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                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:S.severus_1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="S"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-1" n="severus_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname></persName></head><p>(<persName xml:lang="grc"><surname full="yes">Σευῆρος</surname></persName>). Greeks, literary and
      ecclesiastical. The name of Severus, though of pure Latin original, passed into the East, and
      was borne by various writers, whose works, chiefly in Arabic, are still extant in MSS. Only
      three persons of the name, however, require notice here, the two haeresiarchs (<ref target="severus-bio-4">Severus the Encratite</ref> and <ref target="severus-bio-3">Severus of
       Antioch</ref>) and <ref target="severus-bio-7">Severus the rhetorician</ref>. For the others
      the reader is referred to Assemani, <hi rend="ital">Bibliotheca Orientalis ;</hi> Cave, <hi rend="ital">Hist. Litt.</hi> vol. ii. p. 106, ed. Oxford, 1740-43; and Fabric. <hi rend="ital">Bibl. Graec.</hi> vol. x. p. 623, &amp;c.</p><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-2" n="severus_2"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname></persName></head><p>1. <hi rend="smallcaps">ACEPHALORUM</hi>
       <hi rend="smallcaps">PRINCEPS</hi> [No. 2.].</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-3" n="severus_3"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname></persName> or <persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname><addName full="yes">Bar</addName></persName></head><p>2. Of <hi rend="smallcaps">ANTIOCH</hi>. An eminent leader of the Monophysites in the
       earlier part of the sixth century, whence he is designated <hi rend="smallcaps">HAERESIARCHA</hi> and <hi rend="smallcaps">ACEPHALUS</hi> (the Acephali, <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἀκέφαλοι</foreign>, " the headless," were the stricter Monophysites, and
       were so called because they renounced the communion of Peter Mongus, the trimming head of
       their party), not to enumerate the other reproachful epithets heaped upon hint by the members
       of the orthodox Greek and Latin churches. As a compensation for all this abuse, it may be
       observed that he enjoys, to this day, the highest reputation among the Jacobites of Syria and
       other parts of the East. He was born at Sozopolis, a town of Pisidia, in Asia Minor ; and was
       in early life a pleader at Berytus in Syria, being at that time a heathen. He is charged by
       his adversaries with having practised magic (Evagrius, <hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> 3.33; <hi rend="ital">Epistola Orthodoxor. Episcop. Orientalium,</hi> and <hi rend="ital">Libellus
        Monachor. ad Mennam</hi> apud <hi rend="ital">Concil.</hi> vol. v. col. 40, 120, 121, ed.
       Labbe). Having, however, embraced Christianity and been baptized in the church of St.
       Leontius, the Martyr, at Tripolis in Syria, he quitted the bar and devoted himself to a
       monastic life, in a monastery of Palestine, between Gaza and its port Maiuma. He appears to
       have embraced the Monophysite doctrine almost immediately after his conversion; for he is
       charged (<hi rend="ital">Libellus Monachor. l.c.</hi>) with renouncing, before the days of
       his baptism were complete, the church into which he had been baptized; " calling the holy
       temples of God receptacles of heresy and impiety " (ibid.). It is probable, and indeed
       Theophanes distinctly asserts it (<hi rend="ital">Chronog.</hi> p. 241, ed. Bonn.), that the
       monastery to which he withdrew, was a monastery of the Monophysites; and it was there that he
       met with Peter the Iberian, bishop of Gaza, a strenuous Monophysite and a follower of
       Timotheus Aelurus [<hi rend="smallcaps">TIMOTHEUS</hi>], whose banishment he had shared.
       Severus was so earnest a Monophysite that he rejected the Henoticon of the emperor Zeno [<hi rend="smallcaps">ZENO</hi>], and anathematized Peter Mongus, the more moderate Monophysite
       patriarch of Alexandria [<hi rend="smallcaps">PETRUS</hi>, literary and ecclesiastical, No.
       22.], because he received the Henoticon (Liberat. <hi rend="ital">Breviar.</hi> 100.19).
