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| The New Martyr Saint George of Ioannina and his martyrdom, a popular icon of the 19th century, Benaki Museum |
By Archimandrite Michael Stathakis
“1838: January: 17: a certain young man in Ioannina, named George, was slandered by the Turks of Ioannina that he had changed his religion and become a Turk. They brought him before the Kadi and before the Vizier Mustafa Pasha, examined him, and tortured him greatly. In the end he was not persuaded to become a Turk; he stood firm and did not change his Christianity. They hanged him at Kouramargio, and he remained hanging for two days. They then took him down and buried him at the Metropolis on January 19, and he became a martyr and works miracles for those who approach with faith. This is most true. The Saint had a wife and a child fifteen days old, who are alive in Ioannina.”
Thus simply — very simply — a monk of the Sacred Monastery of Panagia Eleousa on the island of Ioannina describes, on a page of the Great Horologion, the martyrdom of Saint George the New Martyr of Ioannina. He recounts the events as simply as George’s own life was simple. A young man, only twenty-eight years old, a horse groomer by profession, he had only recently married his wife Helen and had a son with her, whom he baptized just a few days before his martyric end.








