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The Cappadocian Fathers, Women and Ecclesiastical PoliticsAuthor(s): Philip M. Beagon
Source: Vigiliae Christianae , Vol. 49, No. 2 (May, 1995), pp. 165-179
Published by: Brill
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1584393Accessed: 22-04-2016 17:34 UTC
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THE CAPPADOCIAN FATHERS, WOMEN AND
ECCLESIASTICAL POLITICS
BY
PHILIP M. BEAGON
It will be the task of a future generation of social historians to explain
the explosion of interest in the role of women in the early church seen
in the last twenty years or so. Averil Cameron has analysed some of the
contemporary factors at work, prominent among them being the issue
of the ordination of women.' Various factions in the modern
theological debate seek to interpret the ancient texts in ways that sup-
port their respective positions. But there is a further problem; the
evidential status of those selfsame texts to which each side appeals. This
question also has been tackled by Professor Cameron. She wishes to put
us on guard against the rhetoric of the Cappadocian Fathers, especially
the two Gregories, when they wrote about women, in particular the
sister of Gregory of Nyssa and Basil of Caesarea, Macrina:2
...for just as real women were denied an answer to the rhetoric of their por-
trayal, so a male author ostensibly writing about women was writing about
authority and control, and about the resolution of irreconcilable polarities.
Like the other major writers of the period...each of them also wrote on
Christological themes and on the theory and practice of virginity.
One would not wish to argue with the contention that we must under-
stand the way in which the church fathers say what they say. But form
and content are not necessarily uneasy bedfellows. Indeed I hope to
show how the recoverable historical data actually explains the highly
favourable rhetorical portrayal of Macrina with which we are con-
fronted in the Vita Macrinae and the De Anima et Resurrectione.3
I shall also try to make a wider point. It may well be true that one
can see the writings of Basil and the two Gregories on virginity and
related topics as part of a 'repressive discourse' aiming at control and
subordination. But one should also acknowledge that those same
patristic sources enable one to paint a very different picture. Verna
Harrison has well shown how the theological attitude of the Cappado-
? E.J. Brill, Leiden, 1995
Vigiliae Christianae 49, 165-179
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PHILIP M. BEAGON
cian Fathers towards women is much more positive than is often
imagined.4 She has demonstrated how it is the first creation account in
Genesis 1. 27, where God creates male and female together, rather than
the second (Gen. 2. 22), where Eve is created from Adam's rib, which
underpins the Cappadocians' patristic anthropology.5 As a result the
stress in their thinking is upon the equality of men and women rather
than the subordination of the female to the male. Hence Basil writes
(Hom. on Psalm 1, PG 29 216D-217A), the virtue of man and woman
is one, since also the creation is of equal honour for both, and so the
reward for both is the same. Listen to Genesis. 'God', it says, 'created
the human; in the image of God he created them; male and female he
created them'. And the nature being one, their activities also are the
same; and the work being equal, their reward also is the same . Like-
wise in the Vita Moysis (GNO VII 1, p. 5, 1. 16f.) Gregory of Nyssa
speaks of male and female having an equal capacity to choose the path
of virtue or vice. The growth of ascetic movements in Asia Minor, in
which distinctions between male and female were blurred, surely helped
to mould Cappadocian patristic thought on this issue.6 It is interesting
to contrast the attitude of Basil and the two Gregories with the views
of a contemporary writing at Rome, Ambrosiaster. As has been recently
argued, he relies upon the second creation account in Genesis to support
his views on the subordination of the female to the male; perhaps in
reaction to the threat posed to clerical authority by the circle of high-
born female ascetics gathered around Jerome.7
On a theological level therefore the 'progressive' views of the Cap-
padocian Fathers on male-female equality have been demonstrated.
What this paper will seek to add is a demonstration of the importance
and vitality of women both in the actual development of ecclesiastical
structures in Cappadocia at the time and also in the theological debates
then raging. Peter Brown has written that:8
Macrina represented for Gregory the quiet antipodes of the world of the
city in which he and his great brother Basil had made their way at such
great cost. That world was always far from her.
In The Body and Society Brown creates a powerful image of Cap-
padocian Christianity as tranquil and gelid, offering a contrast with hot
deserts and frantic cities. Attractive though the picture is, to imagine the
Cappadocian religious female as only inhabiting some quiet antipodes
will not do. She is also to be found in the thick of the ecclesiastical
politics
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THE CAPPADOCIAN FATHERS, WOMEN AND ECCLESIASTICAL POLITICS
I I
In 375 Basil sat down to write a letter which marked the formal rup-
ture from his long-time friend and mentor, Eustathius, bishop of
Sebaste in Armenia Minor. Eustathius had been Basil's initial inspira-
tion in the monastic life, inducing him to give up his studies at Athens
in the mid-350s. However Eustathius' heterodox views on the divinity
of the Holy Spirit had caused Basil increasing episcopal embarrassment.
