Great Martyr 17th century

Greatmartyr Bidzini and Martyrs Elizabar and Shalvi of Georgia

died c. 1660

Also known as Prince Bidzini · Prince Elizabar · Prince Shalvi

Georgian nobles who resisted Persian oppression and were tortured and killed for refusing to abandon Christ.

Feast Day
September 18
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Commemorated as

The Holy and Glorious Great-Martyr Bidzini and Martyrs Elizabar and Shalvi of Georgia

Life

Bidzini (Bidzina Cholokashvili) and the brothers Elizabar and Shalvi were Georgian nobles of the seventeenth century who led their countrymen in the Bakhtrioni Uprising against Safavid Persian domination of the Kingdom of Kakheti, and who were afterward tortured and put to death for refusing to renounce Christ.

Bidzina belonged to the high nobility of Kakheti and held administrative office at court, while Elizabar and Shalvi were the eristavi, the ducal lords, of the principality of Ksani. The three are venerated together by the Georgian Orthodox Church as martyrs.

Their commemoration preserves the memory of the resistance of seventeenth-century Georgia to forced foreign settlement and the pressure to abandon the Christian faith.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 1640s Service to the Kingdom of Kakheti Bidzina Cholokashvili held a high administrative office in the Kingdom of Kakheti and, amid the factional disputes of the Georgian nobility, supported King Teimuraz I against the rival Rostom of Kartli. At Teimuraz's direction in 1648 he led a military campaign to bring the district of Ertso-Tianeti under royal control.
  2. 1650s Persian colonization of Kakheti Under Safavid control, the Persians settled large numbers of Turkoman nomads in Kakheti to repopulate the province, hold its restless nobles in check, and secure the region. The eviction of the local population from their villages and farms prepared the ground for revolt.
  3. 1659 The Bakhtrioni Uprising Bidzina, together with Elizabar and Shalvi, the eristavi of Ksani, formed the core leadership of a rising joined by the mountain peoples of Tusheti, Khevsureti, Pshavi and others. The Georgian forces stormed and overcame the Turkoman strongholds at Bakhtrioni and Alaverdi and defeated further Turkoman forces across Kakheti.
  4. c. 1660 Martyrdom Their movement, weakened by poor organization and isolation, could not withstand the Persian counteroffensive. Summoned by the Shah and pressed to abandon the Christian faith, the three refused; they were handed over to tribes that had suffered in the uprising, and were tortured and put to death.

Contributions & Legacy

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Historical Context

The seventeenth century was a turbulent age for the eastern Georgian kingdoms, which lay under the influence of Safavid Persia and were torn by rivalries among their own nobility. Bidzina Cholokashvili lived through this period in the Kingdom of Kakheti, where he held a high office at court and aligned himself with King Teimuraz I against Rostom of Kartli.

In the 1650s the Persians pursued a policy of colonization, settling great numbers of Turkoman nomads in Kakheti in order to repopulate the land, restrain its nobles, and secure the province. According to Georgian tradition the bulk of the population took part in the revolt that followed, because they were being driven from their villages and farms by the newcomers.

The Uprising and Martyrdom

In 1659 Bidzina joined with Elizabar and Shalvi, the eristavi of Ksani, to lead the Bakhtrioni Uprising. They were supported by the highland peoples of Tusheti, Khevsureti and Pshavi. The allied forces attacked and overcame the Turkoman fortresses at Bakhtrioni and Alaverdi and routed further Turkoman troops throughout Kakheti.

Despite this success, the rising was weakened by its loose organization and isolation, and the Safavid shah was able to mount an effective counterattack. The three leaders were summoned before the Persian court and pressed to renounce Christ. When they refused, they were delivered over to tribes that had been struck down during the uprising, and there they were tortured and killed, about the year 1660. The anchor record names the principal saint Bidzini as a Great-Martyr.

Veneration and Legacy

Bidzini, Elizabar and Shalvi are honored as martyrs by the Georgian Orthodox Church, which numbers them among the defenders of the faith and homeland. In this database their feast is kept on September 18.

Beyond their place in the Church calendar, the Bakhtrioni Uprising became a lasting theme in Georgian national memory and literature, inspiring such works as Vazha-Pshavela's epic poem Bakhtrioni and Akaki Tsereteli's novel Bashi-Achuki.

Notes

Named group kept as one row; distinct from Shalva of Akhaltsikhe (OS-1377).

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