       Severus ridiculed the emperor's edict in his writings, calling it not the " Henoticon"
        (<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἑνωτικόν</foreign>, " edict of union"), but Kenoticon (<foreign xml:lang="grc">κενωτικόν</foreign>, " edict of vanity"), and Diaereticon (<foreign xml:lang="grc">διαιρετικόν</foreign>, " edict of disunion"). From his monastery in
       Palestine, Severus appears to have removed to another monastery in Egypt, of which Nephalius
       was abbot. Possibly his ultra opinions had rendered him a dangerous or a disagreeable inmate
       of his Palestinian monastery and he hoped to find a more cordial welcome or a securer shelter
       with Nephalius. In this hope he was disappointed : Nephalius embraced the side of Council of
       Chalcedon, and Severus and others were expelled from the monastery (Evagr. <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>). Hereupon he fled to Constantinople, to plead his own cause and that of his
       fellow-sufferers; and in this way became known to the emperor Anastasius, who had (<date when-custom="491">A. D. 491</date>) succeeded Zeno. Severus is charged (<hi rend="ital">Libellus
        Monachor. l.c.</hi>) with exciting troubles in the city of Alexandria, and occasioning the
       burning of many houses and the slaughter of many citizens, though the city had afforded him a
       shelter " in his adversity :" but it is difficult to fix the time to which these charges
       refer. If he was in Alexandria after leaving the monastery in Palestine, and before entering
       that of Nephalius, the expression " in his adversity " intimates that he had been diven from
       his monastery in Palestine : but it is not unlikely that the disturbances at Alexandria may
       have been consequent on his expulsion and that of his fellow-monks by Nephalius ; and the
       term "his adversity" may be understood as referring to that expulsion.</p><p>In what year Severus went to Constantinople, or how long he abode there, is not clear.
       Tillemont places his arrival in <date when-custom="510">A. D. 510</date>; but he probably relied on
       a passage in Theophanes (<hi rend="ital">Chronoy. ad</hi>
       <hi rend="smallcaps">A. M.</hi> 6002) which is ambiguous. The fellow-monks for whom Severus
       came to plead, were partisans of Peter Mongus [<hi rend="smallcaps">PETRUS</hi>, No. 22.];
       and Severus, because he had formerly anathematized Peter, was reproached with inconsistency
       in taking their part (Liberat <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>). He appears to have been at
       Constantinople, <date when-custom="512">A. D. 512</date>; when, in consequence of the disturbances,
       excited on account of Flavian, patriarch of Antioch [<hi rend="smallcaps">FLAVIANUS</hi>,
       Ecclesiastics, No. 2.], that prelate was deposed and banished to Petra in Idumaea (Evagr. <hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> 3.32), and Anastasius eagerly seized the opportunity afforded by this
       vacancy to procure the appointment of Severus to the patriarchate. The appointment was most
       offensive to the orthodox party. Whether Anastasius or Severus took any steps to abate its
       offensiveness is not clear. A letter of Epiphanius, archbishop of Tyre, and some other
       prelates to the synod of Constantinople states it as a matter of common report, vet with a
       cautious expression of doubt as to its truth, that Severus, before his consecration as
       patriarch, renounced the ordination to the office of presbyter, which he had received when
       among the Monophysites. This renunciation, if it really took place, implies that he was
       re-ordained to the priesthood by some orthodox prelate. Theodore Anagnostes or Lector (<hi rend="ital">Hist. Eccles.</hi> 2.31) states, on the authority of Joannes Diacrinomenus, or
       John the Dissenter [comp. <hi rend="smallcaps">JOANNES</hi>, literary and ecclesiastical, No.
       2.], that Anastasius obliged Severus to swear that he would not anathematize the Council of
       Chalcedon (comp. <hi rend="ital">Synodicon,</hi> apud Fabric. <hi rend="ital">Biblioth.
        Graec.</hi> vol. xii. p. 401, and apud <hi rend="ital">Concilia,</hi> vol. iv. col. 1414);
       but that Severus on the very day of his consecration, which appears to have taken place at
       Antioch, yielded to the urgent solicitations of his Monophysite friends, and, ascending the
       pulpit, publicly anathematized the Council, and afterwards (A. D. 413) obtained the
       confirmation of the anathema by a council which he assembled at Antioch (<hi rend="ital">Synodicon,</hi>
       <pb n="799"/>
       <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>). He anathematized Macedonius, the deposed patriarch of
       Constantinople [<hi rend="smallcaps">MACEDONIUS</hi>, No. 4.], and his own predecessor at
       Antioch, Flavianus. But he accepted the Henoticon of Zeno, and declared himself to be in
       communion with Timotheus and Joannes, or John III., the patriarchs of Constantinople and
       Alexandria; and restored to the diptychs the name of Peter Mongus [<hi rend="smallcaps">PETRUS</hi>, No. 22.], whom he had once anathematized. At the same time he received into
       communion Peter the Iberian, his old comrade in the monastery in Palestine, who had retained
       the more rigid Monophysite views which had marked the early years of Severus himself, and
       continued out of communion with the more moderate Monophysites of Alexandria who had received
       the Henoticon. In fact, from the time of his going to Constantinople, Severus's policy
       appears to have been to unite all the Monophysites, whether moderates or ultras, into one
       great body, and to resist the orthodox or supporters of the Council of Chalcedon, by whom his
       appointment was not recognized, and against whom, if the representations of his opponents may
       be believed, he directed a fierce persecution with atrocious cruelty (<hi rend="ital">Relatio
        Archimandritarum Syriae</hi> apud <hi rend="ital">Concil.</hi> vol. iv. coll. 1461, 1462;
        <hi rend="ital">Libell. Monachor. l.c.; Supplicatio Clericor. Antioch.</hi> and <hi rend="ital">Epistola Epiphanii Tyrii,</hi> apud <hi rend="ital">Concilia,</hi> vol. v. col.
