'Saint Nino' (, ),(sometimes ''Nina'' or ''Ninny'') ''
Equal to the Apostles and the Enlightener of
Georgia'', (c.
296 – c.
338 or
340) was a woman who preached and introduced
Christianity in Georgia.
According to most widely traditional accounts, she was from
Kolastra,
Cappadocia (), was a relative of
Saint George[1], and came to Georgia (ancient
Iberia) from
Constantinople. Other sources claim she was from Rome, Jerusalem or Gaul (modern France)
[2] . She performed miraculous healings and converted the Georgian queen, Nana, and eventually the pagan king
Mirian III of Iberia, who, lost in darkness and blinded on a hunting trip, found his way only after he prayed to “Nino’s God”. Mirian declared Christianity an official religion (c. 327) and Nino continued her missionary activities among
Georgians until her death.
Her tomb is still shown at the
Bodbe Monastery in
Kakheti, eastern Georgia. St. Nino has become one of the most venerated saints of the
Georgian Orthodox Church and her attribute, a
Grapevine cross, is a symbol of Georgian Christianity.
Early Life
Many of courses agree on that Nino was born in the small town of
Colastri, in the
Roman province of Cappadocia, despite of other less number accounts. However on her family and origin, Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Church have different traditions.
According to the Eastern Orthodox Church tradition, she was the only child of the famous
Roman general
Zabulon. On her father's side, Nino was related to
St. George, and on her mother's, to the Patriarch of Jerusalem,
Houbnal I.
During her childhood Nino was brought up by her relative and the
nun named
Sarah Bethlehemlianka. Nino’s uncle who served as the
Patriarch of Jerusalem oversaw her traditional upbringing. Nino went to
Rome with the help of her uncle where she decided to preach the Christian gospel in Iberia, known to her as the resting place of the Christ’s tunic. According to the legend, Nino received a vision where the
Virgin Mary gave her a
grapevine cross and said:
:"Go to Iberia and tell there the Good Tidings of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and you will find favour before the Lord; and I will be for you a shield against all visible and invisible enemies. By the strength of this cross, you will erect in that land the saving banner of faith in My beloved Son and Lord."
While on her way to Iberia, passing through Anatolia into Caucasus, Nino managed to convert some villages to Christianity in Northern Anatolia and
Armenia. The account above is believed among Eastern Orthodox faithfuls.
On the contrary Roman Catholic tradition says Nino was brought to Iberia not fully from her own intent, but as a slave, and her family tree is obscure.
[3]
[4]
St Nino in Iberia
Nino reached the borders of ancient Georgian Kingdom of
Iberia in about 320 A.D. There, she placed a Christian cross in the small town of
Akhalkalaki and started preaching the Christian faith in
Urbnis and finally reaching
Mtskheta (the capital of Iberia). Iberian Kingdom has been influenced by the neighbouring
Persian Empire which played an important role as the regional power in the Caucasus. The Iberian King Mirian III and his nation worshiped the syncretic gods of
Armazi and
Zaden. Soon after the arrival of Nino in Mstkheta, the Queen of Iberia
Nana (daughter of King Asphagor) requested the audience with the Cappadician.
Queen Nana, who suffered from severe illness, had some knowledge of Christianity but not yet converted to it. Nino having restored her health, won to herself disciples from the Queen's attendants, including a Jewish priest and his daughter,
Abiathar and Sidonia. Queen officially converted to Christianity and was baptized by Nino herself. King Mirian aware of his wife’s religious conversion was tolerant of her new faith however, he secluded himself from Nino and the growing Christian community in his kingdom. However, his isolation to Christianity did not last for long. According to the legend, while on the hunting trip, the King was suddenly struck blind as the total darkness emerged in the woods. In a desperate state, King Mirian uttered the prayer to the God of St Nino:
:If indeed that Christ whom the Captive had preached to his Wife was God, then let Him now deliver him from this darkness, that he too might forsake all other gods to worship Him.
[2]
As soon as he finished his prayer, the light appeared and the King hastily returned to his palace in Mtskheta. As the results of this miracle, the King of Iberia renounced idolatry under the teaching of St Nino and was baptized as the first Christian King of Iberia. Soon whole of his household and the inhabitants of Mtskheta adopted Christianity. In 327 A.D King Mirian made Christianity as the state religion of his kingdom, making Iberia the second Christian state after Armenia.
After adopting Christianity, Mirian sent an ambassador to
Byzantium, asking Emperor
Constantine I to have a bishop and priests sent to Iberia. Constantine having learned of Iberia’s conversion to Christianity, granted Mirian the church lands in Jerusalem
[3] and sent the delegation of Bishops to the court of the Georgian King. Roman
historian Tyrannius Rufinus in ''Historia Ecclesiastica'' writes about Mirians request to Constantine:
:''After the church had been built with due magnificence, the people were zealously yearning for God's faith. So an embassy is sent on behalf of the entire nation to the Emperor Constantine, in accordance with the captive woman's advice. The foregoing events are related to him, and a petition submitted, requesting that priests be sent to complete the work which God had begun. Sending them on their way amidst rejoicing and ceremony, the Emperor was far more glad at this news than if he had annexed to the Roman Empire peoples and realms unknown''.
[4]
In 334 A.D, Mirian commissioned the building of the first Christian church in Iberia which was finally completed in 379 A.D. on the spot where now stands the
Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in Mstkheta.
Nino, having witnessed the conversion of Iberia to Christianity, withdrew to the mountain pass in
Bodbe,
Kakheti. St Nino died soon after; immediately after her death, King Mirian commenced with the building of monastery in Bodbe where her tomb can still be seen in the churchyard.
Notes
1. Orthodox Church of America - [1]
2. Tyrannius Rufinus, ''Historia Ecclesiastica''
3. Theodore Downling, Sketches of Georgian Church History, p. 52
4. Marjory and Oliver Wardrop, The Life of Saint Nino, volume 5, Clarendon Press Series
See also
★
Georgian Orthodox Church
Further reading
★
Life of Saint Nino, , Margery, Wardrop, Gorgias Press, 2006,
★
Sketches of Georgian Church History, , Theodore E., Dowling, Adamant Media, 2003,
External links
★
Biography from ''The St. Nina Quarterly''
★
Life of St Nino