Martyr 17th century

Martyr Luarsab II King of Kartli

c. 1587 – 1622

Also known as Luarsab II of Georgia

A king of Kartli who withstood the pressure of Shah Abbas of Persia to renounce Christ; held long in captivity at Shiraz, he was strangled for the faith about the year 1622.

Feast Day
January 28
Also Jun 21
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Luarsab II, King of Kartli

Life

Luarsab II was a king of Kartli, in eastern Georgia, and a member of the Bagrationi dynasty who reigned from 1606 to 1615. His reign fell during a period of repeated Persian and Ottoman incursions into the Georgian kingdoms. He is venerated by the Georgian Orthodox Church as a martyr for having refused, throughout a long captivity in Persia, to renounce Christ and accept Islam. He is commemorated on June 21 individually and jointly with St Archil II on January 28.

He was the son of King George X, who according to the tradition was poisoned by Shah Abbas I of Persia, and Luarsab succeeded to the throne while still a youth. The synaxarion relates that in 1609 he led a Georgian force against a far larger Turkish invading army near Kvenadkotsi and routed it, having prepared for battle with prayer and communion. The victory alarmed Shah Abbas, who thereafter sought his destruction; as a measure of peace Luarsab was compelled to give his sister Helen in marriage to the shah.

When Persian forces invaded Kartli, Shah Abbas threatened the kingdom with ruin and promised peace if the king submitted. To spare Kartli and its churches further devastation, Luarsab surrendered himself, withdrawing first westward into Imereti and then placing himself in the shah's hands around 1615. Treated well at first, he was imprisoned once it became clear he would not abandon his faith. By tradition he spent some seven years in chains, first at Astarabad and then at the fortress of Gulab-Kala near Shiraz, enduring torments and pressure to convert. He was put to death in 1622, strangled by order of the shah; two of his retainers were martyred with him, and Christians buried their bodies.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 1606 Accession to the throne of Kartli Luarsab II became king of Kartli following the death of his father, George X.
  2. 1609 Victory at Kvenadkotsi He led a Georgian force that defeated a much larger Turkish invading army.
  3. c. 1615 Surrender to Shah Abbas To spare Kartli from devastation, he gave himself up to the Persian shah and was taken into captivity.
  4. 1622 Martyrdom in Persia After years of imprisonment and refusal to accept Islam, he was strangled by order of Shah Abbas.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Captivity and Martyrdom

The accounts of Luarsab's captivity emphasize his steadfastness in the face of repeated inducements and threats. The shah, according to the tradition, alternately offered him release with treasures and threatened him with death by torture if he would not accept Islam, and the king refused throughout. One incident preserved in the synaxarion records that, during Great Lent, Luarsab declined to eat fish despite the shah's demands, a detail cited as a sign of his strictness in fasting and prayer even under duress.

He was held for several years in chains in Persia and subjected to beatings intended to break his resolve. His execution is described as a strangling carried out on the shah's orders at a fortress in what is now southwestern Iran. The Georgian Orthodox Church numbers him among its royal martyrs, and his commemoration is linked with that of St Archil II, an earlier Georgian king martyred for the faith, with whom he shares a joint feast on January 28.

Notes

Martyred under Shah Abbas of Persia (17th c.). Commemorated jointly with St Archil II on Jan 28 and individually on Jun 21. Previously joined with Archil II in OS-0557.

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