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The Date of the Acts of Phileas and Philoromus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2011
Extract
The Acts of Phileas and Philoromus are often cited among the more authentic documents which we possess for the persecution of Diocletian. As such they are included in Ruinart's “Acta martyrum sincera” and Knopf's “Ausgewählte Märtyrerakten.” Delehaye classes them with his third group of hagiographic sources, that is, with those accounts which are drawn either from the procès-verbaux or from the reports of eyewitnesses. Harnack, Tillemont, Allard, Le Blant, and Mason are likewise convinced of their historical credibility.
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References
1 Légendes hagiographiques, 2. ed., Bruxelles, 1906, p. 137.Google Scholar
2 Die Chronologie der altchristlichen Litteratur, Leipzig, 1904, II. 2, p. 70.Google Scholar
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14 Cf. Hist. eccles., viii, 10, 2–10; reprinted in Knopf, , Ausgewählte Märtyrerakten, Tübingen, 1913, pp. 95–96.Google Scholar
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16 Cf. Acts of Phileas and Philoromus, cc. 1–2; in Knopf, pp. 97–100.
17 The hypothesis of Allard, that we have here a play of words (soli deo, deo soli) to denote the cult of the Sol invictus appears to be too ingenious. Cf. Allard, La persécution de Dioclétien, II, p. 106, note 1. Knopf (p. 97, l. 15) capitalizes Soli, thus accepting Allard's view. I prefer, with Tillemont (Mémoires, V, p. 207) the simpler and more obvious sense. Note, too, but a few lines further on (Knopf, p. 97, l. 28) the same combination of words, “Deo soli in Jerosolyma.”
18 Cf. Acta, c. 1 (Knopf, p. 98, l. 20).
19 Ibid., c. 2 (Knopf, p. 99, ll. 22–25).
20 Ibid., p. 100.
21 Hist. ecles., viii, 9, 8.
22 Acta, c. 2 (Knopf, p. 100, ll. 15–18).
23 Cf. Tillemont, Mémoires, V, p. 208. Allard (La persécution de Dioclétien, II, p. 112, note 1) is assuredly wrong in holding that there was no interrogatoire of Philoromus, for that would have been contrary to all established usage. Cf. Geffcken in Hermes, 1910, p. 491.
24 Hist. eccles., viii, 9, 8; and Acta SS. Phileae et Philoromi, c. 3 (Knopf, pp. 100 f.).
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32 Cf. edition of De Rossi-Duchesne, , Martyrologium Hieronymianum (Bruxelles, 1894)Google Scholar, published as preface to vol. II, November, of the Acta Sanctorum.
33 Hist. eccles., loc. cit.
34 Acta SS. Phileae et Philoromi, cc. 1–3, Knopf, pp. 97–101.
35 Pap. Oxyrh. I, 1898, 71, p. 132; and Pap. Oxyrh. VI, 895; cf. Cantarelli, loc. cit.
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38 Eusebius, De mart. Palest. (ed. Schwartz), 5, 2–3 (the shorter recension); and the longer recension (containing the Acta of Apphian and Aedesius) in Analecta Bollandiana, XVI, 1907, p. 127 (reprinted in Schwartz, op. cit., p. 919).
39 Analecta Bollandiana, XL, 1922, p.26.
40 ‘La serie dei Prefetti di Egitto,’ in Memorie d. R. Accad. dei Lincei, XIV, 6, 1911, pp. 324 f.Google Scholar
41 Ibid. p. 325.
42 Texte und Untersuchungen, XX, 4, 1901, p. 48. Cf. Cantarelli, op. cit, p. 326.
43 Synaxarium eccles. Constantinop. (ed. Delehaye, as Propylaeum to Acta Sanctorum, November), p. 712, l. 14.
44 This view I had already put in writing in July 1921. At that time Delehaye expressed himself to me as in full agreement with regard to the insufficiency of Cantarelli's proof for the establishment of Eustratius's prefecture in Egypt.
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