Commemorated on May 1
In 1166 a daughter, Tamar, was born to King George III (1155-1184) and Queen Burdukhan of Georgia. The king proclaimed that he would share the throne with his daughter from the day she turned twelve years of age.
The
royal court unanimously vowed its allegiance and service to Tamar, and
father and daughter ruled the country together for five years. After
King George’s death in 1184, the nobility recognized the young Tamar as
the sole ruler of all Georgia. Queen Tamar was enthroned as ruler of all
Georgia at the age of eighteen. She is called “King” in the Georgian
language because her father had no male heir and so she ruled as a
monarch and not as a consort.
At the beginning of her reign, Tamar
convened a Church council and addressed the clergy with wisdom and
humility: “Judge according to righteousness, affirming good and
condemning evil,” she advised. “Begin with me--if I sin I
should be censured, for the royal crown is sent down from above as a
sign of divine service. Allow neither the wealth of the nobles nor the
poverty of the masses to hinder your work. You by word and I by deed,
you by preaching and I by the law, you by upbringing and I by education
will care for those souls whom God has entrusted to us, and together we
will abide by the law of God, in order to escape eternal
condemnation.... You as priests and I as ruler, you as stewards of good
and I as the watchman of that good.”
The Church and the royal
court chose a suitor for Tamar: Yuri, the son of Prince Andrei
Bogoliubsky of Vladimir-Suzdal (in Georgia Yuri was known as “George the
Russian”). The handsome George Rusi was a valiant soldier, and under
his command the Georgians returned victorious from many battles. His
marriage to Tamar, however, exposed many of the coarser sides of his
character. He was often drunk and inclined toward immoral deeds. In the
end, Tamar’s court sent him away from Georgia to Constantinople, armed
with a generous recompense. Many Middle Eastern rulers were drawn to
Queen Tamar’s beauty and desired to marry her, but she rejected them
all. Finally at the insistence of her court, she agreed to wed a second
time to ensure the preservation of the dynasty. This time, however, she
asked her aunt and nurse Rusudan (the sister of King George III) to find
her a suitor. The man she chose, Davit-Soslan Bagrationi, was the son
of the Ossetian ruler and a descendant of King George I (1014-1027).
In
1195 a joint Muslim military campaign against Georgia was planned under
the leadership of Atabeg (a military commander) Abu Bakr of Persian
Azerbaijan. At Queen Tamar’s command, a call to arms was issued. The
faithful were instructed by Metropolitan Anton of Chqondidi to celebrate
All-night Vigils and Liturgies and to generously distribute alms so
that the poor could rest from their labors in order to pray. In ten days
the army was prepared, and Queen Tamar addressed the Georgian soldiers
for the last time before the battle began. “My brothers! Do not allow
your hearts to tremble before the multitude of enemies, for God is with
us.... Trust God alone, turn your hearts to Him in righteousness, and
place your every hope in the Cross of Christ and in the Most Holy
Theotokos!” she exhorted them.
Having taken off her shoes, Queen
Tamar climbed the hill to the Metekhi Church of the Theotokos (in
Tbilisi) and knelt before the icon of the Most Holy Theotokos. She
prayed without ceasing until the good news arrived: the battle near
Shamkori had ended in the unquestionable victory of the Orthodox
Georgian army.
After this initial victory the Georgian army
launched into a series of triumphs over the Turks, and neighboring
countries began to regard Georgia as the protector of the entire
Transcaucasus. By the beginning the 13th century, Georgia was commanding
a political authority recognized by both the Christian West and the
Muslim East.
Georgia’s military successes alarmed the Islamic
world. Sultan Rukn al-Din was certain that a united Muslim force could
definitively decide the issue of power in the region, and he marched on
Georgia around the year 1203, commanding an enormous army.
Having
encamped near Basiani, Rukn al-Din sent a messenger to Queen Tamar with
an audacious demand: to surrender without a fight. In reward for her
obedience, the sultan promised to marry her on the condition that she
embrace Islam; if Tamar were to cleave to Christianity, he would number
her among the other unfortunate concubines in his harem. When the
messenger relayed the sultan’s demand, a certain nobleman, Zakaria
Mkhargrdzelidze, was so outraged that he slapped him on the face,
knocking him unconscious.
