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The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity


from its origins to circa AD 700, across the entire Christian world


Palladius of Helenopolis, in his Lausiac History (17), recounts the story of *Makarios the Egyptian (monastic founder in the Sketis, Lower Egypt, ob. 391, S00863), including miracles of exorcism and the possible raising of a dead person. Written in Greek at Aspuna or Ankyra (both Galatia, central Asia Minor), 419/420.

Evidence ID

E03318

Type of Evidence

Literary - Hagiographical - Monastic collections (apophthegmata, etc.)

Major author/Major anonymous work

Palladius of Helenopolis

Palladius of Helenopolis, Lausiac History (BHG 1435-1438v; CPG 6036), 17

Summary:

17. Makarios joined the desert at the age of thirty and spent there sixty years. Palladius heard stories about him from others, because he had died one year before the author's arrival at Nitria (i.e. in 391). Among other things, he healed a woman who was transformed into a horse by a magician. People say that he had raised a dead person, in order to convince a heretic of the resurrection of the dead. He also healed a young man possessed by a demon who caused everything he ate and drank to be evaporated.


Text: Bartelink et al. 1974.
Summary: E. Rizos.

Non Liturgical Activity

Oral transmission of saint-related stories
Composing and translating saint-related texts
Transmission, copying and reading saint-related texts
Visiting/veneration of living saint

Miracles

Miracle during lifetime
Punishing miracle
Power over life and death
Changing abilities and properties of the body
Exorcism

Protagonists in Cult and Narratives

Women
Ecclesiastics - monks/nuns/hermits
Animals
Heretics

Source

Born in 364 in Galatia in central Asia Minor, Palladius became a monk in 386, spending some years in Palestine, before moving to Alexandria. In c. 390, he joined the monastic community of Nitria, where he spent nine years, under Makarios of Alexandria and Evagrios of Pontus. In c. 399, he returned briefly to Palestine and then left for Constantinople where he became closely associated with John Chrysostom. By 400, he was ordained bishop of Helenopolis in Bithynia (north-west Asia Minor), probably by Chrysostom. Palladius stood by his new protector throughout John’s conflict with Pope Theophilos of Alexandria over the affair of the Tall Brothers and the Council of the Oak. One year after John’s exile in 404, Palladius visited Rome in order to plead on John’s behalf with Pope Innocent I (401-411). Returning to Constantinople, he was arrested and one year later (406), he was exiled to Syene (Aswan) and Antinoe in Egypt. There he received the news of John’s death in Pontus (407) and wrote the Historical Dialogue on the Life of John Chrysostom (in 408 or shortly after, E02400). In the 410s, he was allowed to return to his native Galatia, and was restored as a bishop in the imperial church, being appointed to the see of Aspona.

After his return from exile, in c. 419/420, Palladius published the
Lausiakon (‘Book for Lausos’, widely known as the Lausiac History), a book commissioned by and dedicated to the patrician Lausos (imperial chamberlain in 420-422). Along with the History of the Monks of Egypt (E03558, composed in 395/397), Palladius’ work inaugurates the monastic genre of edifying stories and apophthegms. It immediately became a success: two decades after its publication, the ecclesiastical historian Socrates used the Lausiac History as a source (4.23.78), and it was translated into Latin and Syriac. There are also Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopic, and Arabic translations. Its copious manuscript tradition (242 manuscripts) and unstable transmission render a definitive critical edition of the text very difficult. On the manuscript tradition of the Greek text, see:

http://pinakes.irht.cnrs.fr/notices/oeuvre/6840/

Like all monastic collections, the
Lausiac History was mainly written to provide exemplars of ascetic virtue and edifying stories for broader spiritual benefit, rather than to encourage the active cult of the men and women included within it – indeed some of them serve as negative examples to avoid. It was, therefore, difficult for us to decide how to treat this work in our database, focused as it is on the cult of saints. At one extreme, we could have entered every (positive) figure within it as a saint, while, at the other extreme, we might have ignored the text altogether. In the end we came to a compromise position, with one overview entry for the full text (E03176), where all the holy men and women are named, and individual entries for chapters that either reveal interesting incidental details of saintly cult or cover major figures who, in time, came to attract cult. The Lausiac History in its many manuscripts and its many translations was in fact one of the principal ways these figures came to be known, and often venerated, across the Christian world. Some of its chapters were, indeed, later detached from the collection, and circulated as independent pieces of hagiography.

Discussion

Makarios was revered as one of the founding fathers of the monastic communities of the Sketis. Traditions about him, including some of the miracles recounted by Palladius, are also recorded in the History of the Monks in Egypt, the author of which heard Makarios' stories during his visit to the Sketis in 394/5 (E03558). It is possible that Palladius knew the author of the History of the Monks personally and that they met in Egypt.

Bibliography

Text:
Butler, Cuthbert. The Lausiac History of Palladius: Greek Text Edited with Introduction and Notes. Texts and Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1904.

Bartelink, G. J. M., Barchiesi, M. and Mohrmann, C.
Palladio, La Storia Lausiaca. Scrittori Greci E Latini. Milano: Fondazione Lorenzo Valla, Arnoldo Mondadori, 1974. (with Italian translation)

English Translations:
Wortley, J. Palladius, the Lausiac History, Collegeville, MN: Cistercian Publications, 2015.

Meyer, R. T.
Palladius, the Lausiac History, Westminster MD: Newman Press: 1965.

Lowtber Clarke, W. K. The Lausiac History of Palladius, London: Macmillan, 1918.

Further reading:
Katos, D. Palladius of Helenopolis: the Origenist Advocate. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.

Rapp, C. ‘Palladius, Lausus and the Historia Lausiaca.’ In C. Sode, S. Takács (eds.),
Novum Millennium. Studies on Byzantine History and Culture Dedicated to Paul Speck, 19 December 1999, Aldershot: Ashgate, 279-289.


Record Created By

Efthymios Rizos

Date of Entry

28/07/2017

Related Saint Records
IDNameName in SourceIdentity
S00863Makarios 'the Egyptian', monastic founder in the Sketis, ob. 391ΜακάριοςCertain


Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL:
Efthymios Rizos, Cult of Saints, E03318 - http://csla.history.ox.ac.uk/record.php?recid=E03318