Hierarch 8th century

Saint Mamai Catholicos of Georgia

died 744

Also known as Mamai of Georgia

Catholicos of Georgia in the eighth century, remembered as a wise shepherd of the Georgian Church.

Feast Day
May 3
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Mamai, Catholicos of Georgia

Life

Saint Mamai was Catholicos of Georgia in the eighth century, leading the Georgian Church from 731 to 744. Before his elevation to the catholical see he had been abbot of Zedazeni Monastery, one of the centers of Georgian monastic life, and tradition remembers him as a shepherd of marked spiritual wisdom and holiness.

He occupied the see during a period of repeated foreign invasion, when the catholicos and the Georgian king were frequently among the first to fall to invading armies. According to the tradition preserved in the Georgian and Orthodox synaxaria, Mamai himself died a martyr for Christ. The surviving record of his life is acknowledged to be scarce, and his commemoration rests chiefly on this memory of faithful leadership and martyrdom.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 731 Becomes Catholicos of Georgia Mamai, formerly abbot of Zedazeni Monastery, is raised to the office of Catholicos, becoming chief shepherd of the Georgian faithful.
  2. 744 Martyrdom After about thirteen years leading the Georgian Church through a time of invasion, he dies a martyr for Christ, according to the tradition recorded in the synaxaria.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

Mamai's tenure fell in an era when Georgia faced relentless incursions, and the catholicos and the king were often the first victims of invading forces. The sources present him as both a spiritual leader and a guardian of the Georgian people through this turmoil, though they are explicit that the documentary record of his life is limited.

Notes

The OCA entry notes information is scarce; possibly venerated as a martyr. Honest stub; flagged for review.

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