At Queen Tamar’s command, the court
generously bestowed gifts upon the ambassador and sent him away with a
Georgian envoy and a letter of reply. “Your proposal takes into
consideration your wealth and the vastness of your armies, but fails to
account for divine judgment,” Tamar wrote, “while I place my trust not
in any army or worldly thing but in the right hand of the Almighty God
and the infinite aid of the Cross, which you curse. The will of God--and not your own--shall be fulfilled, and the judgment of God--and not your judgment--shall reign!”
The
Georgian soldiers were summoned without delay. Queen Tamar prayed for
victory before the Vardzia Icon of the Theotokos, then, barefoot, led
her army to the gates of the city.
Hoping in the Lord and the
fervent prayers of Queen Tamar, the Georgian army marched toward
Basiani. The enemy was routed. The victory at Basiani was an enormous
event not only for Georgia, but for the entire Christian world.
The
military victories increased Queen Tamar’s faith. In the daytime she
shone in all her royal finery and wisely administered the affairs of the
government; during the night, on bended knees, she beseeched the Lord
tearfully to strengthen the Georgian Church. She busied herself with
needlework and distributed her embroidery to the poor.
Once,
exhausted from her prayers and needlework, Tamar dozed off and saw a
vision. Entering a luxuriously furnished home, she saw a gold throne
studded with jewels, and she turned to approach it, but was suddenly
stopped by an old man crowned with a halo. “Who is more worthy than I to
receive such a glorious throne?” Queen Tamar asked him.
He
answered her, saying, “This throne is intended for your maidservant, who
sewed vestments for twelve priests with her own hands. You are already
the possessor of great treasure in this world.” And he pointed her in a
different direction.
Having awakened, Holy Queen Tamar immediately took to her work and with her own hands sewed vestments for twelve priests.
History
has preserved another poignant episode from Queen Tamar’s life: Once
she was preparing to attend a festal Liturgy in Gelati, and she fastened
precious rubies to the belt around her waist. Soon after she was told
that a beggar outside the monastery tower was asking for alms, and she
ordered her entourage to wait. Having finished dressing, she went out to
the tower but found no one there. Terribly distressed, she reproached
herself for having denied the poor and thus denying Christ Himself.
Immediately she removed her belt, the cause of her temptation, and
presented it as an offering to the Gelati Icon of the Theotokos.
During
Queen Tamar’s reign a veritable monastic city was carved in the rocks
of Vardzia, and the God-fearing Georgian ruler would labor there during
the Great Fast. The churches of Pitareti, Kvabtakhevi, Betania, and many
others were also built at that time. Holy Queen Tamar generously
endowed the churches and monasteries not only on Georgian territory but
also outside her borders: in Palestine, Cyprus, Mt. Sinai, the Black
Mountains, Greece, Mt. Athos, Petritsoni (Bulgaria), Macedonia, Thrace,
Romania, Isauria and Constantinople. The divinely guided Queen Tamar
abolished the death penalty and all forms of bodily torture.
A regular, secret observance of a strict ascetic regime--fasting, a stone bed, and litanies chanted in bare feet--finally
took its toll on Queen Tamar’s health. For a long time she refrained
from speaking to anyone about her condition, but when the pain became
unbearable she finally sought help. The best physicians of the time were
unable to diagnose her illness, and all of Georgia was seized with fear
of disaster. Everyone from the small to the great prayed fervently for
Georgia’s ruler and defender. The people were prepared to offer not only
their own lives, but even the lives of their children, for the sake of
their beloved ruler.
God sent Tamar a sign when He was ready to
receive her into His Kingdom. Then the pious ruler bade farewell to her
court and turned in prayer to an icon of Christ and the Life-giving
Cross: “Lord Jesus Christ! Omnipotent Master of heaven and earth! To
Thee I deliver the nation and people that were entrusted to my care and
purchased by Thy Precious Blood, the children whom Thou didst bestow
upon me, and to Thee I surrender my soul, O Lord!”
The burial
place of Queen Tamar has remained a mystery to this day. Some sources
claim that her tomb is in Gelati, in a branch of burial vaults belonging
to the Bagrationi dynasty, while others argue that her holy relics are
preserved in a vault at the Holy Cross Monastery in Jerusalem.
St. Tamara is commemorated on the Sunday of the Myrrh-bearing Women in addition to her regular commemoration on May 1.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!):
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