Right-believing (Ruler) 12th century

Saint Mstislav (George) Prince of Novgorod

c. 1143 – June 14, 1180

Also known as Mstislav the Brave

A prince of Novgorod venerated as a saint; few details of his life are preserved.

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

The Holy Right-Believing Prince Mstislav (George) of Novgorod, the Brave

Life

Saint Mstislav Rostislavich, called the Brave and known by his baptismal name George (Georgii), was a twelfth-century Rurikid prince who ruled successively at Belgorod, Toropets, Smolensk, and finally Novgorod, where he died in 1180. He is venerated as a right-believing prince, and the OCA commemorates him on June 14, though the OCA synaxarion currently publishes no biographical life for him.

Born around 1143, he was a son of Rostislav Mstislavich and a great-grandson of Vladimir Monomakh through his grandfather Mstislav I of Kiev. Contemporary sources praise him as a warrior who fought only for glory rather than gain, despising silver and gold and giving the spoils of his campaigns to the Church. His remains were discovered incorrupt in 1634 and rest in Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod; he was later canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church–Kyiv Patriarchate.

Timeline 11 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1143 Birth Mstislav (baptized George/Georgii) is born, a son of Rostislav Mstislavich and great-grandson of Vladimir Monomakh.
  2. 1161 Prince of Belgorod Holds Belgorod for the first time; he would hold it again from 1171 to 1173.
  3. 1167 Prince of Toropets Becomes Prince of Toropets.
  4. 1168 Campaign against the Polovtsy Takes part in the campaign against the Polovtsy under Grand Prince Mstislav Iziaslavich.
  5. 1170 Siege of Novgorod Besieges Novgorod together with his brother Roman and Yury Bogolyubsky.
  6. 1174 Defense of Vyshgorod Defends Vyshgorod against a nine-week siege by Andrey Bogolyubsky.
  7. 1175–1177 Prince of Smolensk Rules as Prince of Smolensk.
  8. Nov 1, 1179 Enters Novgorod Becomes Prince of Novgorod, entering the city on November 1, 1179.
  9. Winter 1179–1180 Campaign against the Chud Leads the Novgorodians against the Chud tribes.
  10. Jun 14, 1180 Death Dies in Novgorod.
  11. 1634 Relics discovered incorrupt His remains are found incorrupt and enshrined in Saint Sophia Cathedral, Novgorod.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Family and Lineage

Mstislav was the fourth of five sons and the eighth of nine children of Rostislav Mstislavich, founder of the Rostislavichi branch of the Rurikid dynasty centered on Smolensk. His grandfather was Mstislav I of Kiev, son of Vladimir Monomakh. His father, Rostislav, ruled as Prince of Smolensk, briefly as Prince of Novgorod, and as Grand Prince of Kiev across three periods between 1154 and 1167; among Mstislav's brothers were Davyd, Roman, and Rurik Rostislavich, who were themselves prominent in the dynastic politics of the age.

Mstislav's first wife was Feodosiya Rostislavna of Ryazan. Their children included Mstislav Mstislavich, surnamed Udaloy (the Daring), Vladimir Mstislavich of Pskov, and David, continuing the family's role in the principalities of the Rus' lands.

Princely and Military Career

Mstislav held a succession of principalities: he was Prince of Belgorod in 1161 and again from 1171 to 1173, Prince of Toropets from 1167, Prince of Smolensk from 1175 to 1177, and finally Prince of Novgorod from 1179, having entered the city on November 1, 1179.

His military career spanned the dynastic conflicts of the period. In 1168 he took part in the campaign against the Polovtsy (Cumans) under Grand Prince Mstislav Iziaslavich. In 1170 he and his brother Roman, together with Yury Bogolyubsky, laid siege to Novgorod, and in the early 1170s he assisted his brothers in installing and removing rulers at Kiev. In 1174 he defended Vyshgorod against a nine-week siege by Andrey Bogolyubsky. In the winter of 1179–1180, as Prince of Novgorod, he led the Novgorodians on campaign against the Chud tribes.

Sources describe him as a prince who 'warred only for glory' and who 'despised gold and silver,' giving all the booty of his campaigns to the Church — the qualities that contributed to his later veneration.

Legacy and Commemoration

Mstislav is addressed in The Tale of Igor's Campaign, the celebrated medieval Rus' poem, although he had died six years before the campaign it recounts took place.

He is commemorated on June 14 (Old Style), corresponding to June 27 (New Style). The OCA lists him among the saints of that day, but its synaxarion entry carries no biographical text, noting only that he is venerated. He was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church–Kyiv Patriarchate.

Relics & Shrines

Mstislav's remains were discovered incorrupt in 1634. They now rest in a gypsum sarcophagus set along the south wall of the Chapel of the Nativity of the Mother of God in Saint Sophia Cathedral, Novgorod.

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no detail. Flagged for review.

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