Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
As Peter Brown has so eloquently described in The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity, bones became an avenue to power in late antiquity. Wealthy Christians who could lay claim to the bodies of the holy dead gained status through their willingness to share the gratia thus acquired with those lacking relics of their own; Paulinus of Nola, proprietor of Saint Felix's remains, affords an illuminating example. Patronage was restyled, Brown argues, as the royal, priestly, or monastic controllers of bones became the intermediaries through whom the saints' generosities were bestowed on sinful humans. Yet cooperation was not always the dominant spirit in the dispensing of gratia: relics could provide new opportunities for competition, as is dramatically illustrated by a rivalry confused and perhaps forever obfuscated by contradictory texts. The rivals are the heiress-turned- ascetic Melania the Younger and the empress Eudocia, wife of Theodosius II. The bones are Stephen's.
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3. Brown, pp. 33, 38.
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7. Lucian, , De revelatione 3 (Migne, PL 41. 809).Google Scholar
8. Ibid. 4–5 (Migne, PL 41. 811).
9. Ibid. 8 (Migne, PL 41. 815).
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26. D'Alès, p. 430. Slightly over a decade would have elapsed since Melania's death in 439.
27. Ibid., pp. 446, 449.
28. See below, p. 153. Honigmann, Ernest, “Juvenal of Jerusalem,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 5 (1950):228CrossRefGoogle Scholar, appears to favor the post-Chalcedonian date. On the contrary, d'Alès, p. 446, favors a date before Juvenal's removal in 452. D'Alès believes the Latin version of the Life of Melania might contain a reference to Chalcedon (chap. 44), a sign of its possibly later composition than the Greek version (d'Alès, p. 449). Vincent and Abel, fasc. 4. 748, attribute the omission of Juvenal's name at the deposition as a sign that Eudocia wished him to stay in the background. Abel, F. -M., “Saint Cyrille d'Alexandrie dans ses rapports avec la Palestine,” Kyrillzana (Cairo, 1947), p. 225, n. 50Google Scholar, might favor a post-Chalcedonian date.
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32. Ibid. 32 (Raabe, p. 36).
33. Ibid. 53–55 (Raabe, 54–56); Evagrius, , Historia Ecclesiae 2. 5 (Bidez and Parmentier, p. 52);Google ScholarRhetor, Zacharias, Historia Ecclesiastica 3. 4 (Brooks, p. 108 for Latin, p. 158 for Syriac).Google Scholar See also Devos, p. 350.
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39. Or she came to abhor those who espoused the Catholic faith, namely, Pulcheria. See Holum, Theodosian Empresses, chap. 7; Goubert, Paul, “Le Rôle de Sainte Pulchérie et l'eunuque Chrysaphios,” in Das Konzil von Chalkedon: Geschichte und Gegenwart, ed. Aloys, Grillmeier and Heinrich, Bacht, 3 vols. (Würzburg, 1954), 1:304.Google Scholar On the persuasions of the saint and the abbot, see Cyril, of Scythopolis, , Vita S. Euthymii 30 (Schwartz, pp. 47–49);Google ScholarCallistus, Nicephorus, Ecclesiasticae Historiae 15. 13 (Migne, PG 147. 40–41).Google Scholar
40. On the vow of chastity, see Vita Melaniae 6 (Gorce, p. 136).Google Scholar On their poverty, see ibid. 35 (Gorce, p. 194). For the finding of the relics of Zechariah, see Sozomen, , Historia Ecclesiastica 9. 17 (Bidez and Hansen, pp. 407–408).Google Scholar One of Eudocia's poetic compositions was on Zechariah; see Photius, , Bibliotheca, codices 183–184 (Migne, PG 103. 536–537).Google Scholar For Melania's earlier devotion to the remains of Lawrence, Saint, see Vita Melaniae 5 (Gorce, p. 134).Google Scholar The Forty Martyrs of Sebaste were soldiers martyred in Cappadocia or Armenia under Licinius; the passio is given in Gebhardt, Oskar von, Acta Martyrum Selecta (Berlin, 1902), pp. 166–181.Google Scholar Pulcheria is credited with discovering the remains of the Forty for Constantinople and providing them with a proper resting place: see Chronicon Paschale, a. 451 (Dindorf, 1:590);Google ScholarMarcellinus, , Chronicon, a. 451 (Mommsen, pp. 83–84);Google ScholarSozomen, , Historia Ecclesiastica 9. 2 (Bidez and Hansen, pp. 392–394).Google Scholar That the feast of the Forty was already celebrated in Constantinople when Nestorius was bishop is revealed by Rufus, John, Plerophoria 1 (Nau, pp. 11–12).Google Scholar
41. Vita Melaniae 48 (Gorce, p. 218).Google Scholar The oratory of the women's monastery is called a martyrium in the Latin version of the Vita, chap. 66 (Rampolla, p. 38).
