Aelia Eudocia
Aelia Eudocia | |
---|---|
Augusta | |
Roman empress | |
Tenure | 421–450 |
Born | Athenais c. 401 Athens |
Died | 20 October 460 (aged 58–59) Jerusalem |
Spouse | Theodosius II |
Issue Detail |
|
Father | Leontius |
Aelia Eudocia Augusta (/ˈiːliə juːˈdoʊʃə ɔːˈɡʌstə/; Ancient Greek: Αιλία Ευδοκία Αυγούστα; c. 401 – 460 AD), also called Saint Eudocia, was an Eastern Roman empress by marriage to Emperor Theodosius II (r. 408–450), and a prominent Greek historical figure in understanding the rise of Christianity during the beginning of the Byzantine Empire. Eudocia lived in a world where Greek paganism and Christianity existed side by side.[1] Although Eudocia's work (including the Homeric centos and an epic poem on the martyrdom of St. Cyprian) has been mostly ignored by modern scholars, her poetry and literary work are great examples of how her Christian faith and Greek heritage and upbringing were intertwined, exemplifying a legacy that the Roman Empire left behind on the Christian world.[2]
Early life
[edit]This article may contain an excessive number of citations. (June 2023) |
Aelia Eudocia was born circa 400 in Athens into a family of Greek descent.[3][4][5][6] Her father, a Greek philosopher named Leontius,[4][5][7] taught rhetoric at the Academy of Athens, where people from all over the Mediterranean came to either teach or learn. Eudocia's first name was Athenais, chosen by her parents in honour of the city's protector, the pagan goddess Pallas Athena.[8] Her father was rich and had a magnificent house on the Acropolis with a large courtyard in which young Athenais frequently played as a child.[8]
When Athenais was 12 years old, her mother died and she became her father's comfort, taking on the responsibilities of household chores, raising her siblings and tending to her father. She had two brothers, Gessius and Valerius, who would later receive honours at court from their sister and brother-in-law. In return for her household activities, her father spent time giving her a thorough training in rhetoric, literature and philosophy. He taught her the Socratic virtue of knowledge of moderation, and predicted that she would have a great destiny.[9] She had a gift for memorization, and easily learned the poetry of Homer and Pindar, which her father would recite to her. Both as a teacher and a role model, he had a great impact on her, prepared her for her destiny and influenced the literary work she created after she became Empress.
When her father died in 420, Athenais was devastated. In his will, he left all his property to her brothers, with only 100 coins reserved for her, saying that "[s]ufficient for her is her destiny, which will be the greatest of any woman."[9] Athenais had been her father's confidante and had expected more than this meager 100-coin inheritance. She begged her brothers, to give her an equal share of their father's property, but they refused.
Shortly after her father's death, at the age of 20, Athenais went to live with her aunt, who advised her to go to Constantinople and "ask for justice from the Emperor", confident she would receive her fair share of her father's wealth.[10] John Malalas later gave a more detailed account of her mother's history.
The historical study Theodosian Empresses: Women and Imperial Dominion in Late Antiquity (1982) by Kenneth Holum, further introduced the suggestion that her father, Leontius, was a native of Antioch rather than Athens, drawing from the "traditional link" between the two cities and their philosophers. The argument is considered doubtful as the building activity of Eudocia in the 420s focused on Athens rather than Antioch.[11] Holum suggests that Eudocia may have been named after the great city of Athens, but she would have been born in Antioch.[12]
Life as an empress
[edit]Marriage
[edit]Legend has it that when Theodosius (b. 401) was 20 years old, he wanted to get married. He talked to his sister Pulcheria, who began to search for a maiden fit for her brother, that was of either "patrician or imperial blood."[13] His longtime childhood friend, Paulinus, also helped Theodosius in his search.[13] The Emperor's search began at the same time that Athenais had arrived in Constantinople. Pulcheria had heard about this young woman, who had only 100 coins to her name, and when she met her, she was "astonished at her beauty and at the intelligence and sophistication with which she presented her grievance."[13] Athenais's aunts assured Pulcheria that she was a virgin and was well educated. Pulcheria reported back to her brother that she had "found a young girl, a Greek maid, very beautiful, pure and dainty, eloquent as well, the daughter of a philosopher", and young Theodosius, who was full of desire, fell in love instantly.[13]
