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371943RONTO
/W3t'U. GIUFFIINF.
NAU
PATROLOGIA ORIENTALISTOMUS DECIMUS SEPTIMUS
I.
_
E.
W. BROOKS.(1).
John of Ephesus. Lives of the Eastern SaintsII.
_
S.
E. Ms'
L.
PETIT.DoClinieiltS
OCUMENTS RELATIFS AU CONCILE DE FLORENCE.yii-xxivIII.:
QEuvres aiiticonciliaires de Marc d'Ephese.
RENE BASSET.Le Synaxaire auabe jacobite. V. Les mois de Baounah,Abib, Mesoreet
jours comp leinen faires.
IV.
_
S.
GREBAUT.
Les Miracles de Jesus. Miene les xxi-xxx.
FIRMIN-D1DOT ET
C",
PARIS IMPRIMEURS-EDITEURSRUE JACOB1923
LIBRAIRIE DE PARIS, 56,
Go
JOHN OF EPHESUSLIVES
OF
THE
EASTERN SAINTS
SYRIAC
TEXT EDITED AND TRANSLATED
BYE.
W. BROOKS
PATR. OR.
T. XVII.
F.
1.
Nihil obstat.Parisiis,
die i" maii 1923.
R.
GRAFFIN.
PERMIS
D'IMPRIMERer
Paris, le 1
mai 1923.
.1.
LAPALME,v. gen.
INTRODUCTION
Until 1853 the narae of John of Ephesus
was hardly known except fromso-called
scattered
references in
extracts from
the
Dionysius and other
rd part of his Eccleauthors published by Assemani; but in that year the 3
siastical
HistoryJ.
was published
at
Oxford by
W.
Cureton, and this was soonv.
followed by
P. N. Land's
pamphlet Johannes Bischof1856).In
Ephesos der J stB syr-
ischer Kirchenhistoriker (Leiden,
1860 an English translation ofin
Cureton's text
was publishedJ.
at
Oxford by R. Payne Smith, andat2'" 1
1862 a
Germande
translation by
M. Schnfelder
Munich. Finally the Commentariipart of theEcclesiastical
Beatis Orientalibas
and fragments of theII
History appeared in tom.
of Land's Anecdota Syriaca at Leiden in 1868,
and a Latin translation of the same by van Douwen and Land was publishedat
Amsterdam
in 18S9.
Since that time however two works have appeared
which are invaluable
for the
purpose of enabling us to Supplement John'snd
published works and correct his text, M. Nau's analysis of the 2the history from the so-called Dionysius in/}. O.G., thefirstII,
part of
p.
455, (1897), and
two volumes'.
of
M. Chabot's editionbut
of Michael the
Syrian (Paris,,
1899,
1901)
2 Other studies of our author* have been published by Land
H. G. Kleyn
\ and
L.
Duchesne
'
;
all
these have
now been thrown
into
the shade by the greatin
work
of A.
which 402 pages are occupied byfll
Dyakonov, Ioann Efesskiy (Petrograd, 1908), a critical aceount of John's life and
works, and
useIn
is
made
of the
new
Information derived from 'Dionysius'
and Michael.
consequence of John's careless methods of writing thelife
chronology of bis
and of the;
facts
which he records appeared
to be
an almost insoluble puzzle1.
and
it is
not the least of Dyakonov's
many
merits
tom. VII, VIII).
Some fragments are also preserved by Elijah of Nisibis (C. S. C. 0., a 2. De gedenkschrien c. een Monoph. uit de 6 eeuw (K. Ak. v.
p. 237.
le Reeks, Dl. v, Verslagen en Mededeelingen; Afd. Letterkunde, 3 3. Een buk of het godsdienstig leven in de oostersche Kerk Amsterdam, 1888). d. 6 ie eeuw (Theol. Studien, VII, p. 229. Utrecht, 1889); Bijdrage tot de Kerkgeschiedeniss v. het Oosten gedurende d. 6da eeutv {Festbundel aan M. J. De Goeje. Leiden, 1891). 4. Jean dAsie. Memoire lu devant les 5 Academies le 25 oct. 1802 {Journ. Ofpciel, n" 299, p. 5200). I take this ref. from Dyakonov, but cannot find the
Wetenschappen,
work.
'
|V
INTRDUCTION.
L'vJ
of the ^ hole subject he has succeeded in tl.at by a laborious investigation In a few places I am obliged to differ from bringing order out of cliaos. upon bis work (I have not him; but in general mv chronology is based to'oceupy space by mentioning bis name every time), thought il necessary am thankful indeed to have been spared the necessity of attempting and what seemed to be an impossible task. was born about 507 of Kphesus (so called from bis titular bishopric)I
John
in the territory of Ingila in the territory
afterwards
known
as
Armenia IV,
whichin the
for ecclesiastical purposes
was united withat
the province of Mesopo-
tamia of which the capital was Amida, and
the age of 3 or 4at
neighbouring monastery of the15, after
stylite
Maro
Ar'a Rabtha\
was placed At the
age of
Maro's
deatli,
he
moved
to the
monastery founded by John
during the rtaya at Amida', the mtfnks of which, having been expelled Mama persecution of521, were then residing in the deserted monastery of
The archimandrite Hzim, where they remained 5 years, i. e. tili 526 \ given in eh. 58 seems to have at this time was Sergius', who from the dates 7 in 522/3 died in 523, so (hat the author's migration may be placedat.
Aller other wanderings the monks weretinian to return to
at the
end of 530 allowed by Jus-
Amida
8.
In the
precedmg year John had been ordained
deacon by the exiled bishop John of Thella (Constantina) \ The quiet life and he frequently in the monastery seems however not to have suited him, other monasteries and celebrated hermits; in 532 travelled about to visithe aecompanied bis friends Thomas and Stephen to Antioch "\ and in 534 undertook a journey to Egypt, and in 535 visited Constantinople ". At the end of 536 or beginning of 537 the patriarch Ephraim of Antioch followed upthe final condemnation of the Monophysites at the synod of 536 by a 'descentIn
the Kst',
when
the
monks were again expelledregion lying
2.
They then removed
to Thella d
Thuthe
in the
W.
of
Amida, and on being expelledat
thenee came to the monastery of the Poplars
the extreme limit of thelet alone,
Amideiie territory ".they weredrite1.
Hut there also they were not">:>'.)
and
this time
dispersed; hui in.iiel
Abba
bulkofthem, headed by the archimanincluding onr author, came to the territory of Claudias onthea
This was inhabited byto
mixed Syrian and Armenian populaon; but lngilene
seems4. Cli.
have been predominantly Syrian.
i>:1
2. P. 64.
-
3. 1'.
84; see also eh. 51. p. 83, n.in Ind.
:i.">.
5.
Cli. 58..
6.
Dyakonov,in exileI'.
p. 38, n. l.
- 7.
See
8.
Gh. 35;
'Zach. Uli.', vui,p. 28, n.
They were-
yrs.1.
and returned209 seen.1),
IX (Dyakonov,(p. 47)
1G0).
9.
Cli. 24. in
10.
207.
I'.
211.
Dyakonovis
p'its the
Egyptian journey
535, but himsclf notefe that, since there
no mention of(7
the ecclesiastical revolution that followed the patriarch Timothy's dealhsee Byz. Zeitschr., XII.p.
Feh. 535;-
49),\,l
it
must have been before that time.Vit.
Land,13.
p.
294; 'Zach. Rh.',cf.
;
Monoph.
C
12.
Gh. 35, 58;p. 65,
S.
('.
(>.,
tom.
XXV
(11),
Ch. 35;
eh. 58
and Land,
p. 295.
[vj
INTRODUCTIOX.1
v-\vlio
the Euphrates
.
Thence
in
540 John, perhaps following Abba,time,
iled
to Constantinople about
tliis
removed
to the capital,
and never perandin
manently returned.
In 541 he
madeto
a second journey to Egypt,
the autnrnn of the year he
wentfixedin
Palestine,
where the plague wasmet Johnof
just
beginning-, and thence to Mesopotamia, andConstantinople.topolis
returned through Syria to
The date
is
by
tlie fact3
that he,
Hephaes-
performing ordinations
Asia Minor'.
for in
542 James and Theo-
dore were appointed for that purposeIn 542 John
was
selected by the emperor for the task of Converting the
pagansdonian
in
Asia on condition that he should convert them to the Chalce8.
faifch
Probably however he did not wholly neglect the oppor-
tunity for propagating Monophysitism, for,
when James Burd'ana passed
Among these was John was made bishop of Ephesus, the metropolis of Asia 6 whence he is often called 'John of Asia'. The date of bis consecration may be gathered from the fact that he was consecrated at almost the same time as Kashish of Ghios 8 who, having begun travelling with John, continued to travel for 13 years, and then lived 5 years in Chios before being made bishop Now the travelling must apparently have begun between 540,through Asia Minor, he consecrated seven bishops.himself, wlio,
,
7
.
when Johnthe pagans8
left his,
monastery, and 542,9.
when he undertookand
the mission toit
and
this brings the consecration to 558-60,
should pro-
bably be fixed to 558
He wasunknown.
still
a deacon in 541, for he officiated as
such at the ordinations perl'ormed by John of Hephaestopolis, and the dateof his presbyterateis
There
is
nothing
to
showin
that he ever
resided at Ephesus; and after the death of the patriarch Theodosius in 566
he became the acknowledged head of the Monophysites
Constantinople,of the
where many Syrians had taken refuge under the protectionTheodora andtinian,
empress
after
her death (548) continued to enjoy the favour of Justo
who encouraged them
come
to the capital in Order that
he might10
bring pressure to bear upon them for the purpose of eifecting a unionleave the Monophysites in Syria without leaders.
and
In this objeet he failed;
and, though his successor by using more violent measures effected a tem-
porary union (571)",
it
was repudiated by
the
eastern Monophysites, and
1.
Ch. 58; see
n.
ad
loc.
2.
Land,II,
p.
310.
3.0.
Ch. 25.
p. 62).
is
5.
Mich., p. 287; H. 0.
C,
p. 482.
--
Ch. 50.
4. 7.
Ch. 50 (Dyakonov,Ch. 51.
8.the-
DyaWest.
konov
(p. 81)
supposes
it
to
have begun betweenJ.