The final straw was the circulation by Eustathius of a purported cor-
respondence between Basil and the famous heretic Apollinaris, which
had allegedly taken place some fifteen to twenty years earlier. Basil was
therefore constrained to offer a defence of his theological orthodoxy:
I have never held erroneous opinions about God, or, being otherwise
minded, unlearned them later. The conception of God which I received in
childhood from my blessed mother and my grandmother Macrina, this,
developed, have I held within me. (Ep. 223)
Basil also appeals to the authority of his grandmother, in Ep. 204, as
his link with the authentic traditions of Gregory Thaumaturgus, the
acknowledged founding-father of Pontic-Cappadocian Christianity.9
Gregory of Nazianzus tells us (Or. 43, 6) how the elder Macrina pre-
served the faith in the hills during the persecutions. One should also
note the martyr Julitta, in whose honour a sermon of Basil survives (PG
31 237-262). While it is true that Basil begins by saying that it is hardly
appropriate to call Julitta a woman, given the way she has transcended
the weakness of her sex, it is more significant to note the positive role
envisaged for women in this text.'? As Julitta walks happily to the fires
of martyrdom she exhorts the women of Caesarea not to use the
weakness of their sex as an excuse for not equalling men in the practice
of virtue. Women, she says, are made from the same cupa,ua as men.
The correspondence of the Cappadocian Fathers and John
Chrysostom reveals that the rich female landowner was still a feature of
Cappadocia in the late fourth century. In the letters of Gregory of
Nazianzus (Ep. 57 = Bas. Ep. 321) we read of the vineyards of Thecla
supporting thirsty church-builders. Simplicia (G. Naz. Ep. 79) is a
woman of some substance. Basil does battle with the authorities over
the financial affairs of the widow Julitta (Epp. 107-9). In Ep. 296 he
gravely thanks an unnamed woman for the loan of a mule.'2 John
Chrysostom tells us that Olympias had land-holdings in Cappadocia
(Ep. 9.2). Such women as these were the bedrock of Cappadocian
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PHILIP M. BEAGON
Christianity. I shall demonstrate presently how correspondence with
such women was a forum for the discussion and definition of matters
of church teaching and discipline.
It is in such a tradition therefore that one must locate Macrina.
Gregory of Nyssa supplies the details about his family's social status
and wealth. The eldest in a family of nine, Macrina is the only one of
five sisters whose name is known. Indeed Macrina had two names. Her
mother Emmelia had a vision just before Macrina's birth in which it was
revealed that her child was to carry the secret name of Thecla. The
follower of St. Paul was a potent role-model in Christian Anatolia and
the name was common in Cappadocia at this time.'3 Indeed, not long
after Gregory wrote, one of the saint's good works was to protect
imperial messengers crossing Cappadocia.'4 That Macrina should bear
this secret name is one indication that Gregory's account is much more
than just a biography of his sister, as much recent research has
stressed.'5 But as well as being part of a wider rhetorical discourse the
Vita remains, on perhaps a more prosaic level, a vital source of pros-
opographical information about her family. Macrina is portrayed as the
rock at its heart. When her father dies she ensures that her mother does
not react with an unseemly display of grief. She undertakes the educa-
tion of the youngest son, Peter, and ensures it has a sound biblical basis.
There is no reason to doubt this information-certainly no way of
disproving it-but when Gregory asserts that Macrina was the crucial
influence in converting his brother Basil to asceticism, after he returned
from Athens puffed up by academic success, it is a different matter.
This does not fit happily with Basil's own account of his spiritual
development. What is missing in the Vita Macrinae is any mention of
Eustathius of Sebaste.
III
Eustathius is one of the more colourful figures of fourth century
ecclesiastical politics.'6 His ecclesiastical career goes back to the 320s
(Soc. 2.43.1-7, Soz. 2.24.9) and he may have been a pupil of Arius (Bas.
