Martyr 8th century

Martyrs David and Constantine of Argveti

died c. 740s

Also known as დავით და კონსტანტინე არგვეთელი · David Argveteli · Constantine Argveteli

Noble brothers and princes of Argveti in western Georgia who led resistance to the Arab invasion under Marwan ibn Muhammad and were executed about the 740s.

Feast Day
October 2
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs David and Constantine, Princes of Argveti

Life

David and Constantine were brothers and princes of Argveti in western Georgia, remembered as martyrs of the eighth century who led the local resistance to the Arab invasion of the Caucasus. Georgian tradition gives their family name as Mkheidze. They are commemorated together on October 2.

The brothers' martyrdom is set against the campaign of the Umayyad commander Marwan ibn Muhammad, called by the Georgians 'the Deaf' (Murvan Qru), whose forces pressed through the eastern Byzantine lands into Armenia and Georgia. By the tradition recorded in the synaxarion, the brothers at first led the Georgian forces to victory, but when the commander returned in greater strength the Georgian army was routed and the survivors scattered.

Taken captive, David and Constantine were imprisoned and pressed to embrace Islam through both promises and threats; they refused and continued to confess Christ. After being tortured they were drowned, heavy stones bound to their bodies, in a river of western Georgia. Their relics came to rest near Kutaisi, where the Motsameta Monastery — its name derived from the Georgian word for 'martyr' — was later raised in their honor and where their relics are preserved.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 8th century Arab invasion of Georgia Marwan ibn Muhammad's forces press into the Caucasus, and the brothers lead the Georgian resistance in Argveti.
  2. c. 740 Martyrdom After imprisonment and torture, David and Constantine are drowned for refusing to renounce Christ.
  3. 11th century Motsameta Monastery established King Bagrat enshrines the recovered relics and founds the monastery near Kutaisi in their honor.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom

According to the life, the captured brothers were cast into prison and urged by their captor to abandon Christ for Islam, with false promises and, in some accounts, the efforts of sorcerers to break their resolve. They held firm. The OCA life preserves David's reply to the demand that he convert: that Muhammad had turned the Arabs from the worship of fire but could not give them the knowledge of the True God.

By tradition the brothers were led to a riverbank near a church of Saints Cosmas and Damian, beaten and bound, and drowned with heavy rocks hung from their necks. Their bodies were recovered by Christians and buried. One Georgian source dates the martyrdom to about the year 740.

Relics and the Motsameta Monastery

The relics of the martyrs were enshrined at what became the Motsameta Monastery, perched on a cliff above the Tskaltsitela river some kilometers northeast of Kutaisi in the Imereti region. The name Motsameta means 'place of the martyrs.' By local tradition the river's name, meaning 'red water,' is connected to the blood of the martyrs.

The synaxarion relates that King Bagrat, having found the incorrupt relics, built a church dedicated to the martyrs and established the monastery over the place. The relics have remained an object of veneration; an account records that when they were removed to a Kutaisi museum in 1923 under Soviet authority, public protest secured their return to the monastery.

Notes

Reposed c. 740s. Patrons of Motsameta Monastery near Kutaisi. One commemoration of two named martyrs.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org); OrthodoxWiki