Mtskheta

Ancient capital of Georgia and home of the Robe of Christ

Eastern Orthodox

Why this destination matters

Mtskheta was the ancient capital of Georgia and the place where, in 326/337 AD, the country adopted Christianity through the preaching of Saint Nino of Cappadocia (Equal to the Apostles) - the second Christian nation in history. The Georgian Orthodox Church is Chalcedonian autocephalous, distinct from neighbouring Armenian Apostolic. Catholicos-Patriarch Ilia II has led the Church since 1977. UNESCO inscribed the historical monuments of Mtskheta in 1994.

Svetitskhoveli Cathedral ('Living Pillar', 1010-1029) holds the seamless robe of Christ (John 19:23-24) according to ancient tradition - a Mtskhetan Jew named Elias purchased the robe in Jerusalem at the Crucifixion and brought it home; his sister Sidonia died clutching it, a cedar grew from her grave, seven pillars were carved from the tree, and the seventh pillar levitated and dripped myrrh. The cathedral also holds the burial of ten Georgian kings.

Jvari Monastery (590s-605) crowns the hilltop above the confluence of the Kura and Aragvi rivers - the place where Saint Nino raised the wooden cross that converted the kingdom. Samtavro Monastery preserves the tombs of King Mirian III and Queen Nana (the first Christian king and queen of Georgia) and relics of Father Gabriel Urgebadze (canonised 2012; the body is reported incorruptible).

Key sites to visit

Eastern Orthodoxcathedral

Svetitskhoveli Cathedral

1010-1029. Holds the burial place of the Robe of Christ (John 19:23-24). Royal pantheon of ten Georgian kings.

Eastern Orthodoxmonastery

Jvari Monastery

590s-605. Hilltop above the confluence of the Kura and Aragvi - the place where Saint Nino raised the wooden cross.

Eastern Orthodoxmonastery

Samtavro Monastery

Tombs of King Mirian III and Queen Nana (the first Christian Georgian monarchs); relics of Saint Gabriel Urgebadze (canonised 2012, incorruptible).

Eastern Orthodoxmonastery

Shio-Mgvime Monastery

6th-century cave monastery 10 km from Mtskheta, founded by Saint Shio.

Best time to visit

May-June and September-October. 14 October is Mtskhetoba / Svetitskhovloba, one of the great Georgian pilgrimage days.

Key feast days

  • 14 October - Mtskhetoba / Svetitskhovloba (feast of the Robe of Christ)
  • 27 January - Saint Nino
  • 2 November - Saint Gabriel Urgebadze

How to get there

Tbilisi (TBS) airport 35 km. Marshrutka from Didube bus station Tbilisi to Mtskheta (~25 minutes). Most pilgrims take a private half-day or full-day tour combining Mtskheta with Jvari.

Where to stay

Several small guesthouses in Mtskheta itself for atmosphere. Most pilgrims base in Tbilisi.

Tours and experiences

Half-day Tbilisi tours combine Jvari, Svetitskhoveli and Samtavro. Full day adds Shio-Mgvime and an Uplistsikhe cave town extension.

Practical information

Hours
Cathedral 08:00-20:00. Jvari sunrise-sunset.
Fees
All sites free.
Dress code
Women cover heads and wear skirts (wraps provided at major sites). Long trousers for men.
Accessibility
Cathedral largely accessible. Jvari involves a hilltop drive plus a short walk.

Pilgrim tips

💡 Practical advice for pilgrims

  • Mtskheta (the ancient capital of Georgia and Georgia's principal Christian pilgrimage site) is 20 km north of Tbilisi — 30 minutes by taxi or marshrutka from Didube bus station (~1 GEL = â‚Ŧ0.35).
  • The two pilgrimage focal points are the Svetitskhoveli Cathedral (housing the buried Robe of Christ, John 19:23-24) and Jvari Monastery (the 6th-century cross-shaped church on the hill above the city — visible from the cathedral, one of the great Georgian architectural icons).
  • Mtskhetoba (14 October annually) is Georgia's largest national pilgrimage — tens of thousands gather; the Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia (currently Ilia II, in office since 1977) celebrates the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy at Svetitskhoveli. Book Tbilisi hotels 6 months ahead for the surrounding week.
  • Svetitskhoveli Cathedral is open 09:00-19:00 daily. Sunday Divine Liturgy at 09:00 — an extraordinary experience for any Christian pilgrim. Dress code strictly enforced (women head covering, long skirt or trousers, men long trousers).
  • The Samtavro Convent (Saint Nino's residence, 800m from the cathedral) holds the tomb of Saint Nino. Founded by Saint Nino herself in the 4th century — one of the oldest continuously functioning convents in Christianity.
  • Combine Mtskheta with the Jvari Monastery and the Shio-Mghvime Monastery (12 km north) in a full day from Tbilisi. The Shio-Mghvime cave monastery is one of the great medieval Georgian monastic centres.