537"
and 540, and
fixes the
consecra-
tion to 555-8; but
he does not note thatthat he
states that the travelling
was
in
Theren.
no evidenceIt
was
in
the
on ch. 50.
may be addedto
that 540,
West between 535 and 540. when J. (and probably Kashish also)
9.left
Seethe
monastery and went
GP.,
is
the most likely time for the travelling to have begun.I,
10.
See ch. 25.
11.
H. E.,
24.
v,
INTRODUCTION.
[vi]
the division between East and
West
eventually led to a scliism (575)liis
'
in
which John
is
found on the opposite side tolast
hero James'.
The union
however did not
frequent persecutions as long as John lived.
even in Constantinople, and the Monophysites suffered His history ends in 585, and;
3 but with he probably died in 586 after a year spent in prison at Chalcedon the last 18 years of his life, which fall after the completion of the Lives of
Ihr
Eastem
Saints,
we have
little
concern.
For the
first
two years
of his
residence in Constantinople (540-2) he lived in the house of the patrician Probus 4 nephew of the emperor Anastasius, and after this, wheri he was in,
were perhaps for a time in the palace of Ilormisda, 3 where many of the refugees were settled under the protection of Theodora 542 and 546 " the chamberlain Callinicus, who in but at some time between 8 565 held the office of praep. sacri cubicuW, gave him a villa at Sycae (prothe capital, his quarters;
bably that previously occupied by Mare the solitary,
who
died in 542/3) 9',
which he turnedof
into a
monastery known as,0,
'
the monastery of the Syrians
which he was archimandriteit
and
this
was
his head-quarters until in
578
was
confiscated by the patriarch Eutychius".
His earliest work was a history of the persecntion, which was probablywritten in 537,2,
and does not now,3
exist.;
Heit is
also wrote, probably in 544,
an account of the plague of 541/2
but
not certain that this
was ever
published as an independent work.
Both
of these
were doubtlessly incorwhich theprobably
porated in the Ecclesiastical History, which extended from the time of Julius
Caesar to 595, and was divided into three parts
'
',
of
first
came down
to the time of
Theodosius
II
'\ and the second to 571.
Of part
1
we
liave only citations in
Michael; but of part 2 large fragments exist, andit
with the help of 'Dionysius' and Michaelalmost entirely.
may
be possible to restore
it
Part 3 exists almost complete.
Another work, nowin the
lost,
was
a defence addressed to the
Eastem Synod16.
matter of the union
of 571 and written not later tlian 575teristic of all his
There remains the most characthe
works, the Histories concerningis
ways of
life
of the blessed
Easterns, or, as1. //./'.,
it
more conveniently
called, Lives of the
Eastem Saints'",
3. Mich., p. 364 (Dyakonov, p. 165). 4. P. 157. by the fact that Leontius, who died before the Lives were wrilten (566 lived 20 years in the monastery (eh. 39). Dyakonov (p. 86), appy. confusing him with Aaron (ch. 38), makes him die in 560, and therefore throws back the origin of the monastery to Mare's lifetime. See n. at end of ch. 36. 7. Corippus, /.uns Justin/, i, 75 ff. For the site see p. 298, n. 2. 8. // E\, ii, 41. 9. Ch. 36 and, for the namc, p. 187, n. 1. (see tit. 10. P. 298, ch. 36 init. 38, 39, 40, 41, 51- 11. //. /.'.. / c. 12. Seech. 35, 2'"' note. 13. Land, p. 325 (Dyakonov, p. 168).iv.1.;.
- 2. Cli. 49.is
5.
Ch. 47.
6.
The date,
fixed
,
,
l't.
the pointp.
most likely that he would end part 1 at where Socrates and Theodoret end, but the evidenee adduced by Dyakonov 179 is to me unconvincing. Dyakonov, ]). 169). 16. //. /'., n, 6 17. Lives is//..'.'.,
i,
.!;
Mich., p. 377.
15.
It is
the easiest designation; bul
many
are only detached aneedotes.
;
[vn]
INTRODUCTION.
vn
58 short lives or stories of hcrmits and others with whom the author was contempprary, after the style of Palladius and Theodoret, but containing more ofthe personal element, and including lives not only of obscure asceticsbut also of
men who playedlife
a part in history
'
besides a few more general2.
This seems to have 566 \ and amplilied in 567 \ and again in 568*. We have one ms. only which contained the whole work (1) Brit. Mus. Add. 14647 (A), written in 688 in a good estrangelo hand. This ms. consists of 20 quiresin
chapters on
Monophysite
circles in bis time
been written
in
:
of (normally) 10 leaves each, the
l
sl
leaf
being marked with the number of
the quire in estrangelo, and the next four with the letters
o, u
,
;,
and
oi
the last five leaves, being the other halves of the folded sheets, needed no
numeration.
There are lacunae
after
f.
2,f.
f.
3,it
and
f.
5; and, since
f.
3 has
no numeral, and the 2 Dd quire beginsafterf.f.
atf.
6,5.
follows that 3 leaves are lostis
2,
and one each23
after
f.
3
andatf.
There
another lacuna after
rd 13, and, the 3 quiref.
beginning
14, 2 leaves are lost.
The
4 lh quire
and the 3 rd quire therefore contained 9 leaves only. rently the scribe, perhaps by inadvertence, left a leaf unused. Thebegins at;
Appa5' b
quire
begins at
f.
33, theat
3' d,
4"',
and 5" leaves are numbered o, u1
'',,
and the
6 th quire begins
f.
44.
The
5"'
quire therefore contained 11 leaves; andthe blank leaf in quire 3,
we may perhaps suppose that the scribe found and tacked it on here. The 10"' quire is wholly(f.
missing, and the next leafAfterf.
83)
is
the
2"'
1
leaf of the
1
1'",
so that 11 leaves are here lost.
89In
is
another lacuna; and, as the
12"'f.
quire begins atis
f.
90, 2 leaves are lost.f. f.
the 15"' quire,
which beginsis
at
120, there
a lacuna afterf.
121,
f.
122 hasthe2"'1
no numeral, and thereleaf
another lacuna afterin these
123, while
124
is
ofthe
17"' quire.
Henceat least 3.
two lacunaethatf.
7 leaves are lost,
and the
earlier
must include
Part of the text here lost can however be
supplied from D; and from this
we knowends at
it
cannot have covered less1
than 5 leaves, so that 5 or 6 are lost after
121, andr a.
or 2 afteris
f.
123.
The
rest is complete, but our textit
f.
136
The ms.its
carefully
written, and
is
not often necessary to depart from;
text.
Gh. 37 has
been omitted by the scribe and, since the Simeon mentionedof eh. 41 does not appear in the narrative, the also been omitted of eh. 2, theat the7.
in the
heading
end of that chapter has perhaps1,
The missing
portions are parts of eh.4, all eh.
the beginning|
end of eh. 3 and beginning of eh.all
26 except-;
of a leaf
beginning,
chs. 27-29, all eh. 30 except about48, 49, 50.(f.
of a leaf at the
1.
Ch.
2, 10, 24, 25, 2G,
a).
2.
Ch. 35, 47, 58, and the latter half of eh. 20.4.
-
3.
Ch. 35, 47, 48, 49, 58tit.
1356.
V
Ch. 316"'
fin.,
35
fin.,
48, 51 init.o,,
(cf.
ch.is
39),
58
5.7.
Ch. 58
fin.
Probably the
was numbered
but the mark
illegible.
^-
Dyakonov,
p. 363.
viii
INTRODUCTIOX.all
[vm]eh. 52 except part of
end, the end of eh. 33 and beginning of eh. 34,thetitle,
the beginning ofeh. 53, and part of eh. 54.
Several other mss. oontain
some
of the lives(B),
or extracts
from them.I'.
These are
:
(2) Brit.
Mus. Add. 1465014,
written in 875, whieh at
161
ff,
contains chs. 3,tlial
7.
13,
15,
18,
19,
36,
and 40, which are also(chs.19,
in
A, in
order,
the lives of Susan
and Mary
27,
2/
^jL^otOcaio:J.^'
)^^.Jl^o
.)
Vi
vaoaojJ
yQ...
V
10
yoa-.,..^
|).-i0J\ T>]I-..=>
|).^.ISv..iOO
^^K^oo
y-wJj;
JooJ
).,
1
1
*>
oiK^oia^o;a.jaJi
j^^oo
cxtO^ioi
j;ot
"^^.ioo .^ioi
U~.,..o
opa-^3;
jl^a^;
-.as^ot^aS. ^i^x.' ^lio|
^Voi r ^; |>Kj
^s/o -.^i-iJxVL/
.oV-otO J_^ yOou^-iL^i ~J^o;o1.
pN>.^
yOoi.-JL-.VJo
yoot^so "^i.; jK^-*!
uppl. L.
2.
Point
follows
in m-^.
A
BOOK
Ol'
HISTORIES CONCERNING TUE WAYS OF LIFE OF THE BLESSED EasTKN-,A SOLITAIU
COMIMLED AND WRITTEN UV JOHN THE PILGRIM AND AT ONE TIME
OF THE HOUSE OF [MaR John] OF AlMIDA IN THE FERVOUR OF DIVINE [zEAL].
When we
considered thc words
oi'
our Saviour and Redeemer Jesus in
his preaching to bis saints
which he
said, Let
your light so shine beforeis
men, that they may see your good deeds, and glorify your Father whoheaven',it
in
seemed
to
us that
tliis
is
not disagrqeable to his will, thatall
the light of thc deeds and of the triumphs of his holy disciples should attiines
arise
and be
made known and appear among men,
as indeed
the
sense of his holy saying declares; and for this reason, although
we may
seen to be presuming to set foot in things that are too great for us, by the
powertheir
of his saying and the hope of his gift we have beeu encouraged to approach the task of compiling histories concerning their ways of Life and
brave triumphs and
the
characters of their good deeds,
that,
we
may draw, though1.
obscurely, by
means the
vile
and common pigments of
Matih..
v,
Hi.
PATH. OR.
T.
XVII.
!'.
I.
2
JOHN OF EPHESUS.
[21
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our poor vvords, the pattern of their likenesses for posterity, [and] leavein the
it
when they read and see their good deeds and marvellus ways of life, hy tliis means we opine that two beneficial results will be produced, ne that when they see their good deeds they may also glorify their Father who is in heaven as it is written, and the second again, that, when the light of the narratives of their ways of lifememoria] of our writings; sol
hat,
shines upon souls entanglederror, theyIo
in
the vanities of this world
and darkened by
may
be enlightened
by the
light of their
triumphs and be eager
imitate them, and to
receive their patlerns in themselves, in order that
theysayssince
may attain to Come enter,I
their
crowns, and hear with them the life-fraught
call that
ye blessed ofto
my
Father
'.
