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Orthodox Georgians bid final farewell to longstanding patriarch

By Thomson Reuters Mar 22, 2026 | 10:32 AM

By Lucy Papachristou

TBILISI, March 22 (Reuters) – Large crowds of Orthodox Christians gathered in the centre of the Georgian capital ​on Sunday to mourn Ilia ‌II, the spiritual leader who led the church through nearly half a century of Georgia’s often tumultuous history.

Ilia II, born Irakli Ghudushauri-Shiolashvili, died on ‌Tuesday ​in hospital aged 93, having ⁠served as patriarch ⁠in the overwhelmingly Orthodox country for 49 years.

“He was a friend, he was a father, he was a leader,” said ​mourner Nino Kajaia. “This is the end of an era.”

Georgians of all ages, some ⁠holding flowers and candles, ⁠gathered along the Tbilisi river ​embankment to bid farewell as Ilia II’s funeral ​cortege made its way to the Sioni ‌Cathedral, where the patriarch was laid to rest.

Many wept and clapped as the car bearing his coffin drove by, shouting “I ⁠love you, patriarch!”

Georgia adopted Christianity as its state religion in the early fourth century, and remains ⁠deeply religious ‌to this day.

Ilia II became ⁠patriarch in 1977 and led ​the ‌church through the Soviet period and ​the ⁠civil wars of the 1990s.

“We lost a man who, over the course of 49 years, managed to unite the nation,” said Giga Tutberidze, a doctor.

(Reporting by Lucy PapachristouEditing by ​Christina Fincher)