Epp. 130 and 223). Although excommunicated by the council of
Gangra, he was bishop of Sebaste by the late 350s.'7 Sozomen (3.14.31-
37) highlights Eustathius' role as a founder of monasticism, which we
know to have been of an extreme kind. The canons of the Council of
Gangra condemn the ascetic excesses of the Eustathians-in particular
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the abolition of gender differences. But interestingly, the ultra-orthodox
Epiphanius of Salamis concedes that many thought Eustathius
admirable for his life and conduct (Panarion 75).
One such was clearly Basil. In Ep. 244 Basil describes himself as
having been a slave of Eustathius since boyhood and in the earliest sur-
viving Basilian letter, dating from the mid-350s, Ep. 1, Basil tells how
he followed his mentor all over the near-east in pursuit of his
'philosophia', i.e. asceticism.'8 Eustathius was a leading figure in the
Homoiousian party in the 360s and 370s and for at least part of that
time Basil was his acolyte, attending the Council of Constantinople in
359-60: from Basil's point of view an inglorious episode. It is no sur-
prise that the information is preserved for us only in the fragments of
the Arian Philostorgius and in the words of Eunomius, albeit through
the distorting prism of Gregory of Nyssa's Contra Eunomium.'9 In 364
Basil acted as an adviser to Eustathius before the Council of Lampsacus
and it seems probable that Basil wrote his Contra Eunomium about this
time at Eustathius' request.
Relations between Basil and Eustathius were still good at the outset
of Basil's episcopate. Basil turned to two disciples of Eustathius, Basil
and Sophronius, when he founded his hospice (Epp. 119 & 223). How-
ever, towards the end of 371, Eustathius' disciples left Caesarea, accus-
ing Basil of Sabellianism. Basil (Ep. 119) sent his brother, Peter, to
Eustathius to explain things. Then Basil and Eustathius met in June 372
at Sebaste where they came to an agreement on the Holy Spirit. But
Basil now found himself shunned by the Nicene Theodotus of Nicopolis
on account of his Eustathian connections. In 373 Basil made a final visit
to Sebaste and secured Eustathius' signature to an 'orthodox' profes-
sion of faith. But the agreement did not last. Eustathius began to cir-
culate the Basil-Apollinaris correspondence, perhaps having doctored
it.20 Basil replied with Ep. 223. In 376 Eustathius was involved with the
Galatian bishops who succeeded in deposing Gregory of Nyssa.
This summary of Eustathius' career has demonstrated the close and
long-lasting nature of his ties with Basil. It also reveals the inadequacy
of Gregory's assertion that it was Macrina who converted Basil to
asceticism. Given the circumstances in which Gregory composed the
VM, in the midst of his battle against Messalianism, the damnatio
memoriae of Eustathius is hardly surprising. The temptation to assign
a more prominent role to Macrina is also understandable. All this has
been recognised before, especially by Gribomont. But I wish to stress
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PHILIP M. BEAGON
how this recoverable context of the circumstances in which the VM was
composed clearly, on one level at least, motivates the highly favourable
rhetorical portrayal of Macrina.2'
This is not to deny that Macrina was indeed a powerful influence in
the development of asceticism, both within her own family and also
generally in Cappadocia. Indeed it is the purpose of the second half of
this paper to illustrate the centrality of women in the ecclesiastical
debate in Cappadocia. As one scholar has recently stated, (feminist
scholars) have too quickly accepted the traditional view that the only
history of women within orthodoxy is a history of silence and
oppression .22
In the VM a contrast is drawn between the biblically-based education
Macrina provided for the youngest son Peter, and the traditional
rhetorical training his elder brothers received. Yet one should not read
this text in isolation: its companion dialogue is the all too often
neglected De Anima et Resurrectione. In this clear platonic imitation,
Macrina is a Socratic figure and is several times explicitly called
'teacher' by Gregory.23 The Macrina of the De Anima is very different
from that of the VM. We find her well-acquainted with traditional
pagan learning as she combats Gregory's ostensible doubts. Now of
course the traditional view has always been that the learning here is
Gregory's, not Macrina's. Here it must be said that Cameron's
approach to the text, which can happily permit the two apparently con-
tradictory portraits to co-exist, is an advance on the approach which
uses the VM as an unproblematic source of historical data while dismiss-
ing the De Anima as rhetoric. To maintain the consistency of my own
approach, treating the works both symbolically and empirically, I do
not dismiss the possibility of Macrina's possessing secular knowledge.
It prompts me to ask if there are any indications of the level of female
education in Cappadocia. There is not much, but enough to suggest that
the chasm between pagan and Christian learning suggested by the VM
is overdone.
