INDEX
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Abbibus of Doliche
Abraham of Carrhae (hermit)
Acacius of Amida
Acacius of Beroea: Antiochene leader before 430 A.D Antiochene leader A.D., Antiochene leader after 431 A.D leading partisan of Meletius memorialized figure, opponent of John Chrysostom
Acacius of Melitene
acclamations,
acribia (Latin transliteration)
advocacy for clients
Aerius (sophist)
Aetius (priest, teacher of Eunomius)
Africa, Proconsular, province
agape
Agapetus of Apamea
Agapetus of Nicertae,
Akoimetoi, Monastery of the
akribeia (exactness), in theological doctrine
aletheia (reality). See types/typological interpretations of Scripture
Alexander, Jeffery
Alexander of Antioch
Alexander of Apamea
Alexander of Hierapolis: ascetic background, Antiochene doctrinal purist Antiochene leader before 432 A.D Antiochene leader from 432 to 435 A.D cultural program of social customs
Alexander the Sleepless
Alexandria in Egypt
Alexandrian interpretation of Scripture
allegorical interpretation of Scripture
alternative religious networks See religious networks alternative
Anatolius of Constantinople
Anatolius, Master of Soldiers (patrician): core Antiochene leader patron and mediator, protector of Theodoret
Andreas of Samosata: Antiochene leader before A.D core Antiochene member mediator among Antiochene leaders social cues and practices theological doctrines
angels
Anomoians (doctrinal party)
anthropology, cultural
Antioch clerical affairs episcopal primacy monks in, social base for Theodoret
Antiochene leaders
Antiochene socio-doctrinal network: ascetics as members bishops as members collapse (virtual) communal identity congregations linked to core members definition of, doctrinal cues circa 436 A.D doctrinal reasoning before 436 A.D doctrinal reasoning from 436 A.D emotional and non-verbal cues circa 436 A.D excluded non-members before 430 A.D excluded non-members from 430 A.D geographic extent hubs/leaders circa 436 A.D lay notables as members leaders, before 430 A.D leadership from 435 A.D leadership competition before 436 A.D leadership, consensual, before 436 A.D leadership traditions legacy from 451 A.D lower clerics as members memorialized heroes multilingual relations origins patronage cooperation peripheral associates rapport within recruitment and growth before 430 A.D recruitment and regrowth, after 435 A.D relational patterns/maps resonance of doctrine and social relations schism from other Nicenes, schism within sharing of historical narratives, social practices sources preserved by target of heresy accusations
Antiochus Chuzon, Prefect
antiphonal chant
Apamea
Apelles (scholasticus)
Aphraates (hermit)
Apion family (Egypt)
Apollinarius of Laodicea
apostles
Apostolic Constitutions,
Aquilinus of Barbalissus
Aquilinus of Byblus
Arabia province
Aramaic (language)
Archelaus of Seleucia Pieria
archimandrite. See monastic leaders
archisynagogoi,
archon. See governors provincial
Areobindus, Master of Soldiers
Aristolaus, Tribune
Aristotle
Arius and “Arians,”
Armenia, Persian
Armenia, Roman
Armenian (language)
army, Persian
army, Roman
ascetics: Antiochene contacts until 430 A.D Antiochene contacts after 430 A.D candidates for bishop, confrontational education explanations of ascetic behavior memorialized figures asceticism as leadership qualification lifestyles and customs patronage mediation relations generally with bishops
asketerion,
Aspar, Master of Soldiers
Aspringius of Chalcis
Asterius of Amida
Asterius of Gindarus
Athanasius of Alexandria
Athanasius of Doliche
Athanasius of Perrha
Attic language
audience for appeals
auxiliary soldiers
baptism, offers of
Barabasi, Albert-László
Baradatus (hermit)
bar/bath qyama (covenanter)
Barhadbeshabba of Arbaya
Barsauma of Perrha (archimandrite)
Basil of Caesarea: ally of Meletius memorialized figure patronage mediation theological and moral doctrines
Basil of Seleucia in Isauria: ally of Theodoret patronage participation preaching, temporary defector from Antiochene network, theological doctrines
Basil of Seleucobelus
Beroea
Berytus
