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The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity


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


Jerome, in his Letter 108, describes how Paula travelled through Palestine in 385-6 and visited the well of *Jacob (Old Testament patriarch, S00280), and the church on the site. Written in Latin in Bethlehem (Palestine), 404.

Evidence ID

E06528

Type of Evidence

Literary - Letters

Major author/Major anonymous work

Jerome of Stridon

Jerome of Stridon, Letter 108.13 ('Epitaphium Sanctae Paulae')

Transiuit Sychem – non, ut plerique errantes legunt, Sichar –, quae nunc Neapolis appellatur, et ex latere montis Garizim extructam circa puteum Iacob intrauit ecclesiam.

'She passed by Shechem (not Sichar, as a great many people spell it), which is now called Neapolis, and she entered the church built on the slope of Mount Gerizim around Jacob's well.'


Text: Hilberg 1996 (1912).
Translation: Cain 2013.

Cult Places

Holy spring/well/river
Cult building - independent (church)

Protagonists in Cult and Narratives

Women

Source

In the second half of 404 Jerome composed an Epitaph for his late friend and patron, Paula, which was transmitted to us as letter 108. The work depicts Paula as an example for ascetic women and bears features of hagiography.

Paula died on 26 January 404 in Bethlehem. She was the descendant of a Roman aristocratic family, who traced their lineage back to the Gracchi and Scipiones. She was dedicated to the western ascetic movement and had spent more than twenty years by the side of Jerome of Stridon, whom she had followed with her daughter Eustochium to the Holy Land in 385, where they founded a monastery and a convent in Bethlehem. Paula was not only Jerome's most faithful companion, but also his biggest sponsor.

Jerome's
Letter 108.8-13 describes Paula's pilgrimage through the Holy Land, which lasted from late winter 385 to late spring 386. It is, however, only a partial account, intended to show off Jerome's knowledge of biblical topography as much as to illustrate Paula's piety. Jerome specifically tells us that, at the beginning of his account of Paula's travels in the Holy Land, that he will only mention the places she visited which feature in the Bible: 'I say nothing of her journey through Syria Coele and Phoenicia, for it is not my intention to write a complete description of her travels; I will mention only those stops mentioned in the sacred books' (Omitto Syriae Coeles et Phoenices iter, neque enim odoeporicum eius disposui scribere; ea tantum loca nominabo quae sacris voluminibus continentur. Ep. 108, 8.1, trans. Cain). It is very possible that Paula also visited the shrines of post-biblical saints (as she had earlier done on Ponza - see E06524), but, if so, these visits were passed over by Jerome.


Discussion

On her trip through Palestine, Paula visited biblical Shechem, close by Neapolis (today Nablus) where a deep well hewn of solid rock can be seen to this day. Traditions associate it with Jacob (Gen. 33:18-20). A cruciform church was build over the site sometime between the visit of the Bordeaux Pilgrim in 333 and Paula's.


Bibliography

Edition:
Hilberg, I., Hieronymus, Epistulae 71-120 (Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum 55; Vienna, 1996).

Translation and commentary:
Cain, A.,
Jerome's Epitaph on Paula: A Commentary on the Epitaphium Sanctae Paulae (Oxford, 2013).

Further reading:
Schenk, H.M., "Jacobsbrunnen, Josephsgrab Sychar: topographische Untersuchungen und Erwägungen in der Perspektive von Joh. 4,5-6," Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins 84 (1968), 159-84.


Record Created By

Philip Polcar

Date of Entry

17/09/2018

Related Saint Records
IDNameName in SourceIdentity
S00280Jacob, Old Testament patriarchIacobCertain


Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL:
Philip Polcar, Cult of Saints, E06528 - http://csla.history.ox.ac.uk/record.php?recid=E06528