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St. Dionysius of Alexandria
Contributor(s): Feltoe, Charles Lett (Translator), Of Alexandria, Bishop (Author)
ISBN: 154830347X     ISBN-13: 9781548303471
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $9.31  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: July 2017
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Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction
Physical Information: 0.2" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.31 lbs) 96 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
2. The references to his family and early years are extremely scanty and vague. In the Chronicon Orientale, p. 94, he is stated to have been a Sabaita and sprung from "the chiefs and nobles of that race": and several writers speak as if he had been a rhetorician before his conversion (as Cyprian of Carthage had been). The exact meaning of the term "Sabaita" above is doubtful. Strictly used, it should mean a member of the Sabaite convent near Jerusalem, and the Chronicon may be claiming Dionysius as that, though, of course, without any ground for the claim. If it is equivalent, however, to "Sabaean" here, it implies an Arab descent for him, which is hardly probable, as he seems always to consider himself connected by education and residence, if not by birth, with the city-folk of Alexandria, whom he distinguishes from the Coptic inhabitants of Egypt; so that it would be rather surprising to find that his family came from the remoter parts of Arabia, where the Sab ans dwelt. The other tradition of his having been a rhetorician may be due to some confusion between our Dionysius and a much later Alexandrian writer of the same name, who edited the works of the Areopagite with notes and wrote other treatises. On the other hand, Dionysius's literary style is such that it might very well have been formed by the study and practice of rhetoric, while he has been thought himself to corroborate the statement of the Chronicon Orientale, as to the high position of his family, in his reply to Germanus (p. 49), where he refers to the "losses of dignities" which he has suffered for the Faith.