       157, 194, &amp;c.). He is especially charged, in conjunction with Peter of Apameia, with
       having engaged a " band of Jewish robbers," and placing them in ambush for a company of three
       hundred and fifty of the orthodox, who were all slain, and their limbs left unburied and
       scattered about the road. Many of the bishops of Severus's patriarchate fled from their sees,
       others were banished, and others apparently were compelled to conceal their real sentiments.
       Elias I., patriarch of Jerusalem [<hi rend="smallcaps">ELIAS</hi>, No. 1.], was deposed, and
       the Monophysite party became triumphant in most parts of the East. Their triumph indeed was
       not complete, nor of long duration. Some bishops of Severus's own patriarchate renounced
       communion with him : two of them, Cosmas of Epiphaneia, and Severianus of Arethusa, had the
       audacity to send to him a document declaring him deposed; and so strongly were they supported
       by the people of their dioceses, that the emperor, who had sentenced them to banishment for
       their contumacy, was obliged to leave them in possession of their sees, finding he could not
       remove them without bloodshed (Evagr. <hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> 3.34). The patriarch of
       Jerusalem who succeeded Elias, prompted by the Anachorets Saba [<hi rend="smallcaps">SABA</hi>] and Theodosius, adhered to the orthodox faith, which was also supported by the
       pope and the Roman Church. Still, notwithstanding this opposition, the Monophysites having
       men of their own party in the patriarchal sees of Alexandria, Antioch, and Constantinople,
       possessed a decided superiority. But the accession of Justin I., who adhered to the Council
       of Chalcedon [<hi rend="smallcaps">JUSTINUS</hi> I.], occasioned their overthrow; for in the
       balanced state of parties, and the servility or timidity of the ecclesiastics and people, the
       predominance of one side or the other depended on the individual filling the imperial throne.
       While the heretical Anastasius survived, heresy was in the ascendant; it succumbed to
       orthodoxy, on the accession of the orthodox Justin. Another circumstance which, perhaps,
       conduced to the overthrow of the Monophysites, was the re-action occasioned in many minds by
       their abuse of their pre-eminence. Among those who were thus led to return to the orthodox
       faith was Mamas, abbot of the convent near Gaza, under whom Severus had passed the earlier
       part of his monastic life. Early in the reign of Justin I. [<hi rend="smallcaps">JUSTINUS</hi> I.], that emperor, at the instigation perhaps of Vitalian, commanded that
       Severus should be deposed and apprehended : according to some accounts he ordered his tongue
       to be cut out, and he was anathematized in a council held at Constantinople (<date when-custom="518">A. D. 518</date>). Severus, however, eluded the emperor's severity; and taking
       ship at Seleuceia, the port of Antioch, fled with Julian bishop of Halicarnassus, to
       Alexandria (<date when-custom="518">A. D. 518</date> or 519). Paul was chosen patriarch of Antioch
       in his room (Evagrius, <hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> 4.4) : and the change was followed by the
       secession from the church of the followers of the deposed patriarch, and by the pronouncing,
       in various ecclesiastical councils, of anathemas upon him (<hi rend="ital">Concilia,</hi>
       vol. iv. col. 1673 ; Liberat. <hi rend="ital">Breriar.</hi> 100.19). Meanwhile Severus
       remained at Alexandria, protected by the patriarch Timotheus : and, as if it was his destiny
       to be the troubler of the Church, he and his fellow-exile Julian started the controversy on
       the corruptibility of Christ's human body before the resurrection, Severus affirming, and
       Julian denying, that it was corruptible; the patriarch Timotheus rather inclined to the side
       of Severus. After the death of Justin, and the accession of Justinian I., the prospects of
       Severus became more favourable ; for although the new emperor himself [<hi rend="smallcaps">JUSTINIANUS</hi> I.] supported the Council of Chalcedon, his empress Theodora favoured the
       Monophysite party, and by her influence Severus obtained the emperor's permission to return
       to Constantinople (Evagrius. <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>). On his arrival, Severus found that
       Anthimus, who had just obtained the patriarchate of Constantinople, <date when-custom="535">A. D.
        535</date>, was a Monophysite, and he prevailed on him to avow his sentiments. Timotheus of
       Alexandria was a Monophysite also, and the avowal of that obnoxious heresy by the heads of
       the church, naturally excited the alarm of the orthodox party. Anthimus and Timotheus were
       both deposed; and in the councils of Constantinople and Jerusalem (<date when-custom="536">A. D.
