A monastic from his youth who became Bishop of Mytilene on the island of Lesbos and confessed the veneration of the holy icons, suffering persecution under the iconoclasts.
Feast Day
April 7
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Our Father among the Saints George the Confessor, Bishop of Mytilene
Life
George the Confessor was a Byzantine hierarch who served as Bishop of Mytilene on the island of Lesbos during the era of the iconoclast controversy. According to the synaxarion he embraced the monastic life from his youth and was noted for his humility before being raised to the episcopate. He is remembered above all for refusing to abandon the veneration of the holy icons, a stance that brought him persecution and exile and earned him the title of Confessor.
His commemoration falls on April 7. The Orthodox tradition associates him with miraculous gifts during his lifetime and after his death, and recounts that a bright star appeared over Mytilene at the hour of his repose.
Timeline 4 moments
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From youthMonastic lifeAccording to the synaxarion, George led a monastic life from his youth and was especially accomplished in the virtue of humility before his elevation to the episcopate.
8th centuryElevation to MytileneThe OCA account relates that during the reign of the emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitos (dated 780-797) George was raised to the archbishopal cathedra of Mytilene on the island of Lesbos. His tenure was associated with a gift of wonderworking, the casting out of unclean spirits, and the healing of diseases.
813-820Defense of the icons under Leo the ArmenianWhen the iconoclast emperor Leo the Armenian (813-820) renewed the persecution of icon veneration, George refused to comply and stood in defense of the holy icons alongside other bishops at an assembly in Constantinople.
815Exile to ChersonBy tradition George was banished in 815 and sent to Cherson on the Black Sea, where he endured physical hardships and deprivations and died after the year 820 (placed by some accounts around 820-821).
Contributions & Legacy
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Iconoclasm and confession
George's title of Confessor derives from his steadfast defense of the veneration of icons during the Byzantine iconoclast controversy. The sources record that he refused to follow the wishes of the iconoclast authorities and openly upheld icon veneration, for which he was deposed and exiled rather than martyred — the distinction that the Church marks with the rank of Confessor.
The synaxarion accounts associate his confession with the renewed iconoclasm under Leo the Armenian, when he was banished to Cherson and died in exile.
Some hagiographic notices additionally connect his sufferings to an earlier period of iconoclast persecution; the surviving accounts are not fully consistent on the chronology, and the dataset places him firmly in the 9th century and the Byzantine era.
Veneration and traditional accounts
George is venerated as a wonderworker, and tradition holds that miracles attended him both during his life and after his death. The most frequently repeated account relates that at the hour of his repose a bright star shone in the heavens over the city of Mytilene.