Uastyrdzhi (Ossetian: Уастырджи, romanized: Wastyrĝi, pronounced[ˈwɑʃtɨrd͡ʒi])[a] is the name of Saint George in Ossetian folklore.[1] Uastyrdzhi is the patron of the male sex and travellers as well as being a guarantor of oaths, like his Iranian counterpart Mithra (among others such as Verethragna and Fereydun) with whom he shares a common origin.[2] It is forbidden for women to pronounce his name;[3][4] instead, they must refer to him as лӕгты дзуарlӕgty dzuar (literally, "the saint of men").[citation needed]
He is depicted as a horseman with a long beard, riding on a white horse.
A large public ceremony devoted to him is held in early July at Khetag's Grove (Хетæджы къох, Khetӕdzhy k'ox), a wood situated three kilometres outside of Alagir, near Suadag village.[5]
According to legend, Khetag (Хетаг) was the son of an Alanian king who consecrated the grove to Uastyrdzhi. Another important ceremony in honour of Uastyrdzhi is held beside a shrine called Rekom in the Tsey Valley in mid-June.
The festival of Dzhiorguba (Джиоргуыба) is celebrated in Uastyrdzhi's honour in November (and is eponymous of the month's name in Ossetian).[4] It involves the sacrifice of a one-year-old bull. To indicate that the victim belongs to the god, its right horn is cut off long before, forbidding any herdsman to swear on it.[6]
^Foltz, Richard (2019). "Scythian Neo-Paganism in the Caucasus: The Ossetian Uatsdin as a 'Nature Religion'" Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture". Vol. 13, no. 3. pp. 314–332.
^ abLora Arys-Djanaïéva (2004). Parlons ossète [Let's speak Ossetian] (in French and Ossetic). Harmattan. p. 163.
^Konstantin Pavlovich Popov (1995). Священная роща Хетага [The sacred grove of Khetag]. Monuments of the Fatherland [Памятники Отечества] (in Russian). Vladikavkaz: Ministry of Environmental and Natural Resources of the Republic of North Ossetia–Alania.