Although Cappadocia is ill-served epigraphically, there are a handful
of inscriptions illustrative of the female role within the church. A stele
found at Aksaray (ancient Colonia Archelais) and dating probably from
the beginning of the sixth century commemorates the deaconess Maria,
who is eulogized with a Pauline quotation describing her good works.
A second stele of similar date commemorates another obviously pious
Christian woman Sosipatra, the name recalling Cappadocia's most
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famous adopted daughter, whose fabulous career is recorded by
Eunapius 24
But most relevant in the present context is the inscription of
Euthymia, which perhaps dates as little as twenty-five years after
Macrina's death. N. Thierry, who discovered it at Kemerhisar, (ancient
Tyana), in 1972, dated it on artistic grounds to the end of the fourth or
the beginning of the fifth century.25
Acknowledge this monument, passerby. Here lies good Euthymia, leader
in temperance. For that reason, Athenion, the most distinguished (eldest?)
of sons, superior to others, honoured her, the prudent mother, with a grave
and a stele; for this is the reward of the dead.
The most recent editor of the text remarks on its spelling errors and
barely recognisable metre-Cappadocia, after all, was meant to be a
place where the people could not speak Greek properly (Philostratus,
VS II 13 (258))-but the final verse is culled correctly from Homer (I1.
16.457 = 675). We only know that Euthymia was Christian from the
cross and the alpha and omega surmounting the text.26 Homer and
Christ were not always so starkly opposed to one another in Cappadocia
as an unwary reading of the Vita Macrinae might suggest.
The picture of Macrina uncontaminated by classical learning in the
Vita is purely ideological. In this context one might note the intriguing
comment in a 14th century manuscript of four letters of the female
Pythagorean, Theano. The author says that he has not also included the
letters of Macrina, because of the great chasm, chronological and
theological, between the two. Yet, he says, both women were great sages
in their different ways.27
IV
It remains to illustrate the active role women played in defining
church teaching and moulding ecclesiastical organization in Cap-
padocia.
First, Nonna and Gorgonia, mother and sister of Gregory of
Nazianzus. He devoted more than fifty of his epigrams to the former
and composed a funeral oration in honour of the latter. Many of the
epigrams devoted to Nonna concentrate on the favoured manner of her
death, in mid-prayer, in church. But her most significant action was to
accomplish the conversion of her husband, the elder Gregory (Epig.
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27).28 With regard to the oration in honour of his sister, Cameron has
argued that Gregory's praise is most enthusiastic when it imposes the
norms of female regulation most successfully ,29 but this does not do
justice to the positive picture of married life presented in the whole
work. The text is not so much concerned with the subordination of
female to male as with the minimizing of gender differences in the
common struggle for salvation (sect. 14). As Harrison has aptly com-
mented, The language of women 'becoming male' is a way of
transcending culturally entrenched misogyny, not a reaffirmation of
it .30 To be sure, Nonna and Gorgonia are held up by Gregory as
exemplars, but the rhetorical nature of their portrayal is firmly rooted
in their actual activity.
Macrina, Nonna and Gorgonia have become heroines of the orthodox
tradition. Yet had church doctrine developed otherwise, that place of
honour might have been filled by such as Eulampios, the mother of the
Arian church historian Philostorgius (HE IX 9). The family came from
Borissos in western Cappadocia. Eulampios was converted to Euno-
mianism by her husband Carterios. In her turn she managed to convert
her four brothers, her father Anysius, a presbyter of Borissos, and the
rest of his household. Western Cappadocia was an area where neo-
Arianism flourished. Note, for example, Basil, Ep. 239, concerning
episcopal struggles in the small town of Doara. There we read of a
'godless woman' who makes and breaks bishops. One envisages a
powerful local aristocrat, exercising powers of patronage in a way not
dissimilar from Basil's own family's grip upon the see of Ibora, near the
family estate in Pontus.
The second half of the fourth century also saw women becoming
more directly involved in the ecclesiastical structures of Cappadocia,
with the growth of various types of female asceticism. I wish to con-
clude by demonstrating how this activity lay at the heart of church life
at the time and not on the margins, as is sometimes alleged. It is striking
how many of the provisions in Basil's three canonical letters relate to
women, many concerning sexual discipline. In Ep. 188, canon 9 and Ep.
