Commemorated on September 12
Thirty-five
thousand Persian soldiers marched toward Georgia in the year 1795. The
Georgian king Erekle II (1762–1798) and his two thousand soldiers
declared war on the invaders as they were approaching Tbilisi. The
Georgians won the first skirmish, but many perished in the fighting. The
enemy was shaken and was preparing to flee the battleground, when
several traitors reported to Aqa Muhammed Khan that King Erekle had lost
nearly his entire army. This betrayal decided the fate of the battle:
the one hundred fifty soldiers who remained in the Georgian army barely
succeeded in saving the life of King Erekle, who had willed to perish on
the battlefield with his soldiers.
All of Tbilisi was engulfed in flames. The plunderers murdered the
people, set fire to the libraries, destroyed the print shop, and
vandalized the churches and the king’s palace. They slaughtered the
clergy in an especially cruel manner.
Unfortunately, history has not preserved the names of all those martyrs
who perished in this tragedy, but we do know that a certain Metropolitan
Dositheus of Tbilisi was killed because he would not abandon his flock.
While the invaders simply killed most of the clergymen, from St.
Dositheus they demanded a renunciation of the Christian Faith. They
commanded him to defile the True and Life-giving Cross of our Lord. But
the holy hieromartyr Dositheus endured the greatest torments without
yielding to the enemy, and he joyfully accepted death for Christ’s sake.
The invaders slaughtered Christ’s devoted servant with their swords.
St. Dositheus was martyred on September 12 in the year 1795.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2010(with 2009's link here also and further, 2008's, even 2007!
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