For these reasons therefore,
dreaded evenis
hear the apostolic saying thatii
condemns the man,
who knows whaiminedthatI
good and does
not by the sentence of sin 2
I
deter-
not to conceal
and cover with silence the great and marvellus virtuesin
have seen and known and clearly learned
hcroic and divine persons,fear
and
I
am condenthavinglirst
of bearing true witness without
and without hesiI
tation;
formedJames,iv,
this resolution in
my
mind, that, though
hear
1
Matth., xxv,
34.
2.
17,
[3]
AUTHOR'S PREFACE.
3
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jloia^j-.
^_iO ..yOOULSO
^,
JjL*li^i
^--^/
A r
f.
2
a.
yoouioo
yoonioo
aaM
i
Jjlsj
^o^o yoouio .K^oot yoc*^..
^-^iOJ-a-^>
JKitOiO
).^^.
V
>
U-SQ^; OlbC^iO y^\ .yOOUiO +~JJ;
^
^^^J^ ^3.^^uio_.o
lot-.9L.
Jj^JJ
.Jll/I>jv JJ
J-sVo
J^=>o
ooC^.Jju.j-
JLl~
.jjo^|LiV ji
)la*xoas/o
J
Intern so
.jfco^Vl
Ipojo
U-*\s>+x
Jta^Djo
\oouio t
"^>!Jt
v^Jl li^OAj .)J^_30)io;
J.^sj/',
)di Jl^oa^votv>ai n->
.-).-CSxo
joU^ol
3**
>
^-Joi\OJOI
^.J^otA Joch
J^-.j^.a,^et
.J-=>Vo
U_~iJo JjloYo.
j^Sa-fc
O
-)^-' J
/
|K..2ijJL;
jba&o',^* _ls/ J^clcd
1.
Ms. om.
that a i'ew daysdistrictsI
ago and now also there have been and indeed arefor
in
the
round us heroic and brave men,in
my
part except those offor a
whom'
have been an eye-witness
every one of their aetionsI
long time andto
a witness of the truth of
them,
will in no case
commit anv the of
the
memorial ofall
my
handwriting 2
aetions to the truth of which besides myself
the other
men
of our time are also witnesses, aetions that
were wroughtI
in those
men
heroic in their
ways
of
life,
with every one of
intercourse fromaslecp
my
childhood
down
to their
own
end; of
whom was in whom some feilillus-
trious in the body, to each one of
some time ago, and some during this time, and some are still men who have power to perform apostolir signs, them aecording,
since
to the blessed apostle's saying gifts are dis-
tributed and given 3
to
this
miracles, to that great
ways
of
life
withoul
signs, to another beauty of heart
and purity, to another ready sorrow andlife,
copious tears, toto
another self-denial and perfect pilgrimof gifts, consisting in the
in
addition
the
other distributions
beauties
that
each
one of them severally used to depict upon his person.
These marvelof
He gives an aecount 1. Ms. om. 2. This Statement cannot be taken llterally. Kalesh (ch, 41 who dted before he was born. 3. I Cor., xn, to.
Abraham
of
/,
JOHN OF EPHESUS.-'(X
,4
i_Sj
vOOUl-^ io^-^jL3l
Ji.Oi-,_3u2.
..JK^io la^*_flO;
jlo^>.po
JJ*
^; Ji^soM )1ooX> wcno .^*jJ.to
Jot^JJ
o-Ks
J^o y~.\
OO
^^
-^ Vl
^juX^soai
J-iSso JoUiol
^JSot JV^^
voou^..i^.>o;,^_sJjOIt.
o(ts^ioiaio>.,.
rr>;
+2
.)lo,.a,>.^
^o; ]Lwi\.i^l.-J_=>j
aoi-.o'ESo.aN...
^N.
..
)jiiO.'-Q0j
)lo>>.i
O^.
J-^3
^^;
-i>\
I
.
V>'
CO
JK-O^.J.[ ]a
^o.]*...]
J-^iicacorr.v.
w.ooJk^/
t -,
[^lj
-
\-Z->l
.
'U*i"
1.
Ms. sing.
2.
Ms.
W:
D. and L.
Ions
and divine
beauties
thereforu
I
have
set
myself
to
bring
lo
the
record of narratives, while the spiritual beauties and great triumphs themselves, vvithout the
interposition of elegant language, are related bv their
natural simplicity of hearl
with
which as
is
written they glorified God',life
and wo record the aclive manifestation of the ways ofiliem withoul
of every one
of
Ornate diction andall
artificial
combinations of words, rejecting
and dismissing
worldly elegance outside the circle of these admirablelestl>\ it
and divine beauties,1
we
snil
their
liolv
images; which have nocircle, as ncither
d
whatever ofbeauty and adornmenl lying outside their
has the Giver of their beauties himself, since indeed they are not lackingin
anything, which also enrich and enlighten others by their beauties.ihis
We
begin therefore fromsai-.il>
poinl
to
draw
the
picture of each
one of these
h\in
relating his histoiytheir petitions onis,
through (he help of their prayers and confiin
dence
cur behalf, and hope
theis
gift of hini
Imthis
strengthened them, that
as far as our small strength
capable of attaif
ning, through the strength that arises from grace; and at the head
divine
Company we sei ihis greal ld man whom a high heavenbj life, whcre each is in Christ Jesus, well befits.I
place
a1
table in the
I'-.
cxix,
:.
5]
LIFE OF HABIB.
5
^^diA..J_aVojo.
.oova.
^soJl
>aJJS,.o
JiiaLaoJJL't-*otl
ir
*_3L^ ^-VK-s;
\-i-s-l
.o^jtN^iCL^l?
o^otO-'v?
)oX-^fll
2
> .'mi; ^ois/ ^oU00 ?-oto^J-si )K-^^.
-
-.oiJbs.,*.^ ),! ,s-fco
jtX^JL~* )ll/oJja-co
,
**-ot!
jJo
Jv-m^s
^.\
ooi
ia)
vs/i
"^^o
.KiioJ-J^/;
^.io
Jji^J-*>l3
A
f.
2
V
a.
ys*._**>
))SJS_- ?
Jsioto
/^Ss^oj
-oiaXi -oiok-./;).2>;
J-^*->/
Jo
.ipo^
J^>jJ
j-of^o
Jjoi
iia-.\
jlj/
.K-Jv-^aoJJ;
K-);ov.io
J^SOjJjl Jj^.a.~i6; J1q_3l1* laS. .)tsJUL-.ijl oilio^ '^ISLJO
-Ol y^^>J-a*oi'Kia^ ^Sl^ ^-.ou^.iCL'-oi.io
^.\oi1.
^io ^3>o?;to
v-i
^^J*
Vr*/?
-o^iii
JJo
ooi
V-V*?
?
A word seems
have been
hei-e
erased.
J.
Poinl
!'nllc>\\s/j
Jju/ .^_ju,-o'1/
J 001OOI
V-j
^i.; o^
Jjoi
^-.,-.010
.wi
Ji-.^.
^o^oa^
oojo .Jooi ^oioK^/
uio ous
1.
Point
follows in ms.
vetli
nn
me
shall
do greater than these signs whichtu those to(a
I
do
\ we leave this
also" lo liini
and
whia
it
has not been hard to believe his word,
bringing these few thingsThis holy old
small proportioa) to record for the glory of God.
mau tlierefore came from the district of Sophanene, and was trained bv a man who was liimself also great and holy and a worker of This divine man therefore was miracles, whose namc was Bar Nbyl.before our times; and, inasmuch as his end preceded our days,
though
this
great old
man men
liis
discipleto
and inany others used toperform, inasmuch as
teil
us about the great
marvels which he usedshall1.
we
declared before that
we
omit
in
whose ease the sight,
of our eyes has not borne
witness
mir haudwriting 2;
for this
reason
we have
not touched the history ofthat
sainl
who
himself also again
was
trained bv a divine blessed
man whose
name was Mar Dada; which things we have omitted to relate, in order to This teil only the things that concern this man who was our contemporary.
manalso
therefere
came fromfirsl
a villagc called
Fvl
r,
from which his master
came; and heJohn, XIV,12.2.
planted thal monastery, and then this blessed llabib
I.
P.
[7]
LIFE OF HABIB.
7
,ooa.i.
jo v^^o)J-/;o
otbwJL-oo
.-^m.*
-V*"^3
1
*"*
T'l
'^jl
otLo-X ^..a.*.Joe*
JidaJooiv.l.J
-.oilaJ^^3m.
Jo_i'Kio
.Jjl~oV
|^o,_3 oi^J_jl\o
vj^^o
->m\ ot\..
^30
^-.j
+d .oda.io_^s> ^_io Jootoit-?-*'*
)1o_cojloo-.^--JLft.
j-.'/
a
J-L-so-^
ot-/
^^
J-*.iaiL.2>}
ouoo/ loi>
w^^Al
joOt y. **C*>'^t>
V*-s/
jlolj-.
Otlio/
rjU->
-IVw
tP
jJ;
V^-A
-.oilaju*.m.i
)ooi
^.otok.../
J.t^ioK.jLioo
^^~
U^xa^Jj/
o&.
Ioot ).ypaj;
Jjlx./
\%a\ y*Ls yooi^s
^v
.U SQ-i? oiKS.^
^aa ^
*
^*ot
^>o
.|)->^od
Af.31 a.
^.~k.3o; ^j^-/ "^.jlql^ ^ojjjj
^^oik^io
J^JLol JJbL~ -.JjLiCL^ ^>.*aioya.
^_.,_.oio
.'joi^1.
jooi'V^flDis
lt-^--=i
^>
.)oot
^Ico
ovbs.^xa.\
oooi
A
leaf ur niore
liere lusl.
went to him, when he was about ten years
old,
and he received him, and
he continued to dwell with him, and he exercised him in spiritual ways oflife,
marking
his tender age,
and what devoutness and what orderliness heBut,
possessed from his youth.
when
tliat
old
man had completed
ninety
years, he departed to his mansion in heaven, and left his monastery in the
hands ofso,
tlie
blessed Habib, after he had lived with him twenty years; andhis
having seen
ways
of
life
and
liis
obedience and his humility, he made
him heir of the inheritance ofthe blessed Habib
his blessings,
and
left
him
to succed him.