199, canon 21 Basil bows to the custom which prescribed less harsh
penalties for unfaithful husbands than for wives, but he does so reluc-
tantly, concluding canon 21 rather lamely, 'the reasoning is not easy.'31
Canon 18 (Ep. 199) is perhaps of wider significance. In discussing
fallen virgins Basil says that the previous practice used to be to receive
them back after one year. But now, he argues, stronger action is
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necessary because the order of virgins is increasing as the church
becomes stronger. He goes on to say that, as virgins have a higher status
than widows, so should the penalties when they fall be correspondingly
greater. The point is this: as the ecclesiastical structure of the Cappado-
cian church developed and solidified at this time it is not especially
helpful a) to contrast female with male asceticism and b) to set it up in
symbolic opposition to the rest of the church. As Basil wrote in the
Institutio Praevia Ascetica (PG 31 624D-625A), women too join the
campaign at Christ's side, being enrolled in the campaign owing to the
manliness of their souls and not rejected for the weakness of the
body. 32 Basil's episcopate was not uniformly successful but one of his
achievements was to overcome the fissiparous tendencies of the ascetic
movement whether male or female.
This may be illustrated by consideration of Epp. 52 and 105. I have
already mentioned how Basil's own theological position was often ques-
tioned. There were essentially two criticisms. First, his early association
with the homoiousian faction, for example at the Council of Constan-
tinople in 359/60. Later, in the 370s, for his 'oikonomia' on the ques-
tion of the divinity of the Holy Spirit. Ep. 52 is addressed to the
canonicae in Colonia Archelais (mod. Aksaray) and has traditionally
been dated to the early years of the episcopate.33 The canonicae needed
reassurance concerning Basil's soundness on the homoousion. Basil,
while professing adherence to Nicaea, points out that the term
homoousion has been only grudgingly received by some, and not at all
by others. Interestingly he criticizes the reprobates on grounds of
disobedience, rather than the merits of the doctrine itself. However
what concerns me is not the detail of Basil's argument but the fact of
his justifying himself to such an audience. The canonicae of Colonia
Archelais are treated as informed participants in the contemporary
theological debate. In this respect also, they are not to be differentiated
qua women. Likewise in Ep. 105 we find female religious involved in,
not remote from, the theological controversies of the age. Here Basil
writes to the daughters of Terentius, who were deaconesses at
Samosata. The letter praises their steadfastness in orthodoxy. They have
not succumbed to the 'popular novelty of the day'.
One of the tensions of Basil's episcopate was that between the regular
clergy and the monastic movements. It was a split which cut across the
divisions of neo-Arianism. There were orthodox and heretical monks.
Contrast the followers of Eustathius and their aversion to the divinity
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of the Holy Spirit with the militant orthodox monk whom Gregory of
Nazianzus (G. Naz. Ep. 58) heard criticizing Basil at a martyr-festival
for refusing to state outright that the Holy Spirit was God. Of late,
much scholarly attention has been focussed on the role of women in
some of these ascetic movements. The Synod of Gangra, in which the
followers of Eustathius were anathematized, laid down that women
were not to dress as men. Such passages as this have been used to con-
struct a model of asceticism which sees it as providing a means of libera-
tion for women.34 Similar material is provided by the stories of Aerius
and Glycerius. However I wish to argue that it is artificial to separate
the female ascetic element contained in this evidence.
We learn of Aerius from the Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis.35
Eustathius had placed him in charge of an alms-house in Sebaste. How-
ever Aerius became disillusioned with Eustathius, claiming that he had
become devoted to accumulating wealth, and headed off to the hills of
Pontus-Cappadocia with a band of like-minded men and women.
He and his fellowship were driven from the churches, fields, villages
and other cities. Often he and the large crowd of his followers would spend
their days in the country, covered with snow, camping in the open air and
under rocks and taking refuge in the woods (75.3.2).
Aerius' mad doctrines included the belief that bishops were in no way
superior to presbyters and also a cavalier attitude towards fasting and
the celebration of Easter-both condemned as Jewish customs. In
Easter week, they are out at daybreak, shopping for meat and wine,
stuffing themselves full, laughing raucously and poking fun at those
who celebrate the holy service of the Paschal week (75.3.8). There
seems to be an echo of this in Basil's Homily 14. In this sermon on
drunkenness, preached in the week after Easter, Basil attacks the
women of Caesarea who had been dancing at the martyrs' shrines. Mov-
ing out into the Cappadocian countryside the deacon Glycerius was
responsible for similar activities at Venasa (mod. Avanos).36 Basil cer-
tainly had his hands full but it is misleading to emphasise the female
dimension in all these movements. In Basil's eyes, heretical male ascetics
were just as bad. And, in any case, for every maenad accompanying
Glycerius there was an equivalent in the sober daughters of Terentius,
the obedient sisters in Macrina's convent, or the theologically literate
canonicae of Archelais.