Athenais had been raised pagan, and upon her marriage to Theodosius II converted to Christianity and was renamed Eudocia.[14] They were married on 7 June 421, and there were "reports that Theodosius celebrated his wedding with chariot races in the hippodrome".[15] Her brothers, who had rejected her after their father's death, fled since they were fearful of the punishment they thought they were going to receive when they learned that she became empress.[16] Eudocia instead called them to Constantinople, and Theodosius rewarded them.[16] The emperor made Gessius praetorian prefect of Illyricum and made Valerius magister officiorum.[16] Both Gessius and Valerius were rewarded because Eudocia believed that their mistreatment of her was part of her destiny.[16] Theodosius also honoured his best friend, Paulinus, with the title of magister officiorum, for he had helped find his wife.[16]
This rags-to-riches story, though it claims to be authentic and is accepted among historians, leads one to believe that the tale may have been twisted due to the detail of how the romance was portrayed. The earliest version of this story appeared more than a century after Eudocia's death in the "World Chronicle" of John Malalas, "an author who did not always distinguish between authentic history and a popular memory of events infused with folk-tale motifs".[17] The facts are that she was the daughter of Leontius and she did originally have the name Athenais, according to the contemporary historians Socrates of Constantinople, and Priscus of Panion; however, they leave out any mention of Pulcheria's role in playing match-maker for her brother.[15] The historians Sozomen and Theodoret did not include Eudocia in their respective historical works, perhaps because they wrote after 443 when Eudocia had fallen into disgrace.[17]
Eudocia also built the original Church of St. Polyeuctus in Constantinople, which her great-granddaughter Anicia Juliana greatly expanded and furnished in the 6th century.
Children
[edit]Eudocia had three children with Theodosius II.[18][19] Licinia Eudoxia, born in 422, was the oldest. Licinia Eudoxia had been betrothed since her birth to her cousin, the Western Roman emperor Valentinian III, whom she married on 29 October 437.[20] The second child, Flaccilla, died in 431.[18] Arcadius was the only son and died in infancy. Only a year after she gave birth to her first child, Eudocia was proclaimed Augusta by her husband on 2 January 423.[21]
Eudocia also was the guardian for the Georgian prince Nabarnugios who had been sent as a hostage to the Byzantine court. Nabarnugious, who would become known as Peter the Iberian, would later decide to became an ascetic and flee to Jerusalem with his friend John the Eunuch.[22]
Pilgrimage to Jerusalem (438–439)
[edit]After being named Augusta, her relationship to her sister-in-law, Pulcheria, worsened. Eudocia was jealous over the amount of power Pulcheria had within the court, while Pulcheria was jealous of the power Eudocia could claim from her. Their relationship created a "pious atmosphere" in the imperial court, and probably explains why Eudocia travelled to the Holy Land in 438.[23] Eudocia went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 438, bringing back with her holy relics to prove her faith.[18] Her relationship with her husband had deteriorated, and with much pleading from Melania the Younger, a wealthy widow from Palestine and good friend of Eudocia, Theodosius allowed her to go.[24]
Blending Christianity with classical culture
[edit]While on her pilgrimage to Jerusalem in spring of 438, Eudocia stopped in Antioch, and during her stay she addressed the senate of that city in Hellenic style (i.e., an encomium cast in Homeric hexameters) and distributed funds for the repair of its buildings.[5][25] She was very conscious of her Greek heritage, as demonstrated in her famous address to the citizens of Antioch where she quoted a famous line by Homer: "ὑμετέρης γενεής τε καὶ αἵματος εὔχομαι εἶναι" ("Of your proud line and blood I claim to be").[5][25][26][27] These last words of Eudocia's oration brought loud acclaim from the listeners, which resulted in the citizens of Antioch celebrating the Empress Eudocia's Christian Hellenism and commemorating her by erecting a golden statue of her in the curia and a bronze statue in the museum.[26][27][28]
Eudocia convinced her husband to "extend the walls of Antioch to take in a large suburb".[12] Furthermore, she also influenced state policy towards pagans and Jews under her husband's reign, and used the powerful influence she had to protect them from persecution.[12] Eudocia also advocated for "reorganization and expansion" of education in Constantinople.[29] Eudocia had been raised and educated in traditional and classical sophist education from Athens, but her goal was to blend classical pagan education with Christianity. This was her way of using her power as empress to honour teachers and education, something that was very important to her in her life.[citation needed]