        536</date>), and in an imperial edict, Severus was again anathematized ; his writings also
       were ordered to be burned. These decisive measures secured the predominance of the orthodox :
       and Evagrius boasts that the church remained from thenceforth united and pure. But this
       result was obtained by the separation of Monophysites, and the formation of the great
       Jacobite schismatical churches of Egypt and the East, by whom Severus has been ever regarded
       as, to his death, legitimate patriarch of Antioch. Some authorities state that Severus was
       compelled through the interference of Pope Agapetus (A. D. 535, 536) to leave Constantinople
       and return to Alexandria. The date of his death is uncertain : Joannes, bishop of Tela, his
       contemporary, in his <title xml:lang="la">Liber Directionum</title> (apud Assemani, <hi rend="ital">Biblioth. Orient.</hi> vol. ii. p. 54) places it in the year of the Greeks, <hi rend="ital">i. e.</hi> the Seleucidae, 849 = <date when-custom="538">A. D. 538</date>; the
        <title>Chronicon</title> of Gregorius Bar Hebraeus, or Abulpharagius (apud eundem, p. 321),
       in the year of the Greeks 850= <date when-custom="539">A. D. 539</date>; and Assemani himself
       (ibid. note), in <date when-custom="542">A. D. 542</date>. It is said to have taken place at
       Alexandria, where he lurked in the disguise of a monk. The Jacobites recognize Sergius as his
       successor in the patriarchate. (Marcellinus, <hi rend="ital">Chronicon</hi> Victor <pb n="800"/> Tunnunensis, <hi rend="ital">Chronicon ;</hi> Theophanes, <hi rend="ital">Chronog.</hi> pp. 130-142. ed. Paris, pp. 104-113, ed. Venice, pp. 233-255, ed. Bonn;
       Evagrius, <hi rend="ital">H. E. ll. cc.; Concilia, ll. cc.;</hi> Liberatus, <hi rend="ital">Brexiarium Caussae Nestorianorum et Eutychianorum,</hi> 100.19; Nicephorus Callisti <hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> lib. 16.29-32, 34, 45, 17.2, 8, 9, 18.45, 49, 50; Cave, <hi rend="ital">Hist. Litt.</hi> ad ann. 513, vol. i. p. 499; Tillemont <hi rend="ital">Mémoires,</hi> xvi. pp. 632, &amp;100.709, &amp;c.; Le Quien, <hi rend="ital">Oriens
        Christianus,</hi> vol. ii. col. 730; Abulpbaragius, <hi rend="ital">Hist. Dynastiarnm,</hi>
       pp. 93, 94 of Pococke's Latin Version, 4to. Oxon, 1663; <hi rend="ital">L'Art de
        vérifier lcs Dates,</hi> 8vo. Paris, 1818, vol. iv. p. 16, &amp;c.)</p><p>That Severus was a man of indomitable courage and perseverance is obvious from his history.
       He was, in fact, the leader of the Monophysite party, and may be regarded as the principal
       author of the great Jacobite schism. His career was consistent, and, to all appearance,
       guided by integrity : and if lie largely partook of the bitter and uncharitable temper which
       the religious struggles of his day had generated, the general prevalence of his fault may be
       pleaded as extenuating the guilt of the individual. To which it must be added, that we know
       Him almost entirely from the representations of his opponents. His life was written by a
       contemporary ; but the work is lost, and is known to us only in the citations and references
       of Evagrius (<hi rend="ital">H. E.</hi> 3.33), and Liberatus (<hi rend="ital">Breriar.</hi>
       100.19). A life of Severus in Syriac was noticed by Assemani among the MSS. of the Syriac
       convent of St. Mary, at Scete in the desert of Nitria, in Egypt, but it is not certain if it
       was the life of Severus of Antioch. (Assemani, <hi rend="ital">Bibl. Orient.</hi> vol. iii.
       part 1, p. 19). Some statements of very doubtful credit, made by the Nestorians respecting
       him, are given by Assemani (ibid. p. 334, &amp;c.).</p><div><head>Works</head><p>Of the numerous works of Severus only fragments remain. There are citations from him in
        various <hi rend="ital">Catenae in Genesim, in Jobum, in Esaiam, in Matthaeum, in Lucam, in
         Joannem, in Acta Apostolorum et Catholicas Epistolas</hi> (Fabric. <hi rend="ital">Bibl.
         Graec.</hi> vol. viii. pp. 646, 664, 676, 679, 684, 695, 696, vol.x. p. 616); and on the
        ground, apparently, of these citations, Fabricius (vol. x. p. 616) ascribes to him,</p><div><head>1. <title xml:lang="la">Commentarii</title> on these various books of Scripture,
         though the extracts may be from his <title xml:lang="la">Sermones</title></head><p>or some of his other works. A Commentary on the Psalms is indeed mentioned by Gregorius
         Bar Hebraeus or Abulpharagius (Cave, <title xml:lang="la">Hist. Litt.</title> p. 501), and
         a work, probably a Commentary, on St. Luke's Gospel, is cited in a Coislin MS. ( Montfauc.