bishops (generally): ascetic authority authority via writing, coercive authority competing for one see consecration of council attendance cultural programs, deposition of friendship and cooperation among hierarchies of hostilities among idealized community of, idealized model of informal leadership among leadership competition among limited authority local influence, monastic recruitment of pastoral care, patronage, direct patronage mediation, roles pragmatic authority, prosopography of recruitment, relations with ascetics relations with courtiers and imperial high officials relations with educators, relations with emperors relations with governors and bureaucrats relations with local notables relations with lower clerics relations with military leaders relations with non-Nicene religious leaders relations with notable women relations with soldiers resources social background, social cues and practices social role in general, sources controlled by See also Theodoret of Cyrrhus
bnay/bnath qyama. See bar/bath qyama
Boissevain, Jeremy
Bourdieu, Pierre
brokering, social. See patronage mediation
bureaucrats, imperial: contacts of Theodoret, general roles of
Candidianus, Count
Cappadocia provinces
Carthage
catechism
Celerina (deaconess)
Celestiacus of Carthage (decurion)
Celestine I, Pope
centrality. See network centrality
Chalcedon meeting of protest delegations in
Chalcedon, Council of See also conciliar acta (transcripts)
Chaldean Oracles,
Christian community. See religion meaningful community; religion translocal community
Christology. See theological doctrine Christology. See also Antiochene socio-doctrinal network, doctrinal cues of Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network doctrinal cues of; hypostasis; kyana partsopa; prosopon; physis; qnoma
Christological dispute (natures dispute) See also Eutychean Controversy Nestorian Controversy
Chrysaphius, Chamberlain
church history (genre)
church historians, authorial agendas of
Cilicia provinces
citizenship
civic pride/identity
civic competition
civic government. See municipal government
Clark, Elizabeth
classical literary references
classical rhetorical figures. See rhetoric, classical: formal rhetorical figures
classical stock metaphors See metaphors, stock classical
Claudianus (shorthand)
Clement I, Pope
Clement of Alexandria
clerics lower (priests, deacons, country-bishops oikonomoi, etc.): bishops' recommended hierarchy of involved in doctrinal disputes before 430 A.D members of Antiochene network number of, opponents of Antiochene network pastoral roles, patronage roles translations by, travel and surveillance
clerical affection, expression of
clerical leadership, roles of
clericalism
client, role of, abject dependency ambiguous clientage/friendship
cliques/clusters
cognitive linguistics
cognitive science
commemoration of clerics See names of past clerics
commissioners at Council of Chalcedon
common ground ambiguous, religious sophistic cultural
communal identity, religious
communion: disputes over, until 435 A.D disputes over, after 435 A.D general custom See also schism
commonsense reasoning
conciliar acta (transcripts) limits as evidence
confessor, role of
confessional identity See communal identity religious
consistory
consolation, letters of
Constantine (prefect)
Constantinople, episcopal power center imperial government center monks in and near, populace of
Constantinople, First Council of
Constantius II, Emperor
Constitutiones apostolorum See Apostolic Constitutions
consubstantial See homoousios
consularis See governors, provincial
core network, changing shape of, over time social cues social perceptions structure, mapped synchronically
councils, ad-hoc consultative
councils, ecumenical See also Chalcedon, Council of Constantinople, Council of Ephesus, First Council of; Ephesus Second Council of; Nicaea Council of
councils, provincial
councils, regional
councils, non-attendance at
counter-council of Ephesus See Ephesus, First Council of
count, honorary See also honorati count of the Domestici
count of the East
count of the sacred largesses
courtiers, imperial. See imperial high officials; honorati
covenanter See bar/bath qyama
cues, social/cultural doctrinal emotional (affection) mapping exchange of material favors and loyalty symbols non-verbal, overlapping set of
cultural studies/criticism (field)
curator (local imperial bureaucrat)
Cyril of Adana
Cyril of Alexandria: critic of Nestorius leader of Cyrillian network in 431 A.D leader of Cyrillian network in 431 A.D leader of Cyrillian network A.D memorialized figure patronage, theological doctrines writings
Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network doctrinal cues leaders before 444 A.D leaders from 444 A.D lower clerics in, monks and laypeople in patronage, records and writings suffragan bishops in support from courtiers See also Acacius of Melitene Cyril of Alexandria; Dioscorus of Alexandria Firmus of Caesarea; Juvenal of Jerusalem
Cyrrhus: ascetics in and near clerical affairs in lay affairs in
Cyrus of Edessa
Cyrus of Tyre
Damian of Samosata (priest)
Daniel of Carrhae
David of Europus
deacons. See clerics, lower
decurions (curiales), associates of Theodoret burdens and powers refugees targets of tax fraud accusations
defensor civitatis,
Demetrius, (Pseudo-)
Dexianus of Seleucia in Isauria
dialogue (literary genre)
Diodore of Tarsus: ascetic/scriptural educator memorialized figure partisan of Meletius scriptural interpretations target of accusations, theological doctrines
Diogenes of Seleucobelus
Dionysius, Count of the East
Dionysius, Master of Soldiers
Dioscorus of Alexandria Cyrillian leader until 450 A.D Cyrillian leader after 450 A.D
diptychs, reading of
dissonance, socio-cultural
distance, social
doctrinal certainty
doctrinal formula Antiochene Cyrillian shared or compromise See also Nicaea First Council of, Creed Formula of Reunion
doctrinal school See also School of Antioch
doctrinal violence: before 435 A.D
after 435 A.D
Dometianus, Quaestor
Domnina (hermit)
Domnus of Antioch: Antiochene core member patronage mediator social cues target of accusations
donations to church
Dorotheus of Antioch
dreams/nightmares
dyophysitism. See Antiochene socio-doctrinal network, doctrinal cues
East, Roman (Oriens). See Syria Roman
ecclesiology
ecclesiastical resources/wealth
Edessa
educators, alternative
Egypt (region), clerical hierarchy in role in doctrinal conflict
Elpidius of Laodicea
Emesa
emotions. See cues social/cultural -emotional
emperor: general authority participant in doctrinal conflict before 430 A.D participant in doctrinal conflict from 430 to 435 A.D participant in doctrinal conflict from 436 A.D See also Constantius II Emperor; Jovian, Emperor; Julian Emperor; Marcian, Emperor; Theodosius I, Emperor
Theodosius II, Emperor; Valens Emperor
empress See also
Eudocia, Empress; Pulcheria Empress
ensemble, patronage
envoys for letters: affection expressed for, limited availability of, means of communication, participants in doctrinal conflict performers, scapegoats, spies
Ephesus, First Council of
Ephesus, Second Council of
Ephrem Syrus
epistolography. See letters
Eranistes, Theodoret's: literary tropes in, spark of Eutychean dispute, theological doctrines in
eros,
ethos,
Eudocia, Empress
Eudoxius of Antioch, then Constantinople
euergesia (benefaction)
Eulogius of Edessa (priest)
Eunomius of Cyzicus
Euphratensis province
Eurycianus (tribune)
Eusebius of Ancyra
Eusebius of Dorylaeum
Eusebius of Samosata
Eusebius of Teleda (archimandrite)
Eusebius (scholasticus)
Eustathius of Aegaea
Eustathius of Antioch
Eustathius of Berytus
Eutherius of Tyana
Eutrechius, Prefect of Constantinople
Eutychean Controversy
Eutyches of Constantinople (archimandrite)
Euzoïus of Antioch
Evagrius of Antioch
exclusionists, Christian
exegesis. See Alexandrian interpretation of Scripture; allegorical interpretation of Scripture; Antiochene socio-doctrinal network, scriptural interpretations; historical interpretation of Scripture; literal interpretation of Scripture
father: spiritual, term for God, term for honored bishops term for leading ascetics, term for patrons
feasts/festivals
festal letters
Firmus of Caesarea in Cappadocia: cultural program, friendly letters of letter collection of, member of Cyrillian network, patronage mediation
Flavian of Antioch: bishop lay notable, prelate-proxy
Flavian of Constantinople
Florentius (bishop, associate of Pope Leo)
Florentius, Prefect
florilegia
foils, rhetorical, in letters
formula, doctrinal. See doctrinal formula
Formula of Reunion: creation of later endorsement of
frames. See metaphors, deep
friendship, ascetic, communal Christian conceptions and language classical conceptions and language clerical relations of emotional signals of, envoys' role in preserving, functional intimate, linked to patronage linked to shared doctrine sociological definitions See also letters, friendly