Banishment
[edit]On her arrival from Jerusalem, her position was allegedly undermined by the jealousy of Pulcheria and the suspicion of an affair with Paulinus, the master of the offices.[30]
Around 443, Eudocia left the palace for reasons that cannot be fully ascertained. One rumor has it that Eudocia was banished from the court towards the latter part of her life for adultery. Theodosius suspected that she was having an affair with his long-time childhood friend and court advisor, Paulinus.[18] According to Malalas's account of this story, Theodosius II had given Eudocia a very large Phrygian apple as a gift. One day Paulinus had shown the emperor the same apple, not knowing that the emperor had given it to Eudocia as a gift. Theodosius recognized the apple and confronted Eudocia who had sworn she had eaten it. Eudocia's denials made the emperor believe that she had fallen in love with Paulinus and was having an affair, and had given his best friend the same apple he had given to her as a symbol of his love. Theodosius had Paulinus executed and Eudocia, embarrassed, decided to leave the court in 443.[25]
On the other hand, Marcellinus' version suggests intrigues of Theodosius and Eudocia against each other: on Theodosius' orders, comes domesticorum Saturninus killed two allies of the empress, and in revenge, she went on to have Saturninus assassinated. Theodosius subsequently deprived Eudocia of her royal attendants, prompting her to leave the palace.[31] Whatever the cause of her departure may be, she still retained her wealth and the title Augusta.
In Jerusalem (443–460)
[edit]Eudocia returned to Jerusalem in circa 443, where she lived for the last part of her life. In Jerusalem she focused on her writing. She nevertheless retained great influence. She also rekindled her relation with her former ward Peter the Iberian as well as with Melania the Younger, a famous ascetic.[32] Although involved in the revolt of the Syriac Monophysites (453), she was ultimately reconciled to Pulcheria and readmitted into the Eastern Orthodox Church.[citation needed] She died an Orthodox Christian in Jerusalem on 20 October 460,[3][better source needed] having devoted her last years to literature.[30] She was buried in Jerusalem in the Church of Saint Stephen,[33] one of the churches she had herself built in Jerusalem;[34] modern St. Stephen's Basilica now stands at the site. The empress never returned to the imperial court in Constantinople, but "she maintained her imperial dignity and engaged in substantial euergetistic programs."[35]
Literary work
[edit]Soon after her accession as an empress, Eudocia wrote a hexameter poem eulogizing the Roman performance in the Persian wars of 421–22. The work is now lost. While Eudocia could have written a lot of literature after leaving the court, only some of her work survived. Eudocia "wrote in hexameters, which is the verse of epic poetry, on Christian themes".[18] She wrote a poem entitled The Martyrdom of St. Cyprian in three books, of which 900 lines survived, and an inscription of a poem on the baths at Hamat Gader.[18] Her most studied piece of literature is her Homeric cento, which has been analyzed recently by a few modern scholars, such as Mark Usher and Brian Sowers. Eudocia is an understudied poet and has been neglected due to "lack of complete and authoritative text".[36]
Martyrdom of St. Cyprian
[edit]There are three books (or volumes) to this epic poem, which tells the story of how "Justa, the Christian virgin, defeated the magician Cyprian through her faith in God. Cyprian had been hired by Aglaidas to force Justa to love him. It ends with the conversion of Cyprian, his swift rise to the rank of Bishop, and Justa becoming a deaconess, with the new name, Justina."[37] She later became known as Justina of Antioch. This story is all fiction, although the parallels between Eudocia's character Justa and Eudocia herself are interesting, as both of them converted to Christianity and changed their names upon succeeding to power. Although some of the text has been lost, most of it has been paraphrased by Photius. The poem is very long despite not all of it surviving the centuries, and can be found in Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome (2004) edited by Michael Ian Plant. Homer (particularly the Odyssey) is a pivotal linguistic and thematic model for the poem.[38]
The Hamat Gader poem
[edit]The poem inscribed on the baths at Hamat Gader was very short, and can be included here, as evidence of her hexameter writing style. The poem was inscribed so visitors could read it as they went into the pool.
I have seen many wonders in my life, countless,
But who, noble Clibanus, however many his mouths, could proclaim
Your might, when born a worthless mortal? But rather
It is right for you to be called a new fiery ocean,
Paean and parent, provider of sweet streams.