I conclude with two further examples of the reconciliation of Cap-
padocian female asceticism within the approved hierarchical structures.
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5 Harrison (n. 4), p. 449.
6 In the First Homily on the Creation of Man, sect. 18, a work found in both the manu-
scripts of Basil and of Gregory of Nyssa, it is argued that women make better ascetics than
men. In general, this sermon shares the positive attitude towards women already
illustrated and clearly sits happily in the Cappadocian milieu, even if certainty about its
author is unattainable. See the edition by A. Smets and M. van Esbroeck, Basile de
Cesaree. Sur l'origine de I'homme, SC 160 (Paris, 1970), esp. p. 212-16.
7 On Ambrosiaster see David G. Hunter, 'The Paradise of Patriarchy: Ambrosiaster on
Women as (not) God's Image', JThS 43 (1992), 447-469.
8 The Body and Society (New York, 1988), p. 277. At p. 285 Brown does acknowledge
the strong role that the women of Cappadocia played in maintaining and passing on the
faith
9Palladius, Lausiac History, 64 tells of one Juliana of Cappadocian Caesarea, who
looked after Origen during a two-year stay and presented him with the biblical commen-
taries of Symmachus, cf. Eusebius, HE 6.17. Crouzel, BLE LXIV 1963, 195-208 argues
that this visit took place in the early rather than mid third-century. Some believe the
Caesarea in question is really that in Palestine.
'0 Harrison (n. 4), p. 446-9.
M. Girardi, Basilio di Cesarea e il culto dei martiri nel IVsecolo: scrittura e tradizione
(Bari, 1990), 93 and U. Mattioli, 'AaivtLa e avpsita (Parma, 1983), 152, both comment on
the unusual nature of the sentiment, but, as Harrison (n. 4) has shown, it is not
unparalleled in a Cappadocian context. Contrast Clem. Hom. 20.2 = PG 2 449A where
men and women are of different rcpoqia.
12 A valuable animal in Cappadocia as B. Gain notes, L'Eglise de Cappadoce au IVe
siecle d'apres la correspondance de Basile de Cdsaree (Rome, 1985), p. 16, n. 48.
13 M. Hauser-Meury, Prosopographie zu den Schriften Gregors von Nazianz (Bonn,
1960), 158-60 distinguishes three Theclas in the letters of Gregory of Nazianzus. The name
is also found in inscriptions from Tyana. See REG 1958, p. 322, n. 492 quoting A.
Oikonomides, 'Inscriptions from the environs of Tyana', Mikrasiatica Chronica 7 (1957),
330-7.
14 G. Dagron, Vie et Miracles de S. Thecle, Sub. Hag. 62 (1978), 118 and 332-6 for
miracle 16, when Thecla provides an imaginary escort for an imperial messenger travelling
from Seleucia to Constantinople via Cilicia and Cappadocia, to protect him from
brigands. Dagron sees the genesis of the legend in the period of Isaurian incursions at the
beginning of the fifth century. Cf. Chrysostom, Letters to Olympias, 9.4.
15 As well as Cameron (n. 2) see A. Momigliano, 'The Life of St. Macrina by Gregory
of Nyssa', originally in The Craft of the Ancient Historian: Essays in Honor of Chester
G. Starr (New York, 1985), 443-58; reprinted in On Pagans, Christians and Jews (Mid-
dletown, Connecticut, 1987), 206-21. R. Albrecht, Das Leben der heiligen Makrina auf
dem Hintergrund der Thekla-Traditionen (Gottingen, 1986). E. Giannarelli, La Tipologia
femminile nella biografia e nell' autobiografia cristiana da IV secolo (Rome, 1980). G.
Luck, 'Notes on the Vita Macrinae by Gregory of Nyssa', The Biographical Works of
Gregory of Nyssa (ed. A. Spira, Patristic Monograph Series No. 12, Philadelphia Patristic
Foundation Ltd., Camb. Mass. 1984), 21-33.
16 For the best account of his career see J. Gribomont, 'Eustathe de Sebaste', Saint
Basile: Evangile et Eglise, Melanges I (Abbaye de Bellefontaine, 1984), 95-106.
