Hierarch 9th century

Saint Hilarion the Iberian

c. 822 - 875

Also known as ილარიონ ქართველი · Hilarion the Georgian · Hilarion the Wonderworker of Thessalonica · Hilarion of David Gareja

A Georgian monk from Kakheti and bishop of David Gareja who founded a Georgian monastery on Mount Olympus in Bithynia and later settled in Thessalonica, where he was renowned as a wonderworker. He reposed in 875.

Feast Day
November 19
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Hilarion the Iberian, Wonderworker of Thessalonica

Life

Saint Hilarion the Iberian was a ninth-century Georgian monk, ascetic, and wonderworker whose long life carried him from the desert wilderness of Davit-Gareji in his native Kakheti to Jerusalem, Asia Minor, Constantinople, Rome, and finally to Thessalonica, where he reposed in 875. He is remembered above all as a thaumaturgus, or miracle-worker, and is honored as one of the patron saints of Georgia.

Born to an aristocratic family of Kakheti and dedicated to God from birth, Hilarion withdrew to a cave in the Davit-Gareji wilderness while still a youth, was later ordained priest and made abbot of the Davit-Gareji Lavra, and repeatedly fled honors and the episcopate in favor of solitude and pilgrimage. His vita was composed after his death on Mount Athos by followers of Saint Euthymius the Athonite, the circle that established Georgian monasticism on the Holy Mountain.

He should not be confused with Saint Hilarion the New of Georgia, an unrelated nineteenth-century Athonite elder commemorated separately.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 822 Birth in Kakheti Hilarion is born to an aristocratic family in Kakheti, in eastern Georgia, and is dedicated to God from birth and raised in a monastery his father had founded.
  2. c. 836 Withdrawal to Davit-Gareji At about the age of fourteen he leaves his father's monastery and settles in a cave in the Davit-Gareji wilderness, where he lives in seclusion for ten years.
  3. Mid-9th century Ordination and abbacy The bishop of Rustavi ordains him priest, and he becomes abbot of the Lavra of Saint David of Gareji before departing on pilgrimage.
  4. Mid-9th century Pilgrimage to the Holy Land He travels to Jerusalem, venerating Mount Tabor, the Jordan River, and the Lavra of Saint Sabas, and dwells for a time in the Jordan wilderness.
  5. 864 Monastery on Mount Olympus He establishes a monastery on Mount Olympus in Bithynia, housing largely his Georgian compatriots, after spending time with two companions in a forsaken church there.
  6. After 864 Constantinople and Rome He journeys to Constantinople to venerate the Life-giving Cross and to Rome to honor the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul.
  7. 875 Ministry and repose at Thessalonica Settling in Thessalonica after healing a paralyzed boy, he spends his last years working wonders and reposes on November 19, 875.
  8. Reign of Basil I (867-886) Translation of relics Emperor Basil I the Macedonian has the relics conveyed from Thessalonica to Constantinople and ultimately to the Monastery of Romana outside the capital.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Ascetic Beginnings

According to his vita, Hilarion was the son of a Kakheti aristocrat and was dedicated to God from his birth. His father had established a monastery, and the boy was raised within it. At the age of fourteen he left his father's monastery and settled in a cave in the Davit-Gareji wilderness, where he lived in seclusion for ten years.

His reputation as a tireless intercessor in prayer spread through eastern Georgia, drawing crowds who sought his instruction and blessing. The bishop of Rustavi ordained him a priest, and he became abbot of the Lavra of Saint David of Gareji. Davit-Gareji, the great cave-monastery complex of the Georgian semi-desert, is named in the sources as the major shrine associated with him.

Pilgrimage to the Holy Land

After his ordination Hilarion left Georgia for Jerusalem. The synaxarion relates that on the journey thieves attacked him, but their hands suddenly withered; when they fell to their knees and begged forgiveness, he healed and pardoned them. According to his vita he venerated Mount Tabor, the Jordan River, and the Lavra of Saint Sabas, where by one account he remained seven years, living in a cave as a hermit.

Tradition holds that while he dwelt in the Jordan wilderness the Theotokos appeared to him and instructed him to return to his homeland. Returning to Georgia, he found that his father and brothers had died. His mother gave him the family inheritance, which he used to establish a convent for women and a monastery for men numbering seventy-six ascetics, distributing the remainder of the property to the poor.

Mount Olympus and the Western Pilgrimage

When the clergy sought to consecrate him bishop, Hilarion again fled, leaving Georgia with two companions for Mount Olympus in Bithynia, in Asia Minor, where they settled in a forsaken church. His vita recounts that the local abbot at first drove the foreign monks away but, after the Theotokos appeared rebuking him for his treatment of them, received them with honor. By the account preserved in his life, in 864 he established a monastery on Mount Olympus, sometimes identified as the Lavra of Krania, which chiefly housed his Georgian compatriots; he is said to have spent five years on the mountain.

From Mount Olympus he journeyed to Constantinople to venerate the Life-giving Cross, and then to Rome to honor the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul, remaining, by one account, two years at the Apostles' graves. Along the way he is said to have healed a paralyzed man, and similar wonders followed him as he traveled.

Thessalonica and Repose

Arriving in Thessalonica, Hilarion healed a paralyzed boy of fourteen by the sign of the Cross. The prefect of the city, who witnessed the miracle, entreated the saint to remain and built a church at the place he chose. There Hilarion spent the remaining years of his life, continuing to work wonders, and he reposed on November 19, 875.

He is venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church and is counted among the patron saints of Georgia. His hagiography was written after his death on Mount Athos by the followers of Saint Euthymius the Athonite, and texts of it survive from the tenth and eleventh centuries.

Relics and Shrines

After his death the grieving prefect of Thessalonica prepared a marble shrine for the saint, and the sources relate that those who approached his grave with faith received healing. The Emperor Basil I the Macedonian (reigned 867-886) learned of the miracles from the prefect and the archbishop and wished to translate the relics to Constantinople. The people of Thessalonica resisted, but imperial envoys eventually conveyed the relics to the capital in secret.

Basil at first kept the relics in his own chamber; tradition relates that Hilarion appeared to him declaring that the fragrance of holiness belonged 'in the wilderness, not in the city,' after which the emperor transferred the relics to the Monastery of Romana outside Constantinople, where they were said to give off a healing fragrance. The sources add that three disciples of Hilarion so impressed the emperor that he built them a monastery at Romana with a church dedicated to the Holy Apostles, and that he later sent his sons Leo and Alexander to be educated by these Georgian fathers.

Notes

Born c. 822 in Kakheti; reposed 875 in Thessalonica. Commemorated Nov 19 (OCA: 'Hilarion the Wonderworker, Monk of Thessalonica'). Distinct from St Hilarion the New of Georgia (†1864, OS-0661), an unrelated 19th-century Athonite elder.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Nov 19; John Sanidopoulos (Mystagogy); Wikipedia