 320s Mission to Georgia After the martyrdom of her companions in Armenia, Nina enters Georgia through the Javakheti mountains and preaches at Mtskheta.
  4. c. 326 Conversion of King Mirian King Mirian and Queen Nana embrace Christianity, and the king makes it the religion of his kingdom.
  5. c. 335 Repose at Bodbe Nina reposes in eastern Georgia and is buried at Bodbe in Kakheti, where King Mirian builds a church over her grave.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

The Grapevine Cross and the Call to Georgia

The most distinctive emblem of Nina's mission is the cross of grapevines she is said to have received in a vision of the Mother of God, who told her to preach the Gospel in the land allotted to the Theotokos. By tradition Nina bound the two vine-branches together with strands of her own hair, and this cross with its gently drooping arms became, and remains, a recognized symbol of the Georgian Church.

Her desire to reach Georgia was bound up with the tradition that the Robe of Christ had been brought there and lay at Mtskheta, which she had heard of in Jerusalem from the woman Sara who raised her. On her way toward the Caucasus she was linked with the virgin-martyrs Rhipsime and Gaiana and their companions; when they were martyred in Armenia, Nina escaped and went on alone into Iberia.

Conversion of the Royal House

Settling near Mtskheta, Nina learned the Georgian tongue and preached, and her preaching was accompanied by miraculous healings. Among those healed was Queen Nana, who through her recovery came to faith in Christ. King Mirian (Mirian III), who at first resisted, was converted after he was overtaken by darkness or blindness while hunting and his sight was restored when he called upon the God of Nina.

Mirian then made Christianity the religion of his kingdom and, with Queen Nana and their son Bakar, assisted Nina's work. The tradition associated with the building of the first church at Mtskheta tells of a great pillar that workmen could not raise until, after Nina prayed through the night, it was seen suspended above its base and descended onto its pedestal untouched — a sign connected in Georgian memory with the cathedral of Svetitskhoveli.

Later Years, Repose, and Veneration

After the conversion of the king and the establishment of the Church, Nina continued to travel and preach throughout Georgia, laboring in the years of the persecution under Diocletian. By tradition she withdrew toward eastern Georgia and reposed about the year 335.

She was buried at Bodbe in Kakheti, where King Mirian began the construction of a church and monastery, and her tomb there remains a place of pilgrimage; one tradition instead remembers her relics at the cathedral of Mtskheta. She is venerated across the Orthodox world and especially honored as the Enlightener and patroness of Georgia.

Notes

Patroness of Georgia.

Sources: Synaxarion