          <title xml:lang="la">Bibl. Coislin.</title> p. 54). Montfaucon published (<title xml:lang="la">Biblioth. Coislin.</title> p. 63), under the name of Severus, and under the
         impression that it had never before been printed, a fragment, which he entitled
          <title>Severi Archiepiscopi Antiocheni Concordantia Exangelistarum, circa ea quae in
          Sepulcro Domini contigerunt : item de Sabbatis et de Varietate Exemplarium S. Marci
          Exangelistae :</title> but the fragment has been identified with a piece previously
         published among the works of Gregory of Nyssa, ed. Paris, <date when-custom="1615">A. D.
          1615</date> and 1638 [<hi rend="smallcaps">GREGORIUS</hi>
         <hi rend="smallcaps">NYSSENUS</hi>], to whom, however, it does not belong; and <date when-custom="1648">A. D. 1648</date>, again in the <title xml:lang="la">Auctarium Norum</title>
         of Combéfis, by whom it was more correctly ascribed to Hesychius of Jerusalem [<hi rend="smallcaps">HESYCHIUS</hi>, No. 7]. How the piece came to be ascribed to Severus is
         discussed by Galland in the <title xml:lang="la">Prolegomena</title> (100.3) to vol. xi. of
         his <title xml:lang="la">Bibliotheca Patrum,</title> in which the piece is reprinted. An
         extract from a work of Severus is given under the title of <title xml:lang="grc">Ἀπόκρισις</title>, <title xml:lang="la">Responsum,</title> to the question, <foreign xml:lang="grc">Πῶς νοητέον τὴν τοῦ Κυρίον τριήμερον ταφὴν καἰ
          ἀνάστασιν</foreign>; <title xml:lang="la">Quomodo sit intelligenda triduana Domini
          sepultura et resurrectio ?</title> was given in the <title>Quaestiones</title> (<title xml:lang="la">Qu.</title> lii) of Anastasius Sinaita [<hi rend="smallcaps">ANASTASIUS</hi>
         <hi rend="smallcaps">SINAITA</hi>, No. 3]; and was published by Gretser in his edition of
         that work. Fabricius has inaccurately confounded this extract with the fragment published
         by Montfaucon.</p></div><div><head>2. Severus wrote a vast number of <foreign xml:lang="grc">Λόγοι</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Sermones.</title>
         <foreign xml:lang="grc">Λόγος ρξ́</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Sermo
         CLX.</title></head><p>is cited in a MS. <title xml:lang="la">Catena in Prophetas Majores et Minores,</title> in
         the King's Library at Paris (Montfaucon, <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi> p. 53), and there may
         have been many more than that number.</p><p>Many of these <title xml:lang="la">Sermones</title> are extant in MS. in a Syriac
         version, by Jacobus of Edessa [<hi rend="smallcaps">JACOBUS</hi>, No. 8] and others
         (Assemani, <title xml:lang="la">Biblioth. Oriental.</title> vol. i. p. 494). Of the
          <foreign xml:lang="grc">Λόγοι</foreign> of Severus some were designated <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἐνθρονιαστικοί</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Inaugurales ;</title>
         and a fragment of one of these was published by Le Quien, in his edition of the works of
         Joannes Damascenus (vol. i. p. 504), by whom it was cited in the Appendix to his Letter or
         Tract <foreign xml:lang="grc">Περὶ τῶν άγίων νηστειῶν</foreign>
         <title xml:lang="la">De Sanctis Jejuniis</title> [<hi rend="smallcaps">DAMASCENUS</hi>, <hi rend="smallcaps">JOANNES</hi>]. Another citation from a discourse of Severus, entitled
          <title>Homilia de Epithronio,</title> appears in the Latin version by Masius of the
          <title>Paradisus</title> of Moyses Bar Cepha (Assemani, <title xml:lang="la">Biblioth.
          Orient.</title> vol. ii. p. 129), published first at Antwerp, <date when-custom="1569">A. D.