From you the thousandfold swell is born, one here, one there,
On this side boiling-hot, on that side in turn icy-cold and tepid.
Into fountains four-fold four you pour out your beauty.
Indian and Matrona, Repentius, holy Elijah,
Antoninus the Good, Dewy Galatia, and
Hygieia herself, warm baths both large and small,
Pearl, ancient Clibanus, Indian and other
Matrona, Strong, Nun, and the Patriarch's.
For those in pain your powerful might is always everlasting.
But I will sing of a god, renowned for wisdom
For the benefit of speaking mortals.[39]
The line "Of the Empress Eudocia" flanked by two crosses is set above the poem. This title line was added after the carving of the main inscription, making room for some doubt whether the poem was indeed authored by Eudocia. Clibanus is the name given to the source of the hot water. After praising his qualities and those of his many springs ("the thousandfold swell"), the poem enumerates "four-fold four", thus sixteen different parts of the bath complex, fourteen of which bear a name; these names include Hygieia (the pagan goddess of health), a whole range of pagan personal names, "holy Elijah" referring to the prophet, and two refer to Christians – a nun and a patriarch.[40]
Homeric centos
[edit]The Homeric centos that Eudocia composed are her most popular poems, as well as those most analyzed by modern scholars, because Homer was a popular choice on which to write a cento. Eudocia's centos are the longest Homeric centos, and consist of 2,344 lines.[37] These centos are a clear representation of who Eudocia was, and what she believed in—an epic poem combining her Athenian classical educational background, but adding stories from the book of Genesis and the New Testament stories of the life of Jesus Christ. The most extensive surviving portion of Eudocia's work is 2354 lines about Adam and Eve, based upon an incomplete poem by a man named Patricius.[6]
Mark Usher analyzed this poem as a way to understand why Eudocia chose to use Homeric themes as a means to express her biblical interpretations. According to Usher, Eudocia needed to convey human experience relating to the Bible. She used themes from the Iliad and Odyssey because "they contained all Eudocia needed to tell the Gospel story. Whenever and wherever Eudocia needed to express greatness, pain, truthfulness, deceit, beauty, suffering, mourning, recognition, understanding, fear, or astonishment, there was an apt Homeric line or passage ready in her memory to be recalled."[41] Eudocia's Homeric poetry is essential to understanding her as a Christian woman in the Eastern Roman Empire, and understanding her role as empress. Her classical educational background is clearly seen in her poetry, which captures her literary talent, as exemplified by her potential use of acrostics.[42] She made a point to connect her background love for studying classical Greek literature to her Christian beliefs.
Legacy
[edit]Eudocia is regarded as a saint. Her feast day is 13 August.
The plot of Antonio Vivaldi's opera Atenaide is based on the courtship and marriage of Eudocia and Theodosius.
Eudocia is a featured figure on Judy Chicago's installation piece The Dinner Party, being represented as one of the 999 names on the Heritage Floor, associated with the place setting for Theodora (wife of Justinian I).[43][44]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Wagner 1967, pp. 260ff.
- ^ Sowers 2008, pp. iiiff.
- ^ a b "Eudocia: Byzantine empress". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. 2016.
- ^ a b Cheetham 1981, p. 12: "Meanwhile, at Constantinople, the Emperor Theodosius II, grandson of the great soldier, chose to marry a girl from Athens, famous for her learning and beauty. She was Athenais, daughter of the pagan philosopher Leontius, and the event caused a sensation at the time. It was also symbolic, for Athenais was required, on becoming Empress, to renounce paganism and to assume the less pagan-sounding name of Eudocia, and her conversion was followed by the foundation of a new, Christian university at Constantinople designed expressly to eclipse the Athenian academy. Immensely proud of her Hellenic ancestry and culture, Eudocia dominated her easy-going husband for many years, but when she fell from favour as the result of an affair, or a suspected affair, with one of the Emperor's chief ministers, it was to Jerusalem, and not the Athens of her youth, that she preferred to retire."
- ^ a b c d Cuming & Baker 1972, p. 13: "Eudocia herself, the daughter of a pagan Athenian philosopher, embraced the new faith in a mood of total acceptance. Very conscious of her Hellenic heritage, as her famous address to the citizens of Antioch showed, she turned her poetic gifts to the metaphrasis of the prophecies of Zacharias and Daniel and to the exposition of the legend of St Cyprian of Antioch."