ForI
was.-i
so humble and obedient even in his old age thati
l/? )r*>,jOl
"^
J-otol-l
S!wJ-*;
)~J\
),_
wOiasVo-s
-.^iojiOtK.^O.\i
Jv*o;
TP
v*?
vOCH\a.3 ^ "*hr-~/ ),-i- wj;
VLOO
\QVl.m).01^
U);
J(.i;
\
,
..
^OtO^^.
vS( ^01*
ool:
oo ->io^
ojffl
^/o
.ofS.
vaj/ ^^so/oJJjot
^oi q
m
>
^ys
^ Jkja_KxJ_joo-_^^_i
jloji,:>^ ,.,lftoo
)ooi
K_/;Jooi
JV-^j^3
^-/ Ut /s/o
j^-V- -*JjLLA
oS.
opo/:Ji'/
o,l/o
.)Jji^o.\
.JlJ_i^BO
y*\
yoLO
o^w^u. Jon >*^cla ^30 .oila^ ^ViJj? ^o-jo)
.otKi^oo
JV-^jJJ
^.j
oji
m
.
^ym
\.
yO-j/
s^ao
JK^au^CS.
]ooiyJO.
o-*^A0
Jh
Ar
I.
3
ca..^J>o jjjoij "^i^io;
-V^o/o ,a*.sJ.1/
U-so-^ ^iaJt
.voy_i.o
ou3i|ojoot
b.
.yoou-ojaao
JoSx.061)
Jo\ y/Ji-asx1-,'s. rft -s
Uam.: ^.^01
la\ )Kt
-^N
ou-.iiJJ
,)K^ ; K^ajo^Soifcoo
1^-.^ ,)_^k^s 0100
.^^X
w.oi--ioj-yJ
ool^^o..joot
.J.j_o.^ajn.Looi
j^J^o Uio^
^^-.aiioo .0^00*1jo'01
yoo&o
^_o odKj/Ms,
|_>^wlao
oiNw^oolaIo -.joot
Uijsia\ Jaojas ,j
I.
|Sv"lo:
cori
1
.
v. I).
and
I..
saiil
willioul delay,
because he saw his zeal and readiness and
tlie
keenness
ofhis purpose.togetheralso:in
Hut,lost
whenthe
llie
owner ofthehis
ass lieard
it,
his
knees knocked
fear,
powerall
of the saint's curse slionld liglit
upon
liim
and he arose and tunkanother village,
parchments
fapcns),tliere
and brought them
to hiin,
and entreated him to forgive him.
Again
was anotheryears old;
rieb
man
in
who had
an ancient debt,
many
and he
also used to plunder
many
people; and they came and told the blessedlo
man
about him, and he set out to gois
him.
And, when he heard
'
Lo
!
Habib
coming', inasmuch as he was not prepared to do good, he arose and tunk
the
parchments
jrjfcpr/is),
i.
e,
the blessed
man
heanl
il
he
the deeds, and left him and fled. was distressed and said Because:
And whenhis will
was
thus prepared to do evil toward these poor inen,lel
lliernfeil
fearto
God wills their deliverance, never see him again . And the same night tliat man died, and 011 all who heard it. And the blessed man went on continuingif
busy hiaaself greatlyfor
in
matters of debt-remission, becoming
a delive-
rance
the poor
and
his'
fame increasing.
Hnl
the wife
ofthe man
1.
\i-
[9]
LIFE OF I1ABIB.i
9
.
)
->r>
ft
X
oi2^
o_l^../o
a\._Q..
vootw-fn
^3
yOoCSj
-.^.otjLso
K-o-io;
ooi
Joot
y-..a.\o
-Jod
N_./
Jj^/ )*t-=^ol/ootlo
^^ "Vj(
O-JjLSJL*!*.
#v OO|-.',^oA.
Jjlooio
-oio^ow'oi
-.).JL Jt
n\
w.otai.o/
.)nm^o ^iw-\
^io;
J^xito.
Ji^.*
odoJL^wioKjLioo otixn .iv>)
m\o
otlowJS^ ^io;:Jooi
^^ooooIS^Jj
.^.j/o^.ot
J.iJa,
i>>mv> o/ jKxa^&io o/ JN^-ioj/i
Jjls-./
^*j^>c*ia>.
s/Joot
)y,.n.Jl
Jt-^ 7-/^j'/ota^.
]J
-.
.?
I-J-/
JJV^o^
^"^JJ/
^jjj*jJ*
owb,>
J001
o|_icui.
..ot~-*JU9
^-./
]*>o*
.^JJJ
Joot
^)J^JLio.J^ot'oJ.
Jt--^
K^-^o
JL*;
^6
y~l
O^j/Jjoi
It-^^io^..io/
^'iK^soi
^)
Jt3
'
yft'
\-*>Hl
.001
A
f.
3
v" a.
X,
^
-OIV.-^
..s^U/fe*!;
^-*^0| J-L-iO^ >50>OA *30 .JKjLlOo-1 /
^Ojjj,?
jKl*/o
^aj/;J.X',-.
^i&^io; Kj/
"Z^3
!
JlcLs^s? ^t-^! J-V^J-iou>
-t-^
/
yl n^^l
y/ OoloJ~JL3u./
.|.JtJV-S
JLiOiS.
ox vOOJlA ..Ll^O-flOJ.jlo;o3
KaIsj
Jjou^1.
Jjoi
^ot;IVniii
.I^q.9lJ
Lia.J*^;
N^^.ioo ^.ia* ^^^io;
Appy. coit.
'tuSj.
wlio
liad
died
andtlie
his
children
took
all
their
parchments
ypf?.;
,
and
brought tliem to
blessed man, and tlms returned
tliein lo their
owners.
against poor men, and they
Again there was another man, and he kept ancient deeds some years old came and told the Saint, and they brught him, and he went; and that because from his boyhood and down to his old ageitself also
he retained his humility and obedience whichso that a
distinguished him,
widow
or a poor
woman'
or poor did not
him on any business whatever, herefuseto
man who begged him to go with as heing a man of high reputationwonld go with him at once to that man, insmuch asfor see!
go, hut, in order to
satisfy him,
withont delay.
When
thereforc he had gone
Satan had fdled that man's heart, he was roused to fury against him, saying,
Will not this fellow go and
sit
in
his
monastery and be quiet?.
lie
comes out and wanders aboutthese tliings he:
to eat
and drink
And whento hisis
the blessed
man heardif
was
distressed,
and he returned
monastery,
having prayed and saidthou knowest thatI
Lord who knowest what
in the hearts ol all,
came
out in this business in order to eat and drink,if
forgive thisof thy
man.
Andfor the
again,
thy gface knoweth that
it
is
for the sakeI
name and
sake of the deliverance of the wrongcd (hat
have
come1.
out, in order that this
same thing may be made known
to this
man and
Sic s\r.
;
10
JOHN OF EPHESUS. ^-01 .ooax ia^a .^La^*^J.*V-?
[10]
Jlo_3u^
U^-/
:'++*& **-W
N^3 Uv*^o!
Jooto
oi^s^
j^-o -3o:)Iq.jJj
.>;
*~o
oul^
)
v^sv
v*_*-.o
oiSCL^
o2^~JLa
_*>
001
?
Jju;
>>-^ ^DfcCflo/Jjl-,-o
poirnV>
.JV-P Jjj-^J-*>
odo^i^^-t-oi
JJ
.^j
001
.^otoio* jkj;Joot,_*>
ici^
).
*?&JJ /
-.oiDi/
^-*>;
Jjch
Jjo^j
Oi^aA;
i^Xo
d^oa^lr
otts^A
',-=
-ouio
oiIol^j
JL
t
JK-soto^o
..>ju3s
*icu^I^s
L>Ss
Jjlso^
la>o^
a
r.
V
J-jl.;
i)-^
^-*;
|av* oiq^^.
JJ'jO
.L\;l
;a~Jj
JJ
^- .i-a
^J?
.p&l
b.
JO.OI
C*JL^>p
JJjO
.K.^^00
OlV^S
^
OtAS
K--AJL.
Otki^A
V-=
-.-O^.Jj-q-soa
Jk^w-j ^ioo
.)ooi
d-^_o yoouuC^/,)._q...JX.w
^
ooij
-^Aoi J^cUjooi
^^C^jlj/
voou^oo Joot
>'->*
jJLa.*. Lto
otA
1^/*
^^a
);
to
everyone
eise,
do with
hini as tliv grace
knoweth how
.
exacted forthwith f'rom thethe Lord smofce liim,
mau
requital for the old
man; and
that
Then Grace same davand and hea sen-
and
half of liim
became withered, one
f his eyesfeet,it
one of his arms, and the whole of his side, and one of hisfeil
into grievous affliction.
And, when he understood that
was
tence emanating from justice, which had overtaken him of on aecount of his
blasphemy, he sent intercessors to the sainl
to
ask him to pray for liim; andluit
he on his side did not withhold his kindness from him,his disciple
immediately sent
whose name was Z ura;powerofliis
011
whom
from that time he poured part
of the gift of thedisciple
Elisha, so that afterTliis
prayer like the blessed Elijah upon his him he became even more distinguished than:
himself.
man
therefore he sent, saying
Go,llielifo
my;
son;
we
for
our
part will not close the door, and pray for him.
Bat
rest of the sentence
has gonereverse
forlli
againsl him, that he shall depart from
and this we cannotln^
.
And, when he had gone and prayed over him, immediatelyliis
soul departed from
body, and he died, and withoul his consent a remission
was broughl about
for these injured
persons vvhomhe himself was preparedf
to subjeel to afflictions.
Ami
in
conscqucncc
this fear
everyone
who hdthem
debtors of ancient Standing would remil the debt; and some ofthem broughltheiril
la
lo
the blessed
man
himself, and entreated
him
to
bless
[11]
LIFE OF HABIB.* ^--J.*9LiOO -.ooot ^-.J^i
11
.
vQj/ yV^J? ^:oo-/
U:sa^
oj!^
yOOU'^-*/
.ooC^Jl^ oo v3/j\cl.loCH ^-ij
^^ioJjL-O*
.loot
JlqJsj
U/^-o
^a^
otk^ojo otKiK-; ^.. tvi *-J0.^
-V i/
\oo ^o-Do
)^m\
yONjo/
JL*j/
ot/o .LicuV
JJ;o
,K...J-*o~
)
^^oli.lo
'jKi^o^ 66.
*
Ar
f.
'
a.
