Prefatory Remarks, by Valesius,
Chapter IX.— Constantine enacts a Law in favor of Celibates and of the Clergy .
Chapter X.— Concerning the Great Confessors who survived .
Chapter XI.— Account of St. Spyridon: His Modesty and Steadfastness .
Chapter XII.— On the Organization of the Monks: its Origin and Founders .
Chapter XIII.— About Antony the Great and St. Paul the Simple .
Chapter XIV.— Account of St. Ammon and Eutychius of Olympus .
Chapter XVII.— Of the Council convened at Nicæa on Account of Arius .
Chapter XIX.— When the Council was assembled, the Emperor delivered a Public Address.
Chapter IV.— What Constantine the Great effected about the Oak in Mamre he also built a Temple .
Chapter VII.— How the Iberians received the Faith of Christ .
Chapter VIII.— How the Armenians and Persians embraced Christianity .
Chapter X.— Christians slain by Sapor in Persia .
Chapter XI.— Pusices, Superintendent of the Artisans of Sapor .
Chapter XII.— Tarbula, the Sister of Symeon, and her Martyrdom .
Chapter XIII.— Martyrdom of St. Acepsimas and of his Companions .
Chapter XV.— Constantine writes to Sapor to stay the Persecution of the Christians .
Chapter XX.— Concerning Maximus, who succeeded Macarius in the See of Jerusalem .
Chapter XXII.— The Vain Machinations of the Arians and Melitians against St. Athanasius .
Chapter XXIII.— Calumny respecting St. Athanasius and the Hand of Arsenius .
Chapter XXV.— Council of Tyre Illegal Deposition of St. Athanasius .
Chapter XXX.— Account given by the Great Athanasius of the Death of Arius .
Chapter XXXIII.— Marcellus Bishop of Ancyra his Heresy and Deposition .
Chapter III.— Paul, Bishop of Constantinople, and Macedonius, the Pneumatomachian .
Chapter IV.— A Sedition was excited on the Ordination of Paul .
Chapter XV.— Didymus the Blind, and Aëtius the Heretic .
Chapter XVI.— Concerning St. Ephraim .
Chapter XXI.— Letter of Constantius to the Egyptians in behalf of Athanasius. Synod of Jerusalem .
Chapter XXII.— Epistle written by the Synod of Jerusalem in Favor of Athanasius .
Chapter III.— Martyrdom of the Holy Notaries .
Chapter IX.— Council of Milan. Flight of Athanasius .
Chapter XIV.— Letter of the Emperor Constantius against Eudoxius and his Partisans .
Chapter XVII.— Proceedings of the Council of Ariminum .
Chapter XVIII.— Letter from the Council at Ariminum to the Emperor Constantius .
Chapter XXII.— Council of Seleucia .
Chapter II.— The Life, Education, and Training of Julian, and his Accession to the Empire .
Chapter IX.— Martyrdom of the Saints Eusebius, Nestabus, and Zeno in the City of Gaza .
Chapter XIV.— The Partisans of Macedonius disputed with the Arians concerning Acacius .
Chapter III.— The Reign of Jovian he introduced Many Laws which he carried out in his Government .
Chapter VIII.— Election of Nectarius to the See of Constantinople his Birthplace and Education .
Chapter IX.— Decrees of the Second General Council. Maximus, the Cynical Philosopher .
Chapter XXI.— Discovery of the Honored Head of the Forerunner of our Lord, and the Events about it .
Chapter XXIV.— Victory of Theodosius the Emperor over Eugenius .
Chapter XXVI.— St. Donatus, Bishop of Eurœa, and Theotimus, High-Priest of Scythia .
Chapter XXVII.— St. Epiphanius, Bishop of Cyprus, and a Particular Account of his Acts .
Chapter IV.— Enterprise of Gaïnas, the Gothic Barbarian. Evils which he perpetrated .
Chapter II.— Discovery of the Relics of Forty Holy Martyrs .
Chapter III.— The Virtues of Pulcheria Her Sisters .
Chapter IV.— Truce with Persia. Honorius and Stilicho. Transactions in Rome and Dalmatia .
Chapter VI.— Alaric the Goth. He assaulted Rome, and straitened it by War .
Chapter X.— A Roman Lady who manifested a Deed of Modesty .
Chapter XVII.— Discovery of the Relics of Zechariah the Prophet, and of Stephen the Proto-Martyr .
Chapter XXXV.— The Wooden Tripod and the Succession of the Emperor, through a Knowledge of its Letters. Destruction of the Philosophers; Astronomy .
Such is the information which I have been enabled to collect concerning the ecclesiastical philosophers of that time. As to
the pagans, they were nearly all exterminated about the period to which we have been referring.
82
Philost. ix. 15; Eunap. Fragm. ii. 32, 33; Am. Marcel. xxix. 1. 29–44; Zos. iv.
13; Soc. iv. 19.
Some among them, who were reputed to excel in philosophy, and who viewed with extreme displeasure the progress of the Christian
religion, were devising who would be the successor of Valens on the throne of the Roman Empire, and resorted to every variety
of mantic art for the purpose of attaining this insight into futurity. After various incantations, they constructed a tripod
of laurel wood, and they wound up with the invocations and words to which they are accustomed; so that the name of the emperor
might be shown by the collection of letters which were indicated, letter by letter, through the machinery of the tripod and
the prophecy. They were gaping with open mouth for Theodore, a man who held a distinguished military appointment in the palace.
He was a pagan and a learned man. The disposition of the letters, coming as far as the delta of his name, deceived the philosophers.
They hence expected that Theodore would very soon be the emperor. When their undertaking was informed upon, Valens was as
unbearably incensed, as if a conspiracy had been formed against his safety. Therefore all were arrested; Theodore and the
constructors of the tripod were commanded to be put to death, some with fire, others with the sword. Likewise for the same
reason the most brilliant philosophers of the empire were slain; since the wrath of the emperor was unchecked, the death penalty
advanced even to those who were not philosophers, but who wore garments similar to theirs; hence those who applied themselves
to other pursuits would not clothe themselves with the crocotium or tribonium, on account of the suspicion and fear of danger,
so that they might not seem to be pursuing magic and sorcery. I do not in the least think that the emperor will be more blamed
by right-thinking people for such wrath and cruelty than the philosophers, for their rashness and their unphilosophical undertaking.
The emperor, absurdly supposing that he could put his successor to death, spared neither those who had prophesied nor the
subject of their prophecy, as they say he did not spare those who bore the same name of Theodore,—and some were men of distinction,—whether
they were precisely the same or similar in beginning with θ and ending with δ. The philosophers, on the other hand, acted
as if the deposition and restoration of emperors had depended solely on them; for if the imperial succession was to be considered
dependent on the arrangement of the stars, what was requisite but to await the accession of the future emperor, whoever he
might be? or if the succession was regarded as dependent on the will of God, what right had man to meddle? For it is not the
function of human foreknowledge or zeal to understand God’s thought; nor if it were right, would it be well for men, even
if they be the wisest of all, to think that they can plan better than God. If it were merely from rash curiosity to discern
the things of futurity that they showed such lack of judgment as to be ready to be caught in danger, and to despise the laws
anciently established among the Romans, and at a time when it was not dangerous to conduct pagan worship and to sacrifice;
in this they thought differently from Socrates; for when unjustly condemned to drink poison, he refused to save himself by
violating the laws in which he had been born and educated, nor would he escape from prison, although it was in his power to
do so.