frontiers, Roman
Gemellinus of Perrha
Germanicea
Gindarus (village near Antioch)
gossip
governors, provincial
grammarians
Gregory of Nazianzus
Gregory of Nyssa
habitus (behavioral cues)
hatitutha (exactness)
Heliades of Zeugma
Helladius of Ptolemais
Helladius of Tarsus: core Antiochene member mediator in Antiochene network monastic leader social cues of
“Hellenes.” See religion, traditional (“pagan”)
heresy/heretics, labeling of before 430 A.D from 430 to 435 A.D from 435 to from connected to non-Nicene doctrinal parties
Hesychius of Castabalum
Hezser, Catherine
Hiba of Edessa: core Antiochene member-bishop lower cleric, patronage mediator translator, target of accusations
Hierapolis in Syria
Himerius of Nicomedia
Historia religiosa (HR), Theodoret's; effort to build community idealized history, source for social data
“historical” interpretation of Scripture
historical theology (field)
History of the Friends of God See Historia religiosa
Homoians (doctrinal party)
Homoiousians (doctrinal party)
homoousios,
honorati (honorary officials)
hub, network within Antiochene network
humility, display of See self-deprecation
Hypatia of Alexandria (philosopher)
hypostasis, See also subjects in Christ
hypothesis (narrative significance)
Ibas of Edessa. See Hiba
ihidaya (single one)
imperial court: cultural program of ecclesiastical influence of, before 430 A.D ecclesiastical influence of, from 430 to 440 A.D ecclesiastical influence of, from 441 A.D governmental powers of members of, petitions to
imperial high officials
indiction census
intimacy: Antiochene bonds of signals of
Irenaeus of Tyre (count, then bishop) core Antiochene member-bishop count and Antiochene ally editor of extant sources first exile, patronage mediation target of accusations
irreplaceability
Isauria province
Isocasius, Sophist
iugatio,
Jacob of Cyrrhestica (hermit): friend and helper of Theodoret mediator in doctrinal conflict
James of Cyrrhestica. See Jacob of Cyrrhestica
Jerome of Stridon
Jewish religion
Jobius of Constantinople (archimandrite)
John Chrysostom: clerical and ascetic teachings letters, memorialized figure polemical rhetoric, patronage mediation supporter of Meletius' party student of Diodore of Tarsus subject of controversy theological doctrines
John of Antioch Antiochene leader before 431 A.D Antiochene leader from 432 to 433 A.D Antiochene leader from 433 to 435 A.D
John of Damascus
John of Germanicea: core Antiochene member until 435 A.D.core Antiochene member after 435 A.D.
Julian, Emperor
Julian Saba
Juvenal of Jerusalem
kyana (nature)
Lakoff, George
languages, multiple
Latin (language): doctrinal cues in role in late Roman East, sources in
Latrocinium. See Ephesus Second Council of
lay congregations
laypeople as doctrinal partisans before 430 A.D from 430 A.D anti-Antiochene, from 430 A.D pro-Antiochene
lawcourts
law, imperial against alternative religion legal education
leadership: competition in doctrinal networks consensus in doctrinal networks informal, patronage networks performances positions in networks, rationales for clerics' visions of proper
Leo I, Emperor
Leo I, Pope
Leontius of Antioch
letters: accession, by bishops appeals for patronage, communal, collections, conciliar, condolence, customs of exchange, customs of writing doctrinal expressions in evidence for patronage relations evidence for social performance festal, friendly handbooks for writing, limitations as evidence public reading of, recommendation refusal to write, reuse of sequencing and dating of symbolic objects, unanswered use for mapping doctrinal networks verbal supplementation of
Libanius of Antioch, Sophist letter-writing by, pedagogy, relations with emperors relations with imperial officials relations with other educators relations with soldiers, religion in relations patronage appeals speeches
literal interpretation of Scripture
loans of soldiers
local notable class relations with Theodoret social networks See also women, notable
logos (Word, reason): human thought or speech, theological term
Longinus of Doliche (archimandrite)
Lucian of Antioch
Lucian of Samosata
Macarius of Laodicea
Macedonius (hermit)
Magian religion
Mani and Manicheans
Marana (recluse)
Maranas (scholasticus)