'7 Most scholars have dated the council of Gangra to c. 340 but T. D. Barnes, 'The Date
1 76
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THE CAPPADOCIAN FATHERS, WOMEN AND ECCLESIASTICAL POLITICS
of the Council of Gangra', JThS 40 (1989), 121-4 argues for a date c. 355. Perhaps the
dates given in the heading of the Syriac translation of the canons, 343 and 341/2, should
not be too lightly dismissed.
18 The identification of Eustathius of Basil, Ep. 1, with Eustathius of Sebaste was first
made by J. Gribomont, 'Eustathe le Philosophe et les voyages du jeune Basile de C6saree',
RHE 54 (1959), 115-24. B. Treucker, Politische und sozialgeschichtliche Studien zu den
Basilius-Briefen (Frankfurt, 1961), 60-1, reasserted the traditional view that the
Eustathius in Basil's letter was a pagan philosopher. G. Dagron, 'Les moines et la ville',
Travaux et Memoires 4, (Paris, 1970), 250, n. 109 is doubtful of Gribomont while P.
Brown, Body and Society, 301-2 sees no reason to doubt that Bas. Ep. 1 is addressed to
the pagan philosopher-diplomat. Those, like Brown, who think that the Eustathius of Ep.
1 is a pagan philosopher usually assume that he is identical, not only with the Eustathius
mentioned in Ammianus negotiating with Sapor, but also with the Eustathius who is
prominent in Eunapius' Lives of the Sophists, married to Sosipatra. But there is a problem
here not usually noticed. In Eunapius' account the life of Eustathius is closely connected
with that of his Cappadocian colleague, Aedesius. When he married Sosipatra (Wright,
p. 408; Giangrande VI.8.3) she said she would bear him three children but that he himself
would live only another five years, which, Eunapius avers, is what happened. Sosipatra
then returned to Pergamum where Aedesius helped her to bring up the children. Now in
his account of the education of Julian (Wright, p. 426f.; Giangrande, VII.1.5ff) Aedesius
is presented as an old man whose powers are failing, persuading Julian to be taught by
Maximus and Chrysanthius. Eunapius is presumably to be trusted on this since Chrysan-
thius was his own teacher. The crucial point is that Aedesius is said to be dead, 'AlEaCou
E teraoXXaSavTxo' (Wright, p. 438; Giangrande, VII.3.6) before Julian was made Caesar in
355. Therefore the Eustathius of Ammianus and of Basil, Ep. 1, cannot be the same as
the Eustathius of Eunapius. D. F. Buck in an unpublished Oxford D. Phil. thesis on
Eunapius (August, 1977) p. 142-3 saw the difficulty and argued that Sosipatra's prophecy
was not one of death for Eustathius but rather that he would be translated to the fifth
essence or ether, Eustathius cannot have died five years after the marriage for he was
corresponding with Julian the Apostate in 362 . (This of course begs the question). As
for the statement that Aedesius cared for the children, ,tvT& Tiv -&oxTpI a tv Eu:na0iou', in
Buck's view 'a&toXWcprlatq' cannot mean death and he therefore concludes that Eustathius
had deserted Sosipatra. The inner circle would have known the sordid truth, but
Eunapius deliberately used an ambiguous word in order not to sully Eustathius' reputa-
tion with his wider readership . It is very ingenious but I am not convinced.
19 S. Giet, 'St. Basile et le concile de Constantinople de 360', JThS n.s. 6 (1955), 94-99.
20 G. Prestige, St. Basil the Great and Apollinaris of Laodicea (ed. H. Chadwick, Lon-
don, 1956).
21 Cameron (n. 2) nowhere mentions Eustathius in her comments on the VM. Eustathius'
role is recognised by P. Rousseau, 'Basil of Caesarea: Choosing a Past', Reading the Past
in Late Antiquity (ed. G. Clarke, Australian National University Press, 1990), 37-58 esp.
p 50
22 V. Burrus, 'The heretical woman as symbol in Alexander, Athanasius, Epiphanius
and Jerome', HThR 84 (1991), 229-48.
23 E. Clark, 'Devil's Gateway and Bride of Christ: Women in the Early Christian
World', Ascetic Piety and Women's Faith: Essays on Late Ancient Christianity (Edwin
Mellen Press, Lewiston, 1986), 31-2, notes the injunction of Chrysostom, Discourse 4 on
1 77
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PHILIP M. BEAGON
Genesis 1, that women should not teach. See also P. Wilson-Kastner, 'Macrina, Virgin
and Teacher', Andrews University Seminary Studies XVII (1979), 105-17.
