Royal Origins and the Identification Debate
By tradition Basil is reckoned a son of King Bagrat III of Georgia who renounced his place at court for the monastery. This identification, however, is not without controversy. It originated with the eighteenth-century scholar Catholicos Anton I, who first surmised that Basil was the son of a king, and was formalized by Prince Ioann (John) Bagrationi in the early nineteenth century, who placed him within the Bagrationi dynasty.
Medieval Georgian sources otherwise record only one son of Bagrat III, George I, and so the attribution remains debated among historians. The historian G. Goiladze has proposed that Basil may instead be identified with Gurgen, an otherwise little-known son from Bagrat III's first marriage mentioned by the Armenian author Mikayel Chamchian. Despite these scholarly questions, the royal identification has been maintained in the tradition of the Georgian Orthodox Church.
Learning and Literary Work
Basil was esteemed as a man of wide learning, described in later accounts as highly educated in philosophy and theology and fluent in several languages. He was active as a translator from the Greek and as the composer of rhetorical works, and the eighteenth-century historian Prince Vakhushti Bagrationi numbered him among the great translators of his age. For his erudition he was honored with the epithet the 'Jewel of the Georgian Church.'
No works survive that can be attributed to him with certainty, yet medieval testimony to his influence is strong. The eleventh-century Life of Saint George the Hagiorite (Giorgi Mtatsmindeli) calls him 'the great Basil' and a shepherd and enlightener of his country, language that secured his standing in the memory of the Georgian Church.
Mount Athos and Repose
In the latter part of his life Basil departed Georgia for Mount Athos, where the Georgian monastic community at Iviron flourished. There he continued his scholarly labors and is credited with composing a work of praises in honor of the holy father Euthymius (Ekvtime). According to historical accounts he reposed around the year 1040 at the Iviron monastery on the Holy Mountain.