Marcellus of Apamea
Marcellus, archimandrite of the Akoimetoi,
Marcian, Emperor
Marcian (hermit)
Marcion and supposed Marcionites
Marinianus of Barbalissus
Maras of Nisus
Maras of Edessa (priest)
Maris (hermit)
Mari the Persian
Maron (hermit)
Marutha of Martyropolis
Mary (young woman from N. Africa)
Mashdotz (Armenian translator)
master of soldiers (magister utriusque militiae)
Mastoc. See Mashdotz
Maximianus of Anazarbus, Antiochene leader to 432 A.D Antiochene leader from 433 A.D
Maximianus of Constantinople
Maximianus (decurion)
Maximus of Antioch
Maximus of Seleucia in Isauria
Mazdaean religion. See Magian religion
mdabranutha (leadership/flexibility)
mediator between social networks inside Antiochene network, of patronage theological concept
medical metaphors
Meletius of Antioch compromise candidate for bishop exiled Nicene bishop memorialized figure, sponsor of Nicene coup
Meletius of Mopsuestia: core Antiochene member to 432 A.D pro-schism Antiochene leader from 433 A.D
Memnon of Ephesus,
mesiteia (mediation) See also mediator
Mesopotamia province
Messalians, suspected metaphorical reasoning metaphors, deep metaphors, stock classical
metropolitan bishops in Syria
miaphyisitism. See Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network doctrinal cues. See also Apollinarius
military leaders See also count of the Domestici; master of soldiers
miracles of ascetics
Mocimus of Hierapolis (oikonomos)
modular scale-free topology in Antiochene network relations
monasteries, bishops' relations with in/near Constantinople education/recruitment in leaders of in Syria
monophysitism. See Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network: doctrinal cues of. See also Apollinarius
Mopsuestia Moses (prophet)
Moses of the Saracens
Mullett, Margaret
multiplex bonds
municipal government
Musaeus of Antaradus
names of past clerics
narrative, communal
nature. See kyana; physis
natures dispute. See Christological dispute
Nectarius of Constantinople
negotiations, doctrinal at Ephesus and Chalcedon 431 A.D in 432 and after 433 A.D
Neon, Governor
Nestorian Controversy, beginnings of settlement of schisms during, social/cultural impact
Nestorius of Constantinople: Antiochene member-bishop in exile, monk, participant in conflict remembered as heretic subject of controversy theological doctrines
network analysis
network centrality, in Antiochene network until 430 A.D. in Antiochene network after 431 A.D
network connectivity
network density
network diameter (degree)
network, intersubjective
network map and all figures
network, patronage
network, perceptual/mental
network science simulations
network, socio-doctrinal See also Antiochene socio-doctrinal network; Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network
network theory See social network theory
Nicaea, First Council of Creed
Nicenes (doctrinal party): before
from 381 to 430 A.D
after 430 A.D
Nicertae, Monastery of
Nomus, Consul
notary
oikonomos. See clerics, lower
oikonomia (flexibility/dispensation)
orthodoxy: defense of definition of (generally) definition of (as part of Christological dispute) dual-level approach to performance of Antiochene performance of general purity of, testing of
Osrhoene province
ousia (substance)
Oxyrhynchus
pagan. See religion, traditional
paideia (classical sophistic learning)
Palestine provinces (I-III)
Palladius of Helenopolis
Palladius (imperial official)
Palladius (philosopher)
panegyric, tone of
partsopa (person)
party, doctrinal. See Antiochene socio-doctrinal network; Cyrillian socio-doctrinal network; network, socio-doctrinal
pastoral care
pater civitatis,
patriarch, Christian
patriarch, Jewish
Patricius, Count
patristics (field)
patronage, alternative religious leaders', definitions and models of dependency, educators', ensembles friendship as euphemism for, God/Christ's imperial officials' linked to doctrinal networks local notables', mediation of military performed roles of shared, as source of friendship source of authority, source of communal identity spiritual motives of, transactional system See also network, patronage; letters: of appeal; letters, uses as evidence for patronage
Paulinus of Antioch
Paul of Antaradus
Paul of Emesa
Paul of Tarsus
peasants
pedagogues
Pelagius of Laodicea
perceptions of social bonds. See network perceptual/mental