Did you know?

â„šī¸ Fascinating facts

  • Saint Nino (c. 296-340 AD), the apostle of Georgia, converted King Mirian III and the Georgian kingdom to Christianity in c. 326-337 AD. Georgia is consequently the second Christian state in history (after Armenia 301). The Georgian Orthodox Church canonised her as 'Equal to the Apostles'.
  • Svetitskhoveli Cathedral ('Living Pillar' Cathedral) is built over the buried tunic of Christ — the seamless robe (John 19:23-24) which a Georgian Jew named Elias is said to have brought back from Jerusalem after the Crucifixion in 33 AD. The current 11th-century structure is the third cathedral built on the site; tradition holds the Robe is in the foundations.
  • The 'Living Pillar' tradition: when the first wooden cathedral was being built, a miraculous pillar refused to be raised by human strength. Saint Nino prayed and the pillar rose, emitting a healing oil. The original wooden pillar is encased within the present 11th-century stone column at the centre of the cathedral.
  • Georgia's Orthodox Christianity is Chalcedonian autocephalous — distinct from the Armenian Apostolic (which is Oriental Orthodox, non-Chalcedonian) despite the geographic adjacency. Georgian Orthodox is in eucharistic communion with the Greek, Russian and Constantinople patriarchates; Armenian Apostolic is not.
  • Mtskheta is a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1994. The 'Historic Monuments of Mtskheta' inscription covers Svetitskhoveli, Jvari and Samtavro — the three principal Christian buildings of the medieval Georgian heartland.

Biblical references

  • John 19:23-24 — “Now the coat was without seam, woven from the top throughout - the seamless robe traditionally preserved at Svetitskhoveli.”

Suggested reading before you go

Title / ReferenceWhy it matters
The Life of Saint Nino (Georgian source, translated)The classic medieval Georgian account of Nino's mission. Read before arrival; the Mtskheta visit becomes the geography of the Nino narrative.
John 19:23-24The seamless Robe passage. Read at Svetitskhoveli with the cathedral pillar in view.
Georgia: A Sovereign Country of the Caucasus (Roger Rosen)Cultural history and travel companion. Strong on the Christian sites and the medieval Georgian Golden Age (David IV the Builder, Queen Tamar).

Nearby destinations to combine

Vardzia

Cave monastery of Queen Tamar

Gelati

Apex of the Georgian Golden Age and royal pantheon of David the Builder

Etchmiadzin

World's oldest cathedral and Mother See of the Armenian Apostolic Church

Featured on these routes

Frequently asked questions

Tradition, preserved since at least the 4th century, holds that a Mtskhetan Jew named Elias purchased the robe in Jerusalem at the Crucifixion and brought it home. His sister Sidonia died clutching it and was buried with it under what is now Svetitskhoveli Cathedral. The robe itself has never been disinterred; the burial spot is marked inside the cathedral.

It means 'Living Pillar', commemorating the tradition that a cedar grew from Sidonia's grave; seven pillars were carved from the tree to support the first church, and the seventh pillar levitated and dripped myrrh - the 'Living Pillar'.

A Cappadocian Greek nun (c. 296-338/340) who evangelised Georgia and converted King Mirian III in 326 or 337 AD, making Georgia the second Christian nation. Her cross of woven vine is preserved at Sioni Cathedral, Tbilisi.

Both are Chalcedonian Eastern Orthodox and are in eucharistic communion. The Georgian Orthodox Church is autocephalous (self-governing), older than the Russian Church, and uses Georgian rather than Church Slavonic liturgy.

14 October. Svetitskhoveli is the focal point of huge pilgrim crowds; the Patriarch celebrates the Divine Liturgy and the cathedral square is filled all day.

Yes - Svetitskhoveli Cathedral celebrates the Divine Liturgy each Sunday in Georgian. Visitors of all denominations are welcome to stand and pray. Women must cover heads; modest dress required.

Names in other languages

GeorgianMtskheta
RussianMtskheta
GreekMtschita
GermanMzcheta
FrenchMtskheta
ArmenianMtskheta