The Holy Martyr Susanna (Shushanik), Queen of Georgia
Life
Susanna, known in Georgian as Shushanik, was a fifth-century noblewoman of the Caucasus venerated as a martyr and passion-bearer. The daughter of the Armenian commander Vardan Mamikonian, she was raised in a devout Christian household and married Varsken, a regional ruler associated with Hereti and Gogarene who held authority as a vassal under the Persian-aligned order of the day.
Her husband, drawn to the Persian court, renounced Christianity and embraced the Zoroastrian fire religion, then pressed his wife to follow him into apostasy. Susanna refused, and for that refusal she endured years of confinement and ill-treatment before her death around 475. Her steadfastness was recorded by an eyewitness, making her story not only an account of martyrdom but also the foundation of written Georgian literature.
Timeline 6 moments
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c. 440BirthBorn into a Christian family of the Caucasus, the daughter of Vardan Mamikonian, an Armenian military commander remembered for his resistance to Persian domination.
5th centuryMarriage to VarskenMarried Varsken, a ruler connected with Hereti and Gogarene who governed as a vassal within the Persian sphere of influence over the Georgian and Armenian lands.
5th centuryVarsken's apostasyAttracted to the Persian court, Varsken renounced Christianity and adopted the Zoroastrian (Mazdean) fire religion, pledging to bring his household with him.
5th centuryRefusal and confinementSusanna refused her husband's demand that she abandon Christianity. By the synaxarion's account she answered that, as he had renounced his Creator, so she renounced him, and she was thereafter imprisoned for some six years.
c. 475DeathAfter prolonged captivity and ill-treatment she died, traditionally placed at Tsurtavi in 475, and was honored as a martyr.
578Translation of relicsWith the blessing of Catholicos Kirion I, her relics were translated to Tbilisi.
Contributions & Legacy
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Captivity and Witness
According to the account preserved of her life, Susanna spent roughly six years in captivity after refusing to share in her husband's apostasy. The sources relate that during this confinement she continued to aid the poor who came to her.
By tradition the synaxarion further reports that through her prayers the sick were healed and children were granted to the childless during the years of her imprisonment.
Relics & Shrines
In the year 578, with the blessing of Catholicos Kirion I, the holy relics of Susanna were translated to Tbilisi. They are kept, according to the tradition, in the Metekhi Church of the Most Holy Theotokos in the city.
Legacy in Georgian Literature
Susanna's life was recorded by her confessor Iakob (Yakov) of Tsurtavi, a contemporary and participant in the events, who composed The Martyrdom of the Holy Queen Shushanik. This work is regarded as the earliest surviving piece of original Georgian literature, written within a few years of her death.
The text survives in eleven manuscripts, the earliest being a tenth-century codex, and saw its first printed edition in 1882. In 1979 the 1,500th anniversary of her martyrdom was internationally commemorated, and the work has been translated into several European languages. Beyond the Georgian Church she is also venerated within the Armenian tradition.