performance, social Christian ideals, as clerical leader, as confessor as friend, as leader of socio-doctrinal network as patronage advocate/mediator ritualized, shared orthodoxy See also cues, social/cultural
periphery, network, extent of, mapped synchronically, shifts over time, social perceptions
persecution, religious
Persia/Persians, Sassanid Antiochene contacts in religious conflict within, Roman rhetorical target
Peter of Emesa
Peter (scholasticus),
Peter the Apostle
Peter the Fuller
Peter the Galatian (hermit)
petitions to imperial court
philosophy: Christian asceticism, Christian learning, “pagan,” rigorous argument
philosophers: ascetics, associates of sophists and bishops, educators, referenced authors
philanthropia (generosity)
philia, cultural cue in letters See also friendship
Philip of Cyrrhus (principalis),
philostorgia,
Philostorgius (historian)
Phoenicia I province
Phoenicia II province
Photius of Tyre
phronema (mindset)
physis (nature) human “one by nature,” “one nature,” “one nature incarnate,” “one nature after the union,” “two natures,” “two natures, made known in,” unclear number of natures
Plato
Plutarch of Caeronea
polemic. See rhetoric, polemical
politeia (way of life)
Polletta, Francesca
Polychronius (hermit)
Polychronius of Apamea
Pompeianus of Emesa
population growth, late antique
Porphyrius of Antioch
poverty: rhetoric in appeals rhetoric in monastic discourse
post-structuralism
palatini/privatiani,
praefectiani,
praeses. See governors, provincial
preaching, public against pagans, Jews, and non-Nicene Christians against rivals in Christological disputes encouragement for giving, shared preaching as social cue
prefects, praetorian: authority, as potential doctrinal allies as potential patrons
prefects, urban
priests. See clerics, lower
primacy, episcopal, in Alexandria and Rome, in Antioch, tetrarchy or pentarchy of
principales,
Proclus of Constantinople: contact of Theodoret,
critic of Nestorius, memorialized figure, participant in doctrinal conflict patronage mediator
professional classes
promethia (forethought)
prophets/prophecy
prosopography, episcopal/clerical
prosopography, lay notable,
prosopon (person)
prosopeion (mask)
prostasia (protection)
proxenia/proxenos (procurement): in doctrinal networks, in patronage
Publius of Zeugma
Pulcheria, Empress
purity, doctrinal
qnoma (person)
quaestor
rabbis
Rabbula of Edessa: ascetic connections, cultural program hagiographic exemplar, member of Antiochene network opponent of Antiochene network preaching, social cues; translations by
Rasapha
recommendations. See letters, of recommendation
refugees from Vandal invasions
regional identity
rehmatha (love)
religion: ambiguous adherence to, cognitive phenomenon, custom/law, diversity of, doctrinal thought, hierarchical institution, idealized vision of community, ideology, knowledge/learning, local community, meaningful community shared discourse/culture, symbolic system, trans-local community virtue See also Antiochene socio-doctrinal network, communal identity; Antiochene socio-doctrinal network, idealized vision of community; Jewish religion; Magian religion
religion, traditional (“pagan”): adherents, customs and teachings, opposition to
religious certainty. See doctrinal certainty
religious conflict See also Christological dispute; religious violence;
Trinitarian dispute
religious networks, alternative
Renatus of Rome (papal legate)
Res privata,
resonance, socio-cultural
rhetoric, polemical
rhetoric, classical: education in, formal rhetorical figures, formulas and handbooks, general styles, performances, skill level, surprising tropes
rhetoric (cultural construction)
ritual Roman identity
Rufinus of Aquileia rumor
rumors, refutation of
Rusticus of Rome (deacon)
Sabinianus of Perrha
Sahak (katholikos of Armenia)
Samaritan religion
Samosata
Samuel of Edessa (priest)
Sassanid Empire. See Persia/Persians,
Sassanid schism: before 431 A.D from 431 to 433 A.D from 433 A.D
Scholasticius (chamberlain)
scholastikos,
“School of Antioch,”
School of the Persians in Edessa
Scriptural commentaries
Scriptural references
secretarial education
self-deprecation
senatorial order
Sergius, Saint
Senator, Prefect
Severus of Antioch
Sixtus, Pope. See Xystus, Pope
Sleepless, Monastery of the. See Akoimetoi