- ^ a b Potter, David. "In Her Own Words: The Life and Works of Aelia Eudocia." Classical Outlook, vol. 97, no. 4, Dec. 2022, pp. 208+.
- ^ Bradbury 2004, "THEODOSIUS II, BYZANTINE EMPEROR (401–50)", p. 91: "Theodosius married Athenais, renamed Eudocia, a Greek philosopher's daughter."
- ^ a b Tsatsos 1977, p. 10.
- ^ a b Tsatsos 1977, p. 11.
- ^ Tsatsos 1977, p. 12.
- ^ Greatrex, Geoffrey (2004). "Aelia Eudocia (Wife of Theodosius II) [Note #1]". An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors. University of Ottawa.
- ^ a b c Holum 1982, p. 118.
- ^ a b c d Holum 1982, pp. 112–114.
- ^ Greatrex, Geoffrey (2004). "Aelia Eudocia (Wife of Theodosius II)". An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors. University of Ottawa.
- ^ a b Holum 1982, p. 115.
- ^ a b c d e Holum 1982, p. 113.
- ^ a b Holum 1982, p. 114.
- ^ a b c d e f Plant 2004, p. 198.
- ^ Harries 2013, p. 88 (Footnote #87): "Of Theodosius' three children by Eudocia, Flaccilla and Arcadius (if he existed) both died young and only Licinia Eudoxia, wife of Valentinian III, reached adulthood; see Alan Cameron 1982: 266–267."
- ^ Holum 1982, p. 183.
- ^ Holum 1982, p. 123.
- ^ Bitton-Ashkelony & Kofsky 2006, p. 48.
- ^ Cameron 2012, p. 18.
- ^ Holum 1982, p. 184.
- ^ a b c Holum 1982, p. 117.
- ^ a b Hunt 1982, pp. 229–300: "As the empress on a 'state visit', Eudocia contributed to building improvements in Antioch, and her stay there, obviously a famous event in the city's annals, was commemorated in a bronze statue. In a formal speech to the citizens in praise of Antioch she struck a welcome chord by referring to their Greek ancestry, which she proudly shared with them—a theme which was capped by a concluding verse adaptation of Homer."
- ^ a b Bury 2008, pp. 131–132: "The journey of Eudocia to Jerusalem (in spring 438) was marked by her visit to Antioch, where she created a great effect by the elegant Greek oration which she delivered, posing rather as one trained in Greek rhetoric and animated with Hellenic traditions and proud of her Athenian descent, than as a pilgrim to the great Christian shrine The last words of Eudocia's oration brought down the house—a quotation from Homer, ὑμετέρης γενεής τε καὶ αἵματος εὔχομαι εἶναι, "I boast I am of your race and blood." The city that hated and mocked the Emperor Julian and his pagan Hellenism loved and feted the Empress Eudocia with her christian Hellenism, a golden statue was erected to her in the curia and one of bronze in the museum."
- ^ Sowers 2008, p. 16.
- ^ Holum 1982, p. 124.
- ^ a b public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Eudocia Augusta". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 881. This cites:
- W. Wiegand, Eudokia (Worms, 1871)
- Ferdinand Gregorovius, Athenais (Leipzig, 1892)
- Charles Diehl, Figures Byzantines (Paris, 1906), pp. 25–49
- Theodosius.
- On her works cf. Arthur Ludwich, Eudociae Augustae carminum reliquiae (Königsberg, 1893).
- ^ "Roman Emperors - DIR Aelia Eudocia".
- ^ Bitton-Ashkelony & Kofsky 2006, p. 50.
- ^ Greatrex, Geoffrey (2004). "Aelia Eudocia (Wife of Theodosius II) [Note #17]". An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors. University of Ottawa.
- ^ Bar-Am, Aviva (14 September 2009). "St. Stephen's Monastary – The brothers' work". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
- ^ Sowers 2008, p. 6.
- ^ Usher 1997, p. 305.
- ^ a b Plant 2004, p. 199.
- ^ Praticò, D. (2023). Odyssean Mediations in Eudocia’s Martyrdom of St Cyprian. The Cambridge Classical Journal, 69, pp. 59-74. doi:10.1017/S1750270523000039
- ^ Plant 2004, pp. 207–208.
- ^ Yeung 2002, pp. 74–76.