24 These two inscriptions were first published by G. Jacopi, Esplorazioni e studi in
Paflagonia e Cappadocia (Rome, 1937), 33-6, figs. 135-7. See now N. Thierry, 'Un Pro-
bleme de continuite ou de rupture, la Cappadoce entre Rome, Byzance et les Arabes',
CRAI 1977, 98-145, esp. 114-7.
25 I. Sevcenko corrected Thierry's text in 'A Shadow Outline of Virtue', Age of
Spirituality: A Symposium (Met. Mus. of Art, New York, ed. K. Weitzmann, 1980),
53-73.
26 Another inscription may be suggestive. Found in the village of Kurden by H.
Gr6goire, 'Rapport sur un voyage d'exploration dans le Pont et en Cappadoce', BCH 33
(1909), no. 18, p. 52, it contains the name Pieris. Gregoire commented, Dans ce canton
perdu de la Cappadoce, ce nom, porte par une femme du pays, fait penser a un culte des
Muses particulierement florissant . Kurden lies some thirty miles nne of Kayseri near
modern Felahiye.
27 Maraval (n. 3) p. 273, thinks that perhaps the author was thinking of the De Anima
which often bears the MS heading ra Maxpivta, but the possibility of a collection of letters
remains.
28 Franca Ela Consolino, ZO)DIHE AMOOTEPHE n1PYTANIN: Gli Epigrammi
Funerari di Gregorio Nazianzeno (AP VIII)', Athenaeum n.s. 65 (1987), 407-25.
29 'Virginity as metaphor', 197-8.
30 Harrison, (n. 4), p. 447 for quote. P. 455 & 464-5 for the positive view of Gorgonia's
married state.
31 Gregory of Nazianzus by contrast, arguing from the premise of male-female equality,
demands equal standards of sexual fidelity in Oration 37. See C. Moreschini (ed.),
Gregoire de Nazianze. Discours 32-37, SC 318 (Paris, 1985), p. 51f.
32 Translation by W. Clarke, The Ascetic Works of Saint Basil, (London, 1925), p. 58.
33 Marina S. Troiano has recently argued for date in the mid-370s, 'Sulla cronologia di
Ep. 52, Ad alcune religiose, di Basilio di Cesarea', Vetera Christianorum XXVII (1990),
339-67. On canonicae see Gain, (n. 12), p. 119. J.-R. Pouchet, Basile le Grand et son
univers d'amis d'apres sa correspondance: une strategie de communion (Rome, 1992),
580-1 is hesistant whether Ep. 52 really is addressed to a group of female religious, poin-
ting out that there is nothing in the text itself to force this conclusion, and that the only
evidence is provided by the manuscript headings. Moreover in some Mss one can read
'xavov...' or 'xavovtx ', which might suggest that the letter is a rule of faith. However, P.
J. Fedwick, Corpus Christianorum. Bibliotheca Basiliana Universalis: A Study of the
Manuscript Tradition of the works of Basil of Caesarea: 1 The Letters (Brepols-Turnhout,
1993), 485-7 shows the reading 'xavovtxatg' is by far the most common, as well as being
found in the best manuscripts.
34 By, for example, E. Clark (n. 23), 'Ascetic Renunciation and Feminine Advancement:
A Paradox of Late Ancient Christianity', 175-208. The idea is also stressed in S. Elm, 'The
Organization and Institutions of Female Asceticism in Fourth-Century Cappadocia and
Egypt', D. Phil. Thesis, Oxford, 1987. See now Elm's Virgins of God: Making of
Asceticism in Late Antiquity (Oxford, 1994), published while this article was in proof.
35 English translation by P. Amidon, New York, OUP, 1990.
36 On the attribution of Basil, Epp. 169-71 to Gregory of Nazianzus see A. Cavallin, Stu-
dien zu den Briefen des heiligen Basilius (Lund, 1944), On Messalianism: J. Gribomont,
1 78
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THE CAPPADOCIAN FATHERS, WOMEN AND ECCLESIASTICAL POLITICS 179
'Le dossier des origines du messalianisme', Epektasis, Melanges Patristiques offerts au
cardinal Jean Danielou (Paris, 1972), 611-25.
37 Maraval (n. 3), p. 86 compares Paula having bishops as pall-bearers, Jerome, Ep. 108,
29.
38 M. Alexandre, 'Les nouveaux martyrs. Motifs martyrologiques dans la vie des saints
et themes hagiographiques dans l'eloge des martyrs chez Gregoire de Nysse', The
Biographical Works of Gregory of Nyssa (n. 15), p. 53.
University of Manchester