John S. Ott
Portland State University
HST 354U - Early Medieval Europe, 300-1100
(Copyright 2020, 2021, 2024)
 

Reading Guide 2:

Week II: Athanasios of Alexandria, Life St. Antony; Salvian of Marseilles, On the Judgment of God;
Palladius, The Lausiac History (On Melania the Elder)



Week II. The Later Roman Empire

Athanasios of Alexandria, Life of St. Antony (composed ca. 356-373 C.E.)
(1) What kinds of images and metaphors does Athanasius use to describe Antony's experiences of religious conversion and meditation?  How do these images depict the process of ascetic withdrawal?
(2) What is Antony's attitude toward wealth and worldly honor/power?  How does Athanasios demonstrate it in the text, and why do you think this theme would have been of concern to him?
(3) What kind of person do you think the text's author, Athanasios, was?  For whom and for what purpose(s) do you think the Life of St. Antony was written?  How can you tell?
(4)  What are the limitations and strengths of hagiography as a historical source?
Palladius of Galatia, The Lausiac History (composed 419-420)

Palladius was a monk, and later bishop, and a dedicated member of the eastern Christian church. In the late 380s, he traveled -- like many others -- to Egypt to meet and study with the many monastics (men and women both) who had settled in the Egyptian deserts to lead solitary lives, following the example of Antony. The Lausiac History was written and named for a court chamberlain of the Emperor Theodosius II (r. 402-450), Lausus. Composed in Greek, Palladius' collection of biographies and edifying stories about the early "desert fathers and mothers" became quite popular and was translated into other languages. The figure at the center of our readings from The Lausiac History is Melania, called "the Elder" because she is sometimes confused with another Melania, her grand-daughter, who was also quite famous in her time -- and whom scholars refer to as "the Younger." BOTH Melanias were incredibly wealthy. Born around 350 in Spain, Melania the Elder was the daughter of a Roman consul, a high-ranking official appointed by the emperor. Married in her early teens and widowed at the age of 22, she converted to Christianity following the death of her husband and two her three sons. She then moved to the Egyptian desert and later to Jerusalem, where she founded two religious houses on the Mount of Olives. She distributed much of her wealth in support of Christian causes, and was well connected to Christian intellectuals throughout the Mediterranean. She died in ca. 410/17.
(1) How does Melania use and distribute her wealth?
(2) How does Palladius characterize her role in the Christian communities of the east in the fourth century?
(3) To whom is she connected? How does her high social background inform her activities and Palladius' description of her?
Salvian of Marseilles, On the Judgment of God (composed 440s C.E.)

Salvian (c. 400-480) was born in what is now western Germany, perhaps in the imperial cities of Trier or Köln (Cologne). He appears to have been educated in law and married a high-ranking noblewoman who came from a pagan family. He decided with his wife to pursue a religious life after the birth of their daughter, however, and the family retreated to the island monastic community of Lérins, off the southern coast of Gaul (France). The monastery there served as a training ground for many subsequent Christian intellectuals and bishops (including Martin of Tours, whom we meet later). Salvian later moved to Marseilles, nearby, and became a priest. In addition to a number of letters and a treatise against avarice which he wrote under a pseudonym, he composed On God's Judgment in the 440s. The work offers a severe indictment of Roman mores, conduct, and leadership.
(1) How does Salvian describe the source of the woes the Roman Empire is facing? What language does he use to depict officials responsible for tax collection? How, by contrast, does he characterize Roman life under the "barbarians" (Germanic kings and chieftains)?
(2) This is a moralizing treatise; how might that affect our interpretation of its contents and depiction of fifth-century Roman life? Does Salvian paint a reliable picture of life in the provinces? Why or why not?