- ^ Usher 1998, p. 145.
- ^ Praticò, D. (2023). 'Homeric' Acrostics. Eudocia, Homerocentones (I), 452–455, 942–946. Mnemosyne. doi:10.1163/1568525x-bja10200
- ^ "Eudocia". Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art: The Dinner Party: Heritage Floor: Eudocia. Brooklyn Museum. 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
- ^ Chicago 2007, p. 106.
Sources
[edit]- Bradbury, Jim (2004). The Routledge Companion to Medieval Warfare. New York: Routledge (Taylor & Francis). ISBN 978-1-134-59846-5.
- Bitton-Ashkelony, Brouria; Kofsky, Aryeh (February 2006). The Monastic School of Gaza. Brill. pp. 24–25, 48, 50. ISBN 9789047408444. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
- Bury, John Bagnell (2008) [1889]. History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene, Volume I. New York: Cosimo, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1-60520-404-8.
- Cameron, Averil (2012) [1993]. The Mediterranean World in Late Antiquity: AD 395–700. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-67305-4.
- Cheetham, Nicolas (1981). Mediaeval Greece. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10539-8.
- Chicago, Judy (2007). The Dinner Party: From Creation to Preservation. London and New York: Merrell. ISBN 978-1-85894-370-1.
- Cuming, G.J.; Baker, Derek, eds. (1972). Popular Belief and Practice: Papers Read at the Ninth Summer Meeting and the Tenth Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-08220-X.
- Duncan, Alistair (1974). The Noble Heritage: Jerusalem and Christianity, A Portrait of the Church of the Resurrection. London: Longman. ISBN 0-582-78039-X.
- Harries, Jill (2013). "Chapter 2 Men Without Women: Theodosius' Consistory and the Business of Government". In Kelly, Christopher (ed.). Theodosius II: Rethinking the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 67–89. ISBN 978-1-107-27690-1.
- Holum, Kenneth G. (1982). Theodosian Empresses: Women and Imperial Dominion in Late Antiquity. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04162-2.
- Hunt, E.D. (1982). Holy Land Pilgrimage in the Later Roman Empire, AD 312–460. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-826438-5.
- Klein, Konstantin (2011–2012). "The Patronage of Aelia Eudokia in Jerusalem". Wiener Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte. 60/61: 85–95.
- Mahler, Helen A. (1952). Empress of Byzantium. New York: Coward-McCann.
- Plant, Ian Michael, ed. (2004). Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome: An Anthology. London: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3621-9.
- Praticò, D. (2023). "'Homeric' Acrostics. Eudocia, Homerocentones (I), 452–455, 942–946". Mnemosyne. doi:10.1163/1568525x-bja10200. S2CID 255326128.
- Praticò, Domenico (2023). "Odyssean Mediations in Eudocia's Martyrdom of St Cyprian". The Cambridge Classical Journal. 69 (69): 59–74. doi:10.1017/S1750270523000039.
- Sowers, Brian Patrick (2008). Eudocia: The Making of a Homeric Christian. Cincinnati: University of Cincinnati. Archived from the original on 11 August 2016.
- Tsatsos, Jeanne (1977). Empress Athenais-Eudocia: A Fifth Century Byzantine Humanist. Brookline, Massachusetts: Holy Cross Orthodox Press. ISBN 9780916586072.
- Usher, Mark David (1997). "Prolegomenon to the Homeric Centos". American Journal of Philology. 118 (2). The Johns Hopkins University Press: 305–321. doi:10.1353/ajp.1997.0031. JSTOR 1561854. S2CID 161616724.
- Usher, Mark David (1998). Homeric Stitchings: The Homeric Centos of the Empress Eudocia. Lanham, Boulder, New York and Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8476-9050-3.
- Wagner, Günter (1967). Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries: The Problem of the Pauline Doctrine of Baptism in Romans VI.1–11, in the Light of Its Religio-Historical "Parallels". London and Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd.
- Yeung, Maureen W. (2002). Faith in Jesus and Paul. Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II), 147. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-16-147737-9.
External links
[edit]- Mărmureanu, Cătălina; Cernescu, Gianina; Lixandru, Laura (2008). Early Christian Women Writers: The Interesting Lives and Works of Faltonia Betitia Proba and Athenais-Eudocia (PDF) (Report). University of Bucharest. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 June 2017. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
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