V^o/ ..o.i^J^j
jJ;
V-oij
y.-/o -.oA
J;ou>
J-a-
t
V--^ -
t3 ****>
J^7 J-^~ .W
-.JJ
^-*!
vj JioiaJ
^is
Kiou
v-jl^-.
v^alaiia-cH; .6C^
1.
Ms. um.; e Pesb. suppl.
J.
A
leaf or
more
here
lost.
while the fear and the terror of him went out thenceforth in every place And, as it is because he himself also travelled in all the districts of Syria.written in the blessed Job,
Who
hath contended with him and hath had
peace?
',
so
was
it
fulfilled in this spiritual old
him
in this matter,
and transgressed
his Orders,
man, so that no one resisted and raised bis head again.,
2 There was again another rieh man in the eity of Maiferkat who was a (ypaji.[jLaTeTov) several years old, and banker fa^;/;^-;
-ota
oi
ju_=>j
\-^?o ^3o .K-.JL*--;ou^>.
ooi
I^OfJ^ 06.
001 .-oto^o.
jJ
>J;
|ooi
^a-ioo
-.J-a..
la2S> Jils ^D
1.
An erasure
follows:
2.
Ms. t-om: corr.
v.
D.
and
1.
scave
thanks to God.
While he was exerting
his activity in theil
same
city,
ccitain persons l'rom thc counti v of the Persians heard of
because he was
near there, and they broughl liini two women, one who was persecuted by a demon, and anther who was harren of offspring, having been many years with her husband and ao1 having had children; and they continued entreating liim to pray for them. Bu1 he on liis side came up and made the sign
over the possessed
woman, and prayed, andbarren he prayed andyourself,that
laid
an inhibition upon thal Bulin the
demon, and
lie
immediately came onl of her, and she was healed.
eise of the onesaid,
who wassliall
madesi
the sign over herI;
andtime
Go and keep guard overhavea
you
and
at
iliis
next year lo! von
son
.
And
that
womanto
believed, and wentaller a
awav; and she leeeived conception and barepassed, she took himin
a son: and,
yearin
liad
her arms, and
came
the
blessed
man
his
monastery; and he baptized and blessed him; and she returned rejoicing andpraising God.
Again there wasspenl
a certainil;
man. and he hadandthalfor
a
large vineyard,
and had
min
h
money upon
three
years running hail
and made
terrible
havoc of
vineyard; and,
when
thal
came down time came in
the fourtli ynar, he sei forth and wenl
wceping
to the old
man. and continued
.1
[13]
LIFE OF HAB1B.*.",_
13
.Jj/
^o/
.^V^ -\-?l
. ouiojJ
,
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Jot
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odAj; jL *~a
oot L*>V3 v*_3o!50 *3 .)jV^0_.ts-./
.J^4 tC*i fcC~J
&l^J
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..^s.^-Joo
-010^-
JJ
CD^)/o
JjU
U>
joOt
K-/j Otlo^
jV~ Jl^J /
Ooln^OO
^^ ;v,\,
QJSV^O
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Ot
Olp.l/
U*
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-
/.
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^oa
Jva-'/Joot
cxA vopo/)V-a
t^o -U 1^/-
-> I/o
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Ja-.
^.3ot
otto^oo
)jl>ov^?
vooC^
V*?/
-.K-.0.01
i^co/ o.*.^~ jjLJso^;Jj/;>oJ.*-o
kpo/V-.ro/;
J-ia-/>
v o_i^o/
ol/
,J>o
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.^.iol
f3
oA
Joot
^v*u^o
v ~\^Af.
j>o^^Joot
.Uji^-s t^^i?
y^ >vJajo,
^
y^?
J-ootoJv-Q.3
4
v" b.
J,>
iij
M?
ool Jlv~/ -^?U/ J*^? Jfc^o;looi
Jl * ool)ooi
.)M-oV Jlo^. y^\ Jjjb
.)-
J)V,i-ao
M
..U laV
ota-K-./ *3o
.looi
J^j^o
JU^x^o
.yoot-uj^
looi
U^oo
the Lord heard the old man's voice; and that cloud passed away, and did not hrm even one leaf in it; and lo! l'rom that time, through the power of theblessed man's prayers,that vineyard remained withoutit,
hail falling
in
it,
while havoc was made
of every thing round
and
it
alone escaped.in her,after
Agin they broughtand helaid
certain
woman
to
him who had a demon
an Inhibition upon him, and he came out of her.
And
some years the old man feil sick, and was constrained to die; and his disciples came near and besought him to remove his inhibitins; and the And immediately blessed man removed all his inhibitins that he had made. And, when they said to that fiend retnrned, and appeared in that woman. him, How have von presumed, when you were laid under an inhibition by the blessed Habib?, he said to them, Las! evening he removed every Inhibition laid by bim, whileI
was standing
there, and
I
came
.
And when
they
came and
him a message, As for von. von And so ,,,. not al liberty lo dwell in a human being for ever and ever . hewasagain expelled by the power ofGod's word. There was again anothertold the blessed
man
he sent
womanharkod
in
a certain
village
who had
a
mad demon
in her,
a
woman who
nt
people like a noxious beast, and tore their clothes, and violently
assaulted manv, and,1
when they brought1s told.
her to the old man, she continued
Cf. rh.
".
where a simllar *tory
[15]
LIFE OF IIAB1B..qo^*ooiv-/
15
oii-flo/o
Ijzso
^*-3o
.toopdj
J-*x_=>o
ouio
loot
JJ
Js.,.^^0
JJLa-Lioo/
loo^-.j
).9t
*
\ .o
Joo K-/
JKnm:*? jKioo;/JLieL^o
)lv /
^>i
UN*,/.Jlo*-',;
Jl^aAl,.3
looi
J^S-i lo
um o mN))
loot
(-As
u>o
^*3uo
..^-*ou>
l^ieo.;
.^ff> Jls;
>Kj> ,_io |l.,-oM ^-bo ^-.IVlo
Ui^v/
o.fcoo
.otfco;o/
oiJ'^a.flo
"^iwoJJ
-.1,1/
ottaS.ot-s
Joi
^.oi
-Joot
v^
A1"
f.
5
a.
>o^_o otla. 1 yioj-B
^-.v~ AoS
^...ou
JK. x n.a
dtJLttiSi
^Ao^
^..lo
jlo
,).jLfia^
^otiLx^jio ^*-.p/Ljl.
^-.j
^J.i
.ot^oa.*.?
)v^/ ouv^a}
.*/ ^9i^ ,^-otlopoj
J~^ L^oa^s ouo
.^ \sl
^-~'i^*o .otfcC^io
y^\ Jooto jl_> o^ii Uv~/1.
w.*oio
.^wiol
)J
.^; -V^('
"^ i-^ )*-*?
erased.
howlinghis
at
him and seeking
to run
away.
And
the
old
man
stretched out
hand, and made the sign over her; and he laid an Inhibition upon him
and said,
In the name of the Lord you are barred from his creation same hour he went out of her, and she was healed and that woman became quiet, while everyone wondered and gave thanks to Gd, There was again another poor widow woman, and she had been taught,
And
the
;
the art of'drawing, and used to practise
it
and labonr
at
it
l'or
her necessities,
and she used to teach pupils.
And two
of her pupils, after a long time
during which she had spent labour upon them, went away learned and dcfrauded her, and did not give her her fee. everyone
when they hadAnd, becauserecourse to the
who was defrauded whether
of
little
or of
much had
holy Habib as to a deliverer of thoseto him, and informed him of her
affair.
who were wronged, And he wrote
this
woman came
a letter to these
pupils of hers the
paid her the fee for her labour.
them not to make use of her art tili they But they acted presumptuously and treated the old man with contempt, and did not comply with his order, and they began to practise the art. And the same day the sentence for their presumption overtook them; for thetongue of one was seized with an impediment
same hour,
telling
so that she could not speak at
all,
and the arm of the other withered and
16
JOHN OFt-a'
KI'III'.SIS.
[16]
v^J ^-".-^
[^^l *&'>
Aojl^so
[.jo]ot
r 3otk^ow. oi .)*>
jJo
..Pn^o
flQajj, o&. Tool .-'"
v
1.
Suppl.
\.
D.
and
1..
"*-'{.
2.
Suppl.
v.
D. and L.
'
2'i
lines lost.
became
like vvood,
and would aot turn.[entreat] the oldto
And immediately
[certain persons][her] toth-\
ran carrying [that poor woman'a
fee to her,
weeping, and entreatingHut
SO with them and
man; and she went with them, and[he] inli
continued entreating himthe evil-doer according to
forgive them.
prder not fo requite
[Ins]
evil-doing set
fort
incense and prayed and
madethem1
the sign over them, and the bonds were loosened, while he cautioned1 > 1
in aci
presumptuously against the word of God.
\-ain there was a certain rieh
man
in the city
against
whom manyagainsl
poor
inen used to complain that he had retainedfor
parchments
(x^p*")?)
them
man} vears, and, when they had beenii.
paid, he used to
demand themhimto stop
again.
And, when the blessed mau heardhim.
he sei ou1 and vvenl toil.
to entreat
And. when thal
man heardbe shulin
of
he orderedsothat
themand
him
at Ins in;
door, and the door lo
his faceal
he should not
come
and
the
old
entreaty'
the
man continued standing whole day. And he
the
door
sending him an
was
distressed
and
he \vep1
1
>
e lim--
111
t:
LIFE.
OF HABIB.,\jOJL^~; )jL^OoN_3o^io/1'
j;
^^-5vO^-.>--.1 J^OOJJ[;
.
.
Jo
kAf..i.:
.Q^j
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\.X>1]
Uv~
sa.*^-,;
.]^oi>
jJ-a-i
yOoiLaS.
-.^^[otj]
)U"-\^-^-i]
\
)^ sJ
m\ o
)^-t-o
)
|^o voio^
yaij,
'opo[J
JA .^-.owt^^o?
I**[*j^a_=Ljik^o y^\
j
)
j
)ajL;.i./
Jk-Va^j
,-^otJ
.
i
.n.^nA
\
r.
5
v
b.
JJO.-XJ
-.L-^-^O
vOOU>j
J^io^,vS/jJL./
^-^.Ot
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^Q)O t ,>^0.\l
J-^*^?
J^V*
^^::
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JjO^J
jjjOl]
JJLSO^J .yOOi-N-./
'U[jLL-o]
JloiLa. JL^o] Jil/o
l
JJLfSO}A[o]
jLu.;o
:
JloV*!^;
J;|oij
j ojj;v.
