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Saints and Doctors in the Early Byzantine Empire: The Case of Theodore of Sykeon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Peregrine Horden*
Affiliation:
All Souls College, Oxford

Extract

‘Have done with doctors. Don’t fall into their clutches: you will get no help from them. Be satisfied with this prayer and blessing and you will be completely restored to health.’ Theodore of Sykeon’s obloquy and exhortation find numerous parallels in the social history of early Byzantine medicine. The hostility of holy men to doctors is a familiar theme. Less familiar may be that delegation of responsibility and spirit of cooperation suggested by another passage in the Life of Theodore:

Again, if any required medical treatment for certain illnesses, or surgery or a purging draught or hot springs, this God-inspired man would prescribe the appropriate remedy to each like an experienced doctor trained in the art. He might recommend one to have recourse to surgery and would always state clearly which doctor he should employ. In other cases he would dissuade those who wished to have an operation or to undergo some other medical treatment, and would recommend rather that they should visit hot springs, and would name the springs to which they should go.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1982

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References

1 [Festugière, A-J.] Vie Théodore [de Sykéon], Greek text with French translation and commentary, Société des Bollandistes, sub hag 48, 2 vols (Brussels 1970) cap 156.Google Scholar

2 Ibid caps 145-6.

3 [‘The Rise and Function of the] Holy Man [in Late Antiquity’], JRS 61 (1971) pp 80101 at p 98.Google Scholar

4 See [Julia] Seiber, [The Urban Saint in Early Byzantine Social History], British Archaeological Reports, Supplementary Series 37 (Oxford 1977) for the analysis of a limited number of texts. Compare [Robert, ] Browning, [The ‘Low Level’ Saint’s Life in the Early Byzantine World’] in The Byzantine Saint, University of Birmingham Fourteenth Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, Studies supplementary to Sobornost 5 (Birmingham 1981) pp 11727 Google Scholar, a valuable composite image of the rural holy man.

5 Han J. W. Drijvers, ‘Hellenistic and Oriental Origins’ in The Byzantine Saint pp 25-33.

6 As noted by Browning p 122 and Patlagean, [Evelyne], Pauvreté [économique et pauvreté sociale à Byzance] (Paris 1977) p 103 Google Scholar.

7 Hypatii[Callinicus,] Vita (Teubner 1895) translated by Festugière, Les moines d’Orient vol 2 (Paris 1961) cap 40. Hypatios died in 446Google Scholar. His pupil Callinicus wrote the Life ‘wohl kaum vor dem 6. Jahrhundert’. See Beck p 404.

8 Vita Hypatii, cap 40.

9 Compare ibid cap 44 where doctors appear even more corrupt and mercenary.

10 Ibid cap 22.

11 Compare Brown, ‘Holy Man’, p 98, adducing Vita Hypatii, cap 40, and commenting that ‘the holy man appears far more often than we might at first sight suppose in a merely supporting rôle’.

12 On him, and for additional references in much of what follows see [Derek] Baker, , [‘Theodore of Sykeon and the Historians’], SCH 13, The Orthodox Churches and the West (1976) pp 8396 Google Scholar. The encomium was edited by Kirch, C. from a twelfth-century manuscript in An Boi 20 (1901) pp 24972.Google Scholar

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14 Full textual details and further references in Théodore, I pp xxiv-ix and Baker. Fresh examination of all the manuscripts is clearly called for.

15 By Baker.

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17 Selber pp 88-9. [ Festugière, , Collections grecques de miracles, II Miracles de SS.]Côme et Dantien (Paris 1971)Google Scholar.

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21 Théodore cap 165.

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23 And hence would not have been noticed in the encomium. Compare Baker p 94.

24 Théodore cap 13. See further Patlagean, [Evelyne] [‘Ancienne] hagiographie byzantine [et histoire sociale‘], Annales 23 (1968) pp 10623 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at pp 109-10.

25 Théodore cap 10.

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27 Ibid cap 77 with commentary II p 221. Compare cap 121, where the effects of a purgative are also achieved miraculously, and cap 124.

28 Some references collected by Seiber pp 87-93. See also Magoulias, [H.J.], [‘The Lives of the Saints as Sources of Data for the History of Byzantine Medicine in the Sixth and Seventh Centuries’], BZ 57 (1954) pp 12750 Google Scholar, which is often very unreliable.

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33 Selber pp 97-100. See further Patlagean, Pauvreté, pp 105-12 for many additional references.

34 Brown, ‘Holy Man’, p 96.

35 Théodore cap 145.

36 Ibid capsl21,122.

37 Ibid cap26a.

38 Ibid cap 32.

39 Ibid caps 60, 117, 143.

40 See for example Artemii, Miracula S., ed. A. Papadopoulos-Kerameus, Varia graeca sacra (St. Petersburg 1909), nos. 25, 44.Google Scholar

41 Brown, ‘Eastern and Western Christendom’, p 15; ‘Holy Man’, p 95.

42 See above n 36.

43 Compare Théodore cap 143, where the visit of an official prevents his going to a disaster-stricken village.

44 Ibid caps 97, 121,156.

45 See for example La Vie ancienne de S. Syméon Stylite le Jeune, ed Ven, Paul van den, Societé des Bollandistes, sub hag 32, 2 vols (Brussels 1962 Google Scholar, 1970) cap 102 and editor’s note.

46 See for example Miracula S. Artemii no 23 on the ‘braggarts’ Hippocrates and Galen, and the miracles of Cyrus and John passim, in the new edition of Marcos, Natalio Fernandez. Los ‘thaumata’ de Sofronio. Contribución al estudio de la ‘incubano’ Cristiana (Madrid 1975)Google Scholar.

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60 Compare Brown, ‘Holy Man’, p 100: ‘the holy man was thought of as having taken into his person, skills that had previously been preserved by society at large’.

61 See Schwartz, Lola R., ‘The Hierarchy of Resort in Curative Practice: The Admiralty Islands MelanesiaJournal of Health and Social Behaviour 10 (New York 1969) pp 2019 Google Scholar. See further Foster, George M. and Anderson, Barbara Gallatin, Medical Anthropology (New York 1978) pp 248-9.Google ScholarPubMed

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64 Cited from Finucane, Ronald C., Miracles and Pilgrims: Popular Beliefs in Medieval England (London 1977) p 67 Google Scholar.

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