The Life of George the Hagiorite
George the Lesser's chief work is the Life (Vita) of George the Hagiorite, written after his master's repose. Sources date its composition to 1066, the year following George the Hagiorite's death in 1065. The work follows the hagiographic pattern established by George the Hagiorite himself, who had earlier compiled the Life of John and Euthymius, the Georgian founders of the Iviron monastery.
The biography preserves the memory of George the Hagiorite's career: his upbringing in the monastic life, his establishment at Iviron on Mount Athos around 1040, his tenure as hegumen of the monastery from 1044, and his translation of the Scriptures, the service books, and the writings of the Church Fathers into Georgian. It also records the saint's final journey, when he set out from Athos with eighty orphans, stopped at Constantinople, and reposed there on the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul. The Life is regarded as an important source for the history of the Georgian monastic communities within the Byzantine Empire.