Vr*^.
>k-=>
1.
24 lines lost.
2.
Suppl. from the end of eh.
2
f.
10 i- a
.
:i.
Suppl.
and
L.
S
Ms
HT-/.fol.
distressed
in
confidence in the divine
power
that
was
in liim.
he said to them,[in]
Go; and, when you have seen'
these beasts, say to themare not permitted
a lond [voiee],
Habib the sinner [says that vouin this
to taste of
village' .
andsaid
to
the
Company
thev
dayacts that have
been recordedrest,
in
Order to glorify him
we comprise in the low who performed them,in
aeglecting the
while
all
of us
who
are at this time
the
body
testify to
the truth of the things that have been written,
and have seen and know
clearly
each one of them, together with the blessedwell,
men
the disciples of the sainl as
among
w
hom
the
lirst
and the
niost eminent are Z'urawill
and Hanau yaspecial
'
;
which blessed Z'ura, of
whom we
also
compose'In-
a
record,But, after
[began] vigorously to walk wbollv in the footsteps oftlie [old]
saint.
Habib had marvellously run
in this
path of heroism, and of actaof
of
power and miracles and signs and-
mighty deeds, and deliverance
end f Chi
2.
PA1R. OK.
T.
XVII.
F.
1.
:'
Z'URA..
than and aspring broke forth and came oul inabundance, many times more soim., iv,"l,
i
1
1
i
8.
'
V
IV^O
ojoil.
oj_*
^o
.ojil.
C^3
jl^JL.^ioo
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^o^.
j3a-o.m..^3/
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Ot^n
IV
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^A;
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U-sk-co/JL^>j
+oo .0001 voch.^^>/.
(..ira ^^>--.t->
U-sal^ta.Ji
.aioio
*jLioo
J,i
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a/ ? w.pol/
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jjl
C*-^30
J.^.00
^^ V
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xmoopcu: ]k-V^-x>Jf>0
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xsicu./
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\l'\
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(.^3
j.*\ otQ-^-s o+ji.\
^a o
)
1
1
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f^^N_3i -Ol ^OO^O+JQLi^ .^o/o CH^JiQ.L\ Offco>J^.j^0V-*2C
,i.lo
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^3 JJLj^pt
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JJ/
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)!'/
^-;
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Lioa^ ^^-^oi_=>
).i^aaN ov^3,o .ouooi ^'^oJXa./o ou_. "^o.
-^^o
p
,\s^y^J.\
Jjlsql^j
clenched his
fist (?)
as tightly as he could in violent rage, and Struck himselfsaid,
upon Ihe breast andis
You
are apostates and corrupters, and the svnod
more, and.
it from you any you wcre true men, God would show me a sign byyour hands. And he who anathematizes the synod contends with bis life . On all this
true,
and
I
will not consent to hear these things against
if
commotion taking place greatblessed man,
terror overwhelmed all tbe magnates; but tbe when he saw tlial lie bad decreed death against anyone who anathematized the synod, was kindled with zeal and liis beart became hot
within liim as
il
is
writlcn, and
fire:
seized bis
body
1
,
and immcdialelv heChrist our
wrni
slraiglilis
against him, and said
The synod which diyided
Lord
anathematized nola
only by us, but also by the angels of heaven.bu1 the
Ami, since you seeka
sign, by believers signs are not required;a sign outside
Lord will not show youheweiit out in violenl
you, but in your
own
seif
.
And
so
rage, while threatsafter a
were also being forged againstfor
the blessed
man.to
I'.ni
day tbe sign
which he asked appearedhea',
inliis
him according
the blessed man's saying,
in lhai
was smitten upon
head, and his understanding was taken away; and
fearful
swelling coveredIns wife,'
him1.
!
.
mit
'1
human shape was3,i
ool recognised in
him
insomuch thalrroni
Ps.
xxxu,
1.
2.
Sc. Justinian.
3.
Mich,i
who
i'epeats
Uns passage
nur
text]
his face
'.
'
ihisremind
ofProc, Hist.
An
and
in the story
which there follows the monk
is
perhaps
Z'ura.
25
LIFE
F
Z'URA.
o^j \^lo&.
otlKj/ s3/; JjLl-/ .Jju^JL; jloiO;
.
'
JLJ_~J,,_io
*V^o? J^Jupcui. ^^.Kj
..cmK^jl^' Jjoojk..i
K^J^ma
..looi
.otla\,_a^'
^a^J
JujJ Ku^tjji
jj
..^.1 )t^DQ.OLO ^?I jJ.aio/ */ jj/oJJLJjj
,op
CH^^iOO -.j>OQ-QJ; ^.CXobO^ JJvj
..JjLJSQ^
loi Ji -a>0
^3
..-cna^iw ojjooi Jjl3 jtOsJus ch-so -.)la\,
U-sa^
t~2u^o
.K*^^
Jl/
joi
.oda\
oAJjoi*.)'!/
Joot
>m - q ^oo
.JLxoot
oul^.^ A9
^^iet-iXio
-.^tr*2..
J^^^
ouiocdS^/o
-.t^o
a
r.
v.yeu^olotla^,?..(./Vaio/;
b
y3
.jus ,J^a-^
^-.^ot ^_ioo
JKjl.^0 ch.^.1^1
).xicu.oo
yOOi^sJL^ J^a>oi^3
.-jLaLXO
jL^, ^^^.io
1.
Mich.
(p.
282
ins.
w^S^.
_
%
,
ver an erasure.
3.
Ms.
-ovs-
be
who was very cunning, hid him secretly in the Chamber, lliat it might not known to the city that he was already dead, and exeept two physiciansslie
and two chamberlains
did not allow anyonc to
she sent intercessors to the blessed
man
to askat
him
come in to him, while to come and pray forin the
him that he might recover, and he wonldAnd, this mcssage having rousedsorry;liim,
once make peace
church.
he went and saw
him, and he.
was
and he said
to
him
:
Lo! the sign wliich you songht
And thet
blessedto him,
man made
a prayer, and the
same hour
bis
understanding returnedit
and he recognised the oldset
man and knew
that
it
had so happened
him becanse he hadwhile the blessed
him
at
naught; and he went on entreating himall
to
pray for him that he might be healed, and he might do
that he ordered;
man
said to
him
:
This happened to you, becanse von
tempted the Lord your God like an unbeliever, and songht a sign . And thenceforth the dread of the blessed man feil upon him, and in fear he usedto assent to bis requests in everything; only the Stateof the
church he didnol
not set right, because the delinquencies of the Amorites
were perhaps
yetfull; but he ceased that violence
and these threats, while the power of(icocppviffia)
the old man's prayer thenceforward gave freedom of action
to all
26J.iaal'i.-.i
JOHN OF EPHESUS.s-.6i
[26]
.-oocm)ooi
.
t
t
S\
J^.J.jJ^^ J.^*.aoo^.i "^i. .-'joot
-.loot
J.:sch...
il/
^ia;oJlaio;t-3
.J^aoao
i-a-i
w^sKxioi
t-J- : N>v
ojfcs-ljbo
yo^
joCSx jiioJiifflV);
^*o
Jll/ +3 Ufc-oj-^~*0|j
J^oooi^ j^op* J'OAJ U-=x^?,6t^3jAsJUi-Sioo
^
l.^oa^.oo .iooi
oiLa^.
-Jooi
'p-^10 -oto^j.-^Jj-O--/
an ^^.ja-jeLaoo J^Kio.l\. M ;
Iq\. )|_^cdo J-iVoi {j'^no.d
p
Jooi v *.^.x oiilj-s;
Jjiol^-3)^.^
O.^
.VCL.
^3
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N.s ^>ooo.ijJal*.
.Joot
d.iaA;
^js.i, jJV-V^-2 J-iooof^ JLx^JJoOt
Jla-^.js
j.jpo,.\i
oot ootJoOt
JjLS^i Jj^-S .JioJ^iO Kl^pOLS....
KJOooot
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I.I.NL5
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v>
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Ji-V i0
a
r.
s
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^ao1.
''()a^i.io)
l^-'^o )lk*.i^Q.^ oa*;
.v.a.:.ij
joot
M to.anotherr,.
J-v^aS
Jjoi
Grammar3.
requires Ihe addilion of ov^-v. imv.I>.
Lhe senl< nee
is
completed
in
\\
. i
>
.
..
Ms.
^o-
_
MS
.
Uan-^l: corr.
and
L.
-
i.
Ms. o^^a-
-,.
Ms.
=^3^/.
_
Ms. um.
the believers in every cityblies,
and
in
every place, and they openly hcld assemof death
which
'
before his
coming the threat
was decreed, against
anyone vvho was discovered liolding an assembly.blessed X'uia reached as far as
And
theto
fame of the
Rome, while God continuedliis
work signs
and deeds of power llirongh him, and Lhe wliole city resorted to him, andhe
was made protectoril.iy
of the poor as in
country, while tnany great affairsthe Senatorssi/wX-n-mwi),
were resolved by him before the king and'\i'i\
all
whileAfter
he
was engaged
in the
same
contesl on behalf of the faith.
man had been some time in the royal city, the man deserving of evil meinorv who had at lliai time been made patriarch in Home, whose name was Agapetus, was summoned by sinne cause, and went down tu the royal \ a man who was a grievous blasphemer, in comparison of whoselhe blessed^?
Corr.
l'idiii
U"0^=-
2.
Mich.
(p. 285)
uoio*m3.
::.
M>. o-sow
bc found depicted anywhere, while he presumptuously promulgated his blasplieraies, which did not retard for him the reward that This man therefore, having been magnificently reeeived his labonr deserved.
nor her likeness
by the hing with much display, inasinnch as he was not aware of all the evil of his inind, when he had come in, inasmuch as he was annoyed by thereports of the blessed Z'ura,hing, saying,to turn the
brought a complaint aboutthe Syrian deeeiver1
liim
b.efore
the
Whereforer
is
who
is
here allowed by youlic
world
to his
deeeption
?
But the king, inasinnch asI
knew
well the old raan's power, said to him,is
a
stubborn
man who
does not fear
And what can men d. But he,all
do
to
him?to
For he
in
zeal in the case of the blessed
man
lirst,
aecused him saying,the
him so that he will submit, or be expelled fromthe king gave
show Ins me do to And countries .order
Let
him
bis will, saying,
If
you are stronger than
he, do as
you
wish
.