social history (field)
social network theory See also network analysis; network science simulations
social rank
social strategy
sociological theory
Socrates (scholasticus)
soldiers, common
“Son of David, Son of God”/two sons
sophistic learning. See paideia
sophists, elite friendships participation in doctrinal conflict patronage links pedagogy
Sophronius of Constantina
soteriology Sozomen (historian)
Stasimus, Count
Stephanus of Germanicea
subject(s) in Christ See also hypostasis
Succensus of Diocaesarea (3)
suffering, divine
Symeon Stylites
Synesius of Cyrene bishop, notions of friendship and patronage patronage mediator social cues and customs
synkatabasis (condescension)
Syria, Roman (region), or “The East” (Oriens): archaeology, ascetics in bishops' claims to represent bishops' social roles in, communal identity of, cultural variety of, doctrinal conflict in, before 430 A.D. doctrinal conflict in, after 430 A.D., imperial government and army in, intra-clerical relations (general) in, before 430 A.D intra-clerical relations (general) in, after 430 A.D., languages of religious variety of, social relations of laity in
Syria I province
Syria II province
Syriac (language), ascetic and clerical sponsorship, education, literature composed in, translations to
Tarsus
Taurus Mountains
Taurus (patrician)
taxes, imperial appeals for lower taxes
Thalassius of Caesarea in Cappadocia
theatrical metaphors
Themistius of Constantinople (philosopher)
Theoctistus of Beroea
Theodore Lector
Theodore of Mopsuestia: friend of John Chrysostom, leader of Antiochene network, memorialized figure partisan of Meletius
scriptural interpretations of student of Diodore of Tarsus, subject of controversy theological doctrines
Theodoret of Cyrrhus: ascetic lifestyle, central hub in Antiochene network circa 436 A.D cultural programs, doctrinal cues, hagiography historiography key member of Antiochene network before 432 A.D leader of Antiochene network from 436 to 448 A.D leader-mediator in Antiochene network from 432 to 435 A.D letter collection life before episcopate, member of Chalcedonian coalition 451A.D multilingual relations pastoral care, patronage, direct patronage mediation, concepts and roles patronage performance polemics against non-Nicene religion, preaching, relations with elites (generally), relations with ascetics relations with courtiers and imperial high officials relations with educators relations with emperors relations with fellow Antiochene bishops (generally) relations with governors and bureaucrats relations with local notables relations with lower clerics relations with military leaders relations with non-Antiochene bishops relations with non-Nicene religious leaders, relations with notable women relations with soldiers, reputation after death, scriptural interpretation, social cues and practices social strategies sophistic/philosophic learning target of accusations theological doctrine before 435 A.D theological doctrine from 435 A.D theological treatises and dialogues
Theodosius I, Emperor
Theodosius II, Emperor: cultural program, death of, doctrinal policy to 434 A.D doctrinal policy from 435 to 450 A.D
patronage
Theodosius of Rhosus
Theodotus of Antioch
Theodotus of Hierapolis
theological doctrine: ambiguities in “balanced,” Christological links to social behavior thought system system of verbal cues, teaching texts for
theopaschitism. See suffering, divine
theophilestatos (most friendly with God)
theotokos,
theurgy, “pagan,”
Thomas of Mopsuestia
Timothy of Doliche
Timothy the Cat
Titus, Count of the Domestici
Tragedy, Irenaeus' documents and editorial side comments, editing and translation
translation, late antique, into Armenian into Latin, into Syriac
trinity, doctrines of
Trinitarian controversy
tutors (educational)
Twelve Anathemas, Cyril of Alexandria's
types/typological interpretations of Scripture
tyranny, episcopal
Tyre.
Uranius of Emesa
Uranius of Himerium
Valens, Emperor
Valentinus of Mallus
Vandals
Vincomalus, Master of Offices
violence, religious. See doctrinal violence; persecution, religious
visits, episcopal
Vitalis of Antioch
war, Roman-Persian
Watts, Duncan
women of the notable classes
Xystus, Pope
Zacharias of Samosata
Zebinas (hermit)
Zeno, Master of Soldiers
Zenobius of Zephyrium
Zeugma
Zoroastrian religion