Venerable (Monastic) 11th century

Saint Euthymius the New and the Georgian Fathers of Iveron

10th - 11th centuries

Also known as Euthymius the Athonite · John the Iberian · George the Hagiorite · Gabriel of Iveron

The Georgian fathers who founded and adorned the Iveron Monastery on Mount Athos — John the Iberian and his son Euthymius the Athonite, and George the Hagiorite — great translators who rendered the Scriptures and the writings of the fathers into Georgian, with Gabriel who received the Portaitissa icon from the sea.

Feast Day
May 13
Also Jul 12
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Fathers Euthymius the Athonite, John the Iberian, George the Hagiorite, and Gabriel of Iveron

Life

This commemoration gathers the Georgian fathers who founded and adorned the Monastery of Iveron on Mount Athos. Chief among them are John the Iberian and his son Euthymius the Athonite, who established the Georgian house on the Holy Mountain in the closing decades of the tenth century, and George the Hagiorite, who in the following century reorganized the community and continued its great labor of translation. With them is remembered Gabriel of Iveron, the monk associated by tradition with the recovery of the Portaitissa icon of the Mother of God from the sea.

The Iveron fathers are honored above all as translators. Working from Greek into Georgian, they rendered the Holy Scriptures and a large body of patristic, liturgical, and hagiographical literature, much of which had not previously existed in their language. Their work set lasting standards for Georgian ecclesiastical letters and made Iveron a vibrant center of Georgian Orthodox culture for centuries. The community is commemorated on May 13, the principal feast associated with Euthymius, with several of the named fathers also honored individually on July 12.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

John the Iberian and the founding of Iveron

John the Iberian came from a noble and wealthy family of the Georgian lands. After renouncing the world he became a monk and eventually settled on Mount Athos, where he was associated with the circle of Saint Athanasius the Athonite and the Great Lavra. With his kinsman Tornike Eristavi and others, John established the Georgian monastery of Iviron, traditionally dated to the years around 980-983. He served as its first abbot and laid the foundation for the community's long Georgian character.

Euthymius the Athonite, translator

Euthymius, the son of John, was born in the Georgian province of Tao. As a boy he had been taken to Constantinople, by some accounts as a political hostage, before being reunited with his father; the synaxarion relates that when given the choice he ran at once into his father's arms. Joining his father on Athos, he studied the monastic life, was ordained priest, and in time led the Iveron community.

Fluent in Georgian and Greek, Euthymius translated the Holy Scriptures and, by the traditional account, more than fifty further works into Georgian. Among his renderings was the spiritual romance known in the West as the story of Barlaam and Josaphat. He is said to have cared for both Saint Athanasius and his father John over many years and to have rebuilt churches and hospices on the Holy Mountain. By tradition he died at Constantinople in the early eleventh century after being thrown from a startled mule, and his relics were brought back to Iveron.

George the Hagiorite and the later fathers

George the Hagiorite, also called George of the Holy Mountain, was born in southern Georgia about the year 1009 into an aristocratic family. Becoming a monk at Iveron, he was made abbot in the mid-eleventh century and reorganized and refurbished the cloister. He continued the translation work of his predecessors, rendering into Georgian the Fathers of the Church, the Psalter, exegetical writings, and synaxaria, and composing an account of the lives of John and Euthymius. He also defended the standing of the Georgian Church before the Patriarch of Antioch. He reposed in 1065.

Gabriel of Iveron is remembered in connection with the Portaitissa, the icon of the Mother of God recovered from the sea and set at the gate of the monastery, from which it takes its name, "She of the Gate."

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Georgian translation of the Holy Scriptures and patristic writings — Renderings from Greek into Georgian by Euthymius the Athonite and George the Hagiorite
  • The Lives of John and Euthymius — An account of the founders of Iveron composed by George the Hagiorite
Notes

Named group of the Iveron founders commemorated together. Sts John (the Iberian) and Gabriel of Iveron, named among these fathers, are also commemorated individually on Jul 12.

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