          1569</date>, and reprinted in various editions of the <title>Bibliotheca Patrum</title>
         (vol. vi. ed. Paris, 1575, vol. i. ed. Paris, 1589 and 1654, vol. x. ed. Cologne, 1618, and
         vol. xvii. ed. Lyons, 1677). The polemical works of Severus, as might be expected from his
         character and position, were numerous. Citations are extant in MS. from his writings.</p></div><div><head>3. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ τοῦ Γραμματικοῦ</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Grammaticum,</title> or <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ Ἰωάννου τοῦ
          γραμματικοῦ τοῦ Καισαρέως</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Joannem Caesarensem
          Grammaticum</title></head><p>in three books at least, written while in exile at Alexandria, after his deposition
         (Anast. Sinait. <hi rend="ital">Hodegus, s. Viae Dux,</hi> 100.6.).</p></div><div><head>4. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ Φιλικισσίμου</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Felicissimum</title></head><p>in four books at least.</p></div><div><head>5. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Πρὸς Ἰονλιανὸν Ἀλικαρνασέα</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Julianum Halicarnassensem</title></head><p>in several books, or more probably several successive works; from this work a short
         passage is quoted by Photius (<title xml:lang="la">Bibl.</title> Cod. 225).</p></div><div><head>6. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ Ἀλεχάνδρου</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Alexandrum ;</title> or <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ κωδικίλλων
          Ἀλεχάνδρου</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Codicillos Alexandri</title></head><p>in several books.</p></div><div><head>7. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κατὰ τῆς διαθήκης Λαμπετίου</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Contra Testamentum Lampetii</title></head><p>i. e. the work of Lampetius the Massalian, entitled <title xml:lang="grc">Διαθήκη</title>, which, as well as the reply of Severus, is noticed by Photius (<title xml:lang="la">Biblioth.</title> Cod. 52). Severus wrote this work before his elevation to
         the Patriarchate. Severus wrote also two works against the Council of Chalcedon : one,</p></div><div><head>8. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Τὰ Φιλαλήθη</foreign>, or rather <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ὁ Φιλαλήθης</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Philalethes s. Amator
          Veri</title></head><p>(comp. Anastas. Sinait. <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>).</p></div><div><head>9. in defence of the former, under the title of <title xml:lang="grc">Ἀπολογία
          τοῦ Φιλαλήθους</title>, <title xml:lang="la">Philalethae Apologia.</title></head><p>Perhaps the <foreign xml:lang="grc">Φιλαλήθης</foreign> is only another title for No.
         3.</p></div><div><head>10. Fabricius mentions a work of Severus in eight books, if not more, <foreign xml:lang="grc">Περὶ τῶν δύο φυδέων</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">De duabus
          Naturis</title></head><p>but does not cite his authority. Of the other works of Severus the principal were,</p></div><div><head>11. his <foreign xml:lang="grc">ʼΕπιστολαί</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Epistolae</title></head><p>of which Montfaucon enumerates nearly sixty, without including those to the Emperor
         Justinian and the Empress Theodora, and to the patriarch Theodosias of <pb n="801"/>
         Alexandria, cited by Evagrius (<title xml:lang="la">H. E.</title> 4.10) and Nicephorus
         Callisti (<title xml:lang="la">H. E.</title> 17.8), the <foreign xml:lang="grc">Συνοδικά</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Synodica,</title> or <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἐπιστολαὶ συνοδικαί</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Epistolae Synodicae,</title> or
          <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἐπιστολαὶ ἐνθρονιστικαί</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Epistolae Inaugurales,</title> issued by him on his promotion to the patriarchate, in
         which he anathematized the council of Chalcedon, and all who supported the doctrine of the
         two natures of Christ. (Evagr. <title xml:lang="la">H. E.</title> 3.33, 34 ; Niceph.
         Callist. <title xml:lang="la">H. E.</title> 17.2.) Of his other works the following are
         cited in various MSS. :</p></div><div><head>12. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Υ̓πακοὴ εἰς τοὺς μάρτυρας</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Hypacöe in Martyres</title></head><p>or simply <foreign xml:lang="grc">Υ̓πακοή</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Hypacöe.</title></p></div><div><head>13. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Πρὸς Ἀναστάσιον διάλογος</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Dialogus ad (s. Contra) Anastasium.</title></head><p/></div><div><head>14. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Πρὸς Εὐπράξιον κουβικουλάπιον
          ἀποκρίσεις</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Responsiones ad Eupraxium
          Cubicularium.</title></head><p/></div><div><head>15. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Εἰς τὸ</foreign> "<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἅγιος
          ὁ Θεὸς</foreign>," <foreign xml:lang="grc">σύνταγμα</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Syntagma in illud,</title> "<title xml:lang="la">Sanctus Deus ;</title>"</head><p/></div><div><head>16. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Βίβλος τῶν ὑποσημειμθέντων ἰδιοχείρως διαφόπων
          κεφαλακ́ων</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Liber capitum variorum manu propria
          subsignatorum,</title> of which Joannes Damascenus cites a passage in the
          <title>Appendix</title> to his <title xml:lang="la">De Jejuniis</title></head><p>(Le Quien's ed. <hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>).</p></div><div><head>Other Works</head><p>Several citations of the works of Severus are given in the <title xml:lang="la">Hodegus</title> s. <title xml:lang="la">Dux Viae</title> of Anastasius Sinaita, and by
         Photius (<title xml:lang="la">Biblioth.</title> Cod. 230) and in the <title>Concilia
          ;</title> but they are chiefly, if not wholly, from his <title xml:lang="la">Sermones</title> and <title xml:lang="la">Epistolae.</title>.</p></div><div><head><title xml:lang="la">Liber de Ritibus Baptismi et Sacrae Synaxis apud Syros
          receptis</title></head><p>A work, <title xml:lang="la">Liber de Ritibus Baptismi et Sacrae Synaxis apud Syros
          receptis,</title> published in Syriac, with a Latin version, 4to. Antwerp, 1572, under the
         name of Severus, patriarch of Alexandria <note anchored="true" place="margin">* The Severus of Alexandria,
          to whom this Liturgy is ascribed, is apparently Severus surnamed Bar Maschi, who lived in
          the tenth century after the Saracen conquest had superseded both the Greek government and
          the Greek language in Egypt; so that he comes not within the limits of our work.</note>,
         is ascribed in some MSS. to our Severus; and Cave inclines to assign it to him. Dionysius
         Bar Salibi, a Syriac writer, cites a work of "Severus patriarcha oecumenicus," which he
         entitles <title>Canticum Crucis</title> (Assemani, <hi rend="ital">Bibl. Orient.</hi> vol.