But
this
man2
in Ins
arrogance without delay sent some of
his
own
leading011
men and
the king's to the blessed
man
himself
(a
large villa at Sycae
the other side1.
had been given him by the queen, and he was staying there
Mich.
'
In bis sorceries'.
2.
Sc
of the
Golden Hrn.
28
JOHN OF EPHESUS.
[28]
Jto
ya ^iolo,j>
..Joot
ooul/ jtoi^io
,_o
.J-l^>q^
^
-sft
nX
J_p omlSj ^o-cd
-)^ooi; )-^o'^o o^
,_^
Jl/
..^ K-X^-Aoi
,^.> )il/^--j
Jjou vAosl;J^j/
oolo
.
'ot,J
.^>K^
\j\
\'l\
Jjlsc4
H>
y*
..^
^)o^Jio
.-^-;o iaXij Jj^OOS
fco/
JJo
-.vjujj
)jL*.lfl
JN._so_JJo
^.\oo
^_3l^1) jh
-.^:-^-;
|V*
|i\^ft
J-i
JjlS^&,
JJo
,^\
^-^a^o -.^
^*-w* J^il v3/j Jjl3_/
.vra^ic^oas/ ,-^j
Jjiot
.yKx*^
v^-co Ol
.JJ;
joi^Ss
^^lj
J)o,^o
o
^*A_9*
Jl* -.JL\U ^ju.
a
r.
8
.Jlj-.p.
jtoa*. o^iol/V3l^>_jo
ot
)-o;
*2^_- ^-^oi ^.j ^D .vofco/
^--J^t-.
\okj/,_a_3o
a.
^otoK*J
jjj',!^
^oVa^.^saAJO
o m'j;
.
vOOt^.^Q-^. aa \
1.
M*.
oi->o.
wilh
all liis
disciples; frsei:
il
was thc
first
days ofthe
fast),
while thc prcsumpa
tuous
mau
liiniself
against the blessed
mau by sending himis
message
in these
terms
Tlic
kingandat
the patriarch' have ordered that either
youto
come
here, or
I
come theret
once; and
it
cpiilc
impossible
i'or
von
reinain longer in
h is country, unless.
you do the king's Order and ours, and
tnake accord wilh us
When
ihe blcssed old
man
heard these things,
lio
jeeredlaid
al
his arrogance, tellingfor us
them
to
say
to
him,
We
have a law
vdp.o?)
by our truo King, thal we arc no1 to receive anyone in these make answers fc-apiceis) ins uch thal nur door is closed, aml accordingly we are nol free to answer either you or ho king. Bu1 waii for us tili the fiftb day of the weck when we sliall opcn the door, and whal God knows tobe right he will himself perform after we have opened between us. But for the presenl we will not voluntarily answer you; fr you seek to acl wilh violence you know . When lhal wretched mau learned these things, lie was filled wilh violent rage, and ordered ihchh'
down
days, nor
;
l
il
il'
magistet to take excubitors and irons and bring
the blessed
man
across.in
WhenI.
ihal
man
as he
was ordered had taken
the irons and
embarked
a
M.
[29]
LIFE
OF Z'URA.
29
q
r.
Li../ i
^o(ooo-i:
oolon
A o ";.oooi
).i4
o\.'.xxjx>
jl..>,\
LsL^oo
-.^..^V-aS.jJo
oaAjj
jju/
^3
Jl
m\ool
^a2l^o(^6
Lyn
..
s;
.aiok.'al
a.^ v -
L^!^>i
^-./
)
i
.v
)-,.j' fJ t
Liao .^^X^. ^is_flOo Jj-io -.sJl'^ jl. ^io Ls
otJ-io
>jjoK^./o
1.
Ms. .aa-^aau
cutterl'etcli
(^pd;j.wv)
wilh die military force and they
had
gone that
lio llie
mighlother
the Idessed
mau, when he was on the point
of landing on
wind took thc cutter (Sp6(/.wv) and turned it back, and sidc, something And again a second time it was im the city side whence he had started. they returned, and approached; and, when they were just about to fix fche ladder (ax.Slx), it was as if a man grasped the boat (xocpaStov) and witli mightylike a1
'
,
force placed
it
where
it
started.
Again accordingas
to that
which
is
written2,
They knew
not nor understood
thatthey were Walking in darknessrhou.ivzpto;jif it
he was enraged against the cutter-menlazy,
was they wlio were
and they proceeded to go onlittle
board.is
And, as they were struggling and advanced
nearer, like what
written aerain,
The Lord was making warofit
for
Israel
\
thercllieirit
cameboat
l'orth
something
like a llash
lightning and suddenly smote
(xapaioy),
and the bencli was torn put ofasit
from end to end, andthe
sprang
away and mounted upwardswretched man understoodthat
l'ar
as
eye can sec; and then that
was God's power which was contendingquickly wilh cries of lamentation theyto
on behalf' of the blessed mau.
And
escaped to shore; and they went and told these thingsthem, and everyone was seized with wonder.1.
those
who
senl
Ms. um.
2.
Ps. LXXXII,
5.
3.
Josh., \. 42.
30
JOHN OF EPHESUS.4*' oto-o^^VotjLj/
[ho]
\
I.
s
wVmfo^-.^-;
V"
I).
^
^_, ?
^
..jul^i.^ y.^1 Jouolo -.vOtH-uVtJLie^ol,.io
j_io_i.o
:JjiXi uJ;%3
^^/o
:LJ^^s
-oia3,,.
K y^\^>-=>? -l
:
)oot
^jl~*
.^o; ^iS^i^j
JLjLSa-O
Otio^
L^wA
^.
^s^; j-i~a^o :U\^>Jooi
^-.Ol .^OIQJL^
^JlXXJ^ JoiSm dk^.;L.joJL/,
^-.ks ^aAJjoi^
,_*>
^.^,
^^
iocx
ji^ojtoo
odoJioux* la_\
^^soi
Lukx
.^.Jv,/,ocx>a3 ,_*>
-.o^~ ^io>
K~jo
^
J^--*
^*
jJ/
.^ijl^ K_3;o/o ^ioa.3..oujl^s J-po -oi^w^io
^suo y^lo
Jmcl
p
K^Kj
ov^
^x;.Jooi
v
iVi, jjLO./ .jbj
U*aaX* JAC^-,, jlj^o,!.^
U\ia3o Lo^uaI
Jjouso
^/
-owljl-.jooto.6t
voc*^a^
^o
j^,
J-^o;>^j)
^coj '|^*_s Uia^j
061
J^oa*\ JL*^
^/
oi3,o^,
U>^
J^l-j
^^\I
ooi
iioa*^
ooo ,,.iw> )o^J>ai.
^,
J-sj^ J.jl*l~\, -.po/o
J^o*
-"^
I..1
voo(^x^1-
Jou>p28fi)
)NX-,o
.slcoo
o,^a-
^^^o
Jooi
^a^.\
Jjl^
Mi. h
in-,
\rtli-
Hul,
when
thal-all
man had begunan Instrument
lo
promulgate
bis
blasphemies openly,
and poured Ins
into the ears of the king
and the people ofthe beretica
whoon
rejoiced
their blasphemies,l,is
foul
(opyavov) had been found Cor the spirit of and they had begun one and another to become drunk dregs, and he was forging threats againsl the believers everywhere,
thal
'nasmucli
asin
the fear ofhis case,
God was not beforesaidin
his eyes,
a
suddenly
thal
happened
which was once
the caseHin
the Assyrian,
Againsl
whom
hast thouf
opened[srael?
ofthe arrogance of mouth and lengthened
th 3 tonguc, save againsl
the Flolyii
~" " "1 1 '
lllis
man
'"
ll|s
tongue, and
\ So therefore the Lord grew long and protruded beyond his
s"
tha1
'thandcame down to his breast, makinga fearful sighl will, greai swelling, '"' was twi c lanced in ii. while terror and trepidationthe sightof him.
whosavvhimal"'
And
seized all inthis torment and manifest sentencefifth
roquital Cor his blasphemy he lingered tili the which the blessed man fixed as the term and said.vveel
JCH^N
.^_i/o
p y,^ ^a-iJ->*-io
Jjlsl/
.'t-io/o
^oiaSi^;J-S.
J.)oivj3l*\.so
-.oiu-^^-"^JoiSsJLjJIJio
.oiv.iQ.
oi^? )t~2^ y-*l
y.*\J-'V^
t^sJJ./
vDotsj.1 jJoJ.a_.*
.'vk-^si.;j-.\j.ja>o
)La~^?
^ 3 !"^,
**h~
.diK-OQ.^
^onI.
.^.ia^
"^N
aio_.j/
..^.jL^'tvic
t
^.-.^.^^i
Joi
^a^ioi
\
r
b.
Ms. oin.
Iiad
threatened the Itlesscd
man
rcceived
liis
burial
und perishedllial
1,
and
fear
accompanied by sliame seizedthe blessed man's words,
all
the parLisans of
wretched man, and
joy reigned over the believers everywhere, while everyone
was amazed
at
how God wrought this miracle in him. When the partisans ofthat wretched man could not by reason oftheir shame find whal to say, they devised a plan, saying, Whereas on the day which Z'uradecreed for the patriarch he dicd, he used enchantments against him, and hetliat
died ongloritied,
same day
.
And
so these inen
and the believers rejoiced; and even the blessed
were ashamed and God was man liiniself wonldwilli his
confess that
God had heardand
his voiec,
and had awokenusedlilvO2.
sentenceof his
against the blasphemer.blaspliemies, he prayed
For,
when
he heard the opennessto
rcappviriaalall
said, as he
pray and say
seasons,
'The Lord awaked like a slecper and
a
man
vvho hath shaken nff his
wine, and smote bis enemics behind liim'of
Lord behold the blaspliemiessilcnl,
presumption against thee, and 'Be not quid nor
God; sincelo!lifted
tliine
enemics make lumult. and they
who
hate thee have
up the head
l.
22 Apr. ncr. to Lib.
Pont.
:
but this was Tuesday, and nol18
in,
Lent.lie
\
Easteia
A-as
23
Mar., andin
A. addressed a tetter to
Justinian ob
Mar
Jaffe\ sul
anno
if
died onis
Thurs.
Lent,
ii
must have been20Mar.;but seep. 30,n.2.Verj probablythe wholein Lib.'/..
storjol
baseless and the date given
Pont, right.
'
/ach.