42. Vita Melaniae 41 (Gorce, p. 204).Google Scholar On the date of her mother's death, see Gorce, p. 205, n. 5.
43. Vita Melaniae 48–49 (Gorce, pp. 218, 220).Google Scholar On the date of Pinian's death, see Gorce, p. 220, n. 2.
44. The traditional dating of the trip to the end of 436 and early 437 is found in Rampolla, pp. 230, 253, xl-xlii; and in Gorce, pp. 44 and 224, n. 1. It has been challenged by Holum; see n. 31 above. On the monastery for men, see Vita Melaniae 49 (Gorce, pp. 220–222).Google Scholar
45. Vita Melaniae 57 (Gorce, p. 240).Google Scholar
46. Ibid. 58 (Gorce, p. 240).
47. Ibid. 64 (Gorce, p. 258).
48. Ibid. 65 (Gorce, p. 262). The dying Melania tells the nuns while she is in their convent that she wants to be carried into the oratory so as to be near the martyrs. In the Latin Vita 66 (Rampolla, p. 38), Melania asks her priest (Gerontius) to enter the martyrium that adjoined her cell to offer the oblation.
49. Socrates, , Ecclesiastica Historia 7. 47 (Hussey, 2:838);Google ScholarJohn, of Nikiou, , Chronicon 87 (Zotenberg, p. 470).Google Scholar
50. Socrates, , Ecclesiastica Historia 7. 44 (Hussey, 2:832–833, has the wrong date);Google ScholarMarcellinus, , Chronicon, a. 437 (Mommsen, p. 79);Google ScholarChronicon Paschale, a. 437 (Dindorf, 1:582).Google Scholar
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53. Evagrius, , Historia Ecclesiae 1. 20 (Bidez and Parmentier, pp. 28–29).Google Scholar
54. Ibid. 1. 21 (Bidez and Parmentier, p. 29).
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56. Vita Melaniae 58 (Gorce, p. 242);Google Scholar Rampolla, p. 239.
57. Vita Melaniae 56 (Gorce, p. 238);Google Scholar see n. 31 above.
58. Vita Melaniae 50 (Gorce, p. 224).Google Scholar On Volusian, see Chastagnol, André, “Le Sénateur Volusien et la conversion d'une famille de l'aristocratie romaine au Bas-Empire,” Revue des Etudes Anciennes 58 (1956):241–253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar On Augustine's efforts in 412 to win Volusian, then proconsul of Africa, for Christianity, see Augustine, epp. 132 and 137; for Volusian to Augustine, ep. 135; and for Marcellinus's involvement, epp. 136 and 138.
59. Vita Melaniae 55 (Gorce, p. 236).Google Scholar The names Eudocia and Eudoxia are sometimes confused in the two versions of the Vita.
60. Ibid. 56 (Gorce, p. 238).
61. Ibid. 54 (Gorce, p. 232).
62. Cyril, of Scythopolis, , Vita S. Euthymii 30 (Schwartz, pp. 47–49);Google ScholarCallistus, Nicephorus, Ecclesiasticae Historiae 15. 13 (MignePG 147. 40–41);Google ScholarJohn, of Nikiou, , Chronicon 87 (Zotenberg, pp. 473–474).Google Scholar Perhaps the mention of the specifically anti-Nestorian tone of Melania's instruction was an addition either by the author of the text, a Monophysite, or by the transcriber of the Greek text; the Latin Vita omits it. Melania died before the Monophysite controversy reached its peak.
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65. Ibid. 58 (Gorce, pp. 240, 242). Compare Rampolla, p. 239.
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68. Ibid. 58 (Gorce, p. 244).
69. Ibid.
70. Ibid. 64 (Gorce, p. 258; Rampolla, p. 37).
71. Ibid. 59 (Gorce, p. 244; Rampolla, p. 33). The texts are unclear as to whether the incident happened on Olivet or elsewhere. In addition, the Latin text makes the Anastasis and Melania's martyrium sound like one and the same place. See Gorce, p. 245, n. 2; Rampolla, pp. 239–240.
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77. Ibid., p. 294.
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85. Abel, , “Saint Cyrille,” p. 222.Google Scholar Abel thinks the official mentioned was appointed to carry messages between Theodosius in Constantinople and Eudocia in Palestine; as he passed through Antioch, the messenger was asked to take a petition to Cyril in Palestine (p. 224).
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93. For a discussion of the evidence, see Honigmann, p. 242.
94. Vita Petri Hiberi 52 (Raabe, p. 53).Google Scholar It was the Palestinian monks and clergy who drove J uvenal from his see.
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98. Vincent and Abel, fasc. 4. 747–748.
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105. Ibid. 31 (Raabe, p. 35).
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109. Acts 7:48.
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111. Ibid. 70 (Gorce, p. 270).