         ii. p. 205).</p></div></div><div><head>Further Information</head><p>The works of Severus are enumerated imperfectly by Cave (<hi rend="ital">Hist. Litt.</hi>
        ad ann. 513, vol. i. p. 499, and more fully by Montfaucon (<hi rend="ital">Biblioth.
         Coislin.</hi> p. 53, &amp;c.), and Fabricius (<hi rend="ital">Biblioth. Graec.</hi> vol. x.
        p. 616, &amp;c.)</p></div></div><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-4" n="severus_4"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname><addName full="yes">ENCRATITA</addName></persName></head><p>3. <hi rend="smallcaps">ENCRATITA</hi>. There were two Severi emiment as leaders of bodies
       accounted heretical. The earlier was a leader of one of the divisions of the Gnostic body;
       the latter, and far more celebrated was the Monophysite Patriarch of Antioch [See No. 2.] We
       speak here of the former, who appears to have lived in the latter part of the second century.
       Little is known of his personal history. Eusebius (<bibl n="Euseb. Hist. Eccl. 4.29">Euseb.
        Hist. Eccl. 4.29</bibl>), speaking of the sect of the Encratitae and their founder Tatian
        [<hi rend="smallcaps">TATIANUS</hi>], says that a certain person named Severus having
       strengthened the sect, gave occcasion to their being called, after his own name, Severiani.
       Theodoret also makes Severus posterior to Tatian (<hi rend="ital">Haeret. Fabul. Comp.</hi>
       1.21). Epiplanius, on the other hand, makes Severus anterior to Tatian. But the silence of
       Irenaeus, who mentions Tatian, but not Severus, makes it probable that Tatian was the
       earlier. Our account of the opinions of the Severiani is very obscure. According to Eusebius
       they admitted the Law and the Prophets (<bibl n="Euseb. Hist. Eccl. 4.29">Euseb. Hist. Eccl.
        4.29</bibl>), while according to Augustin they rejected them (<hi rend="ital">De
        Haeres.</hi> c. xxiv.). It is not improbable that they admitted them as an authentic record
       of the Old or Mosaic Dispensation, promulgated by the Demiurgos, and as such may have used
       them, and argued from them ; but yet denied their authority as binding upon themselves, who
       had embraced the New Dispensation, which rested not on the authority of the Demiurgos, but on
       the higher and opposite authority of the Supreme and All-merciful God. This explanation of
       two apparently opposite statements is at any rate consistent with the leading principles of
       Gnosticism. The curious opinions of Severus, at least of the Severiani, as to the genealogy
       of the Devil, and the origin of the vine, and of the formation of woman and man, are noticed
       elsewhere [<hi rend="smallcaps">TATIANUS</hi>]. Severus denied the apostolic office of Paul,
       and consequently the authority of his writings; going in these respects beyond Tatian. His
       followers also denied, according to Augustin, the resurrection of the body, which is likely
       enough. It is not impossible that these differences may have led to the temporary division of
       the sect of the Encratitae to which Severus and Tatian both belonged, and to the formation of
       separate bodies under the respective names of Tatiani and Severiani, who afterwards reunited
       under the old and generic name of Encratitae. The ascetic features, abstinence from marriage
       and from the use of animal food and wine, appear to have been common to the whole body,
       whether designated Tatiani, Severiani, or Encratitae. [<hi rend="smallcaps">TATIANUS</hi>].
       (Euseb. <hi rend="ital">l.c. ;</hi> Epiphan. <hi rend="ital">Haeres.</hi> xlv. ; Augustin.