Rh.2.
'
nx.
19)
gives a similar accounl
his
death but withoul
mention of
or indication of date.
Ps. lxxviii, 65, 66.
32
JOHN OF EPHESS.
[32]
JJ
J,-^^?
^
?
JIojJj>o .Jooi'Jjlsoio
JjI:
-a*>~s
^ooifco^o
oiloJSp Ja*o4 ?
U>V*
^ M J^
.^,),^. f
L|^1
vo6.aa^)y^
.001
J.13^^
lo^j
.Jo^JJ
JJCOO JOO. jod' uf
^6
jl
OtlQ^j
^
J-^?2
^
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ji*^o
J^
v,-.)^ JIo^^ls; .-^oiq^ioo^is^ ow* '^cuojJl,
otlo^--so
^otoioa*^
p)J
v3/
.JoC$S ?
K,.^ J^ojLi^> ..Ji.~-o
^^S^o
oit^^;!
.pos^ j^ J*^ ou*> *^.l jJ? ^ia*>o Jooi ofcO ^^oo J -JUL^
^
-oio^o;-o.
-ot
v
\ >
\
JL~^* x^
v oulVloijjjoio
Jfc^L, 06,yj-a>
Jooi
'^0 .jo^oj -aaVas ^^ oul^o^^coo p;
M
^o 01 J^t*
^^Uj-oto^/
-S
^o
);o,,
)ooi
.*Joot
^'
-oicia/
^^
odaaL w-fi; 'Jo-^o11
J^oo/
Mo
.Mjs^~~
Jooi
J^l^
7 ;,/ JJ^a
,-io ov^ Jooi
7.:-^? Jo~io; -ot oikXio;JfcOL^jlN
'"oi^a^ ..J^o^s/;
Af.9va.
9/j
J^o^ .oiV^o
J1J^>
lo^; jbcoa_s
*
Jj^/ -.JK^L.'
1
HerebeginsanexlraclinBf.(i
ll^o
W
.
_8.
:;.
^,.
_
headed \ii;
Ephesi ac totius Asiae Marcus.Religiosissimo
Tw
TiiiiwtxTai "
i-i
Upo(lovaz-
Vlnacensis 256,piluli
336-341. T eccleslae cathedraUs 9-20,Parisinusliis.f.
=
Toletanus Caf.
126-128".
adlnbito codice Mosquensis 423 (apud Vladi.
p
=
275-277,
alia
manuI.
ac
mirum 245 267-268. Miror tot viros iloetos eundem textum lanquam ineditum toties edidisse,rinn saepius praelerita aelatein lucem prodiisset. Lectorem etiam monitum volo, monumenli partes Parisino 1218, ex quo fiel V Huxerunt, inverso
reliquus codex.li 150 v \ Prolegomena.
A =
VmbrosianusDosilheidixit
899,
148''*-
Editio
patriarchac
intertasii,
Tomi quem
Amoris
in
1! Editio 1 usebii Renaudol, [698 p. 26-28. Gennadii patriarchae Constanlinopolitani komiEucharisliae Parisiis, 1709), liae de sacramento p. To-77: quam editionem repetiil Migne, /'. G., \ Editio i.brahami Noro^ 160, p. 529-538. Marci Ephesii >;
''
twv xoivwtoi;
eorum qui cum
ipso communicant, ut preces
vouvtidv aTi Ttva auvEu;aaOoti
rj
auu.'.fopE'o-ai
fundant vel sacris operentur una
cum
sacer-
EX
TOU
r,U.ETE'pOU''
uE'pou;*
'lEpsuai6,
toi;
7tp;
Ta
dotibus partis nostrae ad haec peragenda invitandis,
TOiauT7IOTE
7cpoerxXri8e!(Ji
oo;xv
tum praebeatpropositum
qui
non plene
et
penitus
oiaaapTupooiaixou-'-'
evwtciov
7rasaTuydvT(.jv
meum
noverint, dico et obtestorviris hie prae-
koXXcov
a;ioXdvii)v
avopwv, w; 23 oute BouXouair,
coram multis honestissimisquesentibus, nieillius
outs Os'/opiai 21 tt,v touXgivbivtavtytyf,i
t/,v
2
''
tcv 21 |xet''
aTOutv);
neque probare neque suseipere
t irapairav, ooau.w;, oute-'31,
etti
2s
aut sequacium eius
communionemvivo,
nullo
9
aou, oute p.ETa-'" UviTovtoc3: '
wairEp oOoe 32
plane
modo, nequeut
dum
neque post
T/;v
3,1
yEyovuiav evioatv xai,
oo'yu;aTa
Ta XitiaTOu,
mortem,
neque patratam unionem nequeille
vixa
!1
arrEp eoe';to aTo'; te
jwi
o'i
jjlet'
Latinorum dogmata, quae
fautoresque eius
xai 7tcp tou oe^evoeeiv 30 TocuTa xai
t-Jjv
TcpoaTaaiav
suseeperunt, quibusque defendendis hanc sibi
P
TUTr,V E'lAVYJO'TSUO'aTO 37Trj; ExxXv"|iji';oy;jiO(T:i)V'
E7TI XOtTOtO-TpO^YJ18.
TWV lOoiv
dignitatem
comparavit
ad
perdenda
sana
IlE'Trei'aaai
yap xpiSto;,
Ecclesiae dogmata. Certissime enim teneo, me,
oti
oaov
a7roouo-Tau.ai
toutou
xai tojv toioutojv,
quo longius abdisiungar,
illo
et
eiusmodi
hominibus
()ew(0(77TEp
xai Train^(Opl^OU.Ott,
toi;
"
ayioi;Evou.OCl'1
eo
propius
Deumsanetisquepariter
omnesqueillis
TOUTJVxott
OUTW?
TT)
sanetos accedere; ac quatenus ab
dividar,
Xr^Eic
toi;
ayioi;
iratpui,
toi;
OEoXdyoi;
eatenusEcclesiae
uniri
veritati:
Patrlbus,
Tr; ixxXiqaixcE(/.evou;''
wiTiEp au 42 7TEi6oaiot7Tooii
L.
2.
dxfi L.
:
.'S.
o?o>I).
TPRN.
'i.
a>,).a
ex
a)./.i
corr.
M.:
5.
oin.
AD.lin.
MPAR.sup.20.
12.1'.
7.
Eixi'o;
A. A.
xr,ia
13.[iou
Expunov A.
(i.
8.
-^v
oiv
A.
'.i.
e>/j;
TP.o Q ci axt
:
lo.
vaXoeu;
teUut^;
AD.10.-f)
II. Ti(tv
(ivj]|ioin5vi;
14. X).w;
MPR\L.
i'X>.o;
A
:
aXXou D.:
16. itpoxJ.vifiEtTi:
L.21.
17.
o-Ax;
D
:
um.
18.
xv
xai T.:
D.
15. 7rpo;
Ta ToiaTaoin.
7ii-,;;:i
TDL
nxov.h) A.
24.
eioooi
ex axoitw-i corr. sup.
lin.
MosquensisI!.
siown/i
A.
om. T.in':
23. io; xityJ;
A.
ots 5j/o(iai:
um. D.1'.
25.
t/)/
29.
26.
twv um.
PDN.
A. 22. xai 27. out' A.
T
:
vi-.i im.
?&)?,;
um. LoSe:
ad mai'gojtsIt:
28.
-zrj;
um. R.33.Tr,v
zr Cufj
30. tov .nlil.
1'.
31. |iou
add.
AD.rij;
:
32.
xai add.
A.
AD.:
um.
H.
corr.38.
ml marg. Mosquensis.ooY(x.at)v
AI).
35.
-i
om:
MAPRN.
36.
toSe
Se^svte-Jwv
ExxAYiuia;
APRN.
39.
miToi; xai add.
AI'UV
10.
41. alvoO[tai
A.
42.(
o3
cv
43.xai
34. Xativtx ex ita/.txa M. 37. Epiv^oTEoavTo A. laTpi add. MAPRN. MAB:
toi; iuvtseiue'voi;
Vi. no5iiaTa(iai
45. 5i5aax. Tr
;
exxX.
AD.
46.
om. N.
47.
i'i
cum tempus nonEcclesiamqueita
solum,
uyiatvouataxb;
e,
/
>.)ixTwv
:
om. PltN.
T.
15Ttva
:
xt ye
A.
18.
D.
19.
Post
ivx' ijio
aOiov om. l'KV qui propterea xar liabent. punctum posuil H. contra orationis seriem. :i.irai(
17.
e!zi'.i;
A.
xxo5o;;a;ev
ev otiT.lin.
aut$
ADIva:
om.A.
21. vaxaX'J'J'at xat
miijtij.ay
N
:
avaxaXutJiei xal ouji.
A,
;i.
2'.i.
xot;1).
A.
30.
8EXij
cl{
e;j.,
ouXr^Eic,
iaoi
apivto"r/iv ta1,a, Stattxr,v'
"
xa xwvxpi-
10
meorum dogmatatem*
fideique orthodoxae verita-
iraxE'ptov u.ou
oyu.axa xat
2
xrj; 6p6o8o5;ia.n-i>
ac supra
"n e
corrigendi,posuerint,37.
videturj gratis .
xJ-Z'isimI
10.
c;v
''
U.
Yia?15.
mn.
13.
.'l\
,
\
[6.
r/siu^rsy.m-i A.
17.
mc
;i7t:Tv
mn. A.
i
Eulliymius
Secundu
palriarcha ab Oclobri vel
Novembri anni
1410 ad
Marlium anni
[416.
[355]7ravTXr),TtEpt?Trfc
XXIV.xavxsiiOsv'
MANUELIS MAONI RHETORIS BER DR MARCO.jjtr)
4Atopsvx{a
itEp
om. P.
s. ffujJwtapEtX^Oei !'
9.
Om. A.A.
1".
-
iv6\i
A.
II. o-jax46ri?
P-
12. xx^irj^^iii
A.
13.
!$ap-/o-'
jxpoTETaxTat
A.
14
6 901.16.Si'
15.
Ntxai'tov
A; legendum,17. 6eoxanXat(
oppidanorum nomen adhibeatur, Ntxot^uv vel Nixaeuv.
eyflapjjtEvoi
A.
404erant
DOCUMENTS RELATIFS AU CONCILE DE FLORENCE.apertissimi, priscam
[356]
Graecorum
circa
TraXaiav
'EXXiqvwv
itepi'
8eou;,lv