Hypatia—brilliant mathematician, eloquent Neoplatonist, and a woman renowned for her beauty—was brutally murdered by a mob of Christians in Alexandria in 415. She has been a legend ever since. In this engrossing book, Maria Dzielska searches behind the legend to bring us the real story of Hypatia's life and death, and new insight into her colorful world. Historians and poets, Victorian novelists and contemporary feminists have seen Hypatia as a symbol—of the waning of classical culture and freedom of inquiry, of the rise of fanatical Christianity, or of sexual freedom. Dzielska shows us why versions of Hypatia's legend have served her champions' purposes, and how they have distorted the true story. She takes us back to the Alexandria of Hypatia's day, with its Library and Museion, pagan cults and the pontificate of Saint Cyril, thriving Jewish community and vibrant Greek culture, and circles of philosophers, mathematicians, astronomers, and militant Christians. Drawing on the letters of Hypatia's most prominent pupil, Synesius of Cyrene, Dzielska constructs a compelling picture of the young philosopher's disciples and her teaching. Finally she plumbs her sources for the facts surrounding Hypatia's cruel death, clarifying what the murder tells us about the tensions of this tumultuous era.
This book rediscovers the life Hypatia led, the unique challenges she faced as a woman who succeeded spectacularly in a man's world, and the tragic story of the events that led to her tragic murder.
Examines the life of a Egyptian woman who lived in fifth-century Alexandria and became a respected scholar in mathematics and philosophy.
Did Hypatia have the power to bring down the Christian Church? A corrupt Fifth Century Bishop thought so and ordered her savage bone chilling death. Later, he was made a saint.
Along with its eleven new essays, this volume also includes a new translation of all the principal ancient sources touching on Hypatia.
Here the Catholic Church had reacquired power after the failure of Bismarck's Kulturkampf, which had culminated twenty years prior with the expulsion of Jesuits from Germany, the rupture with the Vatican in 1872, and the “Laws of May” ...
As the declining Roman Empire fights for its life and emerging Christianity fights for our souls, Hypatia of Alexandria is the last great voice of reason.
“The State of Research on the Career of Shenoute of Atripe,” in B. A. Pearson and J. E. Goehring (eds.), The Roots of Egyptian Christianity (Philadelphia 1986), 258–70 at 268. G. W. Bowersock, Hellenism in Late Antiquity (Ann Arbor ...
The unexpected murder in the little Cotswolds town of Colombury has everyone guessing. Before the answers are found more lives are threatened.
This book rediscovers the life Hypatia led, the unique challenges she faced as a woman who succeeded spectacularly in a man's world, and the tragic story of the events that led to her tragic murder.
It is designed to stand by itself as an interpretation of the original, but it will also be useful as an aid to reading the Greek text. "Whatever we now understand of Ptolemy ... is in this book."--Noel Swerdlow, University of Chicago