        <hi rend="ital">l.c. ;</hi> Theodoret. <hi rend="ital">l.c. ;</hi> Ittigius, <hi rend="ital">De Haeresiarchis,</hi> sect. ii. c. 12. § xv.; Tillemont, <hi rend="ital">Mémoires,</hi> vol. ii. p. 414; Neander, <hi rend="ital">Church History</hi> (by
       Rose), vol. ii. p. 111; and (by Torrey) vol. ii. p. 167, note 3.)</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-5" n="severus_5"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname></persName></head><p>4. <hi rend="smallcaps">HAERESIARCHA</hi>. [Nos. 2, 3.]</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-6" n="severus_6"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname></persName></head><p>5. <hi rend="smallcaps">MONOPHYSITA</hi>. [No. 2.]</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="severus-bio-7" n="severus_7"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Seve'rus</surname><addName full="yes">RHETOR</addName></persName></head><p>6. <hi rend="smallcaps">RHETOR</hi>. Of this writer nothing certain is known. Fabricius is
       disposed to identify him with the <foreign xml:lang="grc">Σεβῆρος σοφιστὴς
        Ῥωμαῖος</foreign>, Severus Sophista Romans, mentioned by Suidas (<hi rend="ital">s.
        v.</hi>) and by Photius, in his abstract of the life of Isidorus by Damascius (<hi rend="ital">Biblioth.</hi> Cod. 242). The Severus of Photius resided at Alexandria in the
       latter part of the fifth century, in the enjoyment of an ample library, and of literary
       leisure, and was a great patron and encourager of learned men, circumstances which bespeak
       him to have been a man of fortune. The prospect of the revival of the Western Empire during
       the brief reign of the Emperor Anthemius [<hi rend="smallcaps">ANTHEMIUS</hi>], led him to
       visit Rome, where he obtained the honour of the consulship (<date when-custom="470">A. D.
        470</date>), which honour, according to Damascius, was portended by the circumstance, deemed
       a prodigy, that his horse, when rubbed down, emitted from his skin an abundance of
       sparks.</p><div><head>Works</head><p>Severus, the rhetorician, wrote the following works :--</p><div><head>I. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἠθοποιΐαι</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Ethopoeiae</title></head><p>A series of fictitious speeches, supposed to be uttered by various historical or poetical
         personages at particular conjunctures. There are extant eight of these <title xml:lang="la">Ethopoeiae.</title>
         <listBibl><bibl>1. <title xml:lang="la">Herculis, Periclymeno in certamine sese
           commutante.</title></bibl><bibl>2. <title xml:lang="la">Menelai rapta a Paride Helena.</title></bibl><bibl>3. <title xml:lang="la">Hectoris, quum comperisset Priamaum apud inferos cum Achille
            convivatum</title></bibl><bibl>4. <title xml:lang="la">Pictoris, depictae a se puellae amore
           correpti.</title></bibl><pb n="802"/><bibl>5. <title xml:lang="la">Achillis, apud inferos edocti captam a Pyrrho Trojam
            esse</title></bibl><bibl>6. <title xml:lang="la">Aeschinis, cum deprehenderet Philippi imagine apud
            Demosthenem</title></bibl><bibl>7. <title xml:lang="la">Ejusdem, in exilium abeuntis, cum ei Demosthenes viaticum
            daret</title></bibl><bibl>8. <title xml:lang="la">Briseis, cum Praecones eam abducerent</title></bibl></listBibl></p><div><head>Editions</head><p><bibl>Nos. 1-4 were first printed, with a Latin version, by Fed. Morel, 8vo. Paris,
           1616, although the third appeared in an imperfect form and the fourth appeared as a
           fragment, with title merely of <title xml:lang="la">Fragmentum alterius
            Ethopoeiae</title>.</bibl></p><p><bibl>The fourth was afterwards given in a complete form by Allatius; viz. <title xml:lang="la">Pictoris, depictae a se puellae amore correpti.</title></bibl></p><p><bibl>Morel himself published the fourth complete, under the name of the sophist
           Aristides.</bibl></p><p><bibl>Nos. 1-5, but in a more ample form and in a different order, were included, with a
           new Latin version, in the <title>Excerpta varia Graecorum Sophistarum ac Rhetorum</title>
           of Allatius, 8vo. Paris, 1641.</bibl></p><p><bibl>Gale included nos. 1-5, which were already published, with 6-8 in his <title xml:lang="la">Rhetores Selecti,</title> 8vo. Oxford, 1676.</bibl></p></div><div><head>Editions</head><p><bibl>No. 7 had been published in the collection of Allatius, but under the name of
           Theodorus Cynopolites.</bibl><bibl>Gale added a new Latin version of his own, and gave a revised, at least a different,
           text.</bibl></p><p><bibl>The whole eight are included in the <title>Rhetores Graeci</title> of Walz, vol.
           i. p. 539, 8vo. Stuttgard and Tubingen, 1832</bibl>.</p></div></div><div><head>II. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Διηγήματα</foreign>, <title xml:lang="la">Narrationes.</title></head><p><listBibl><bibl>1. <title xml:lang="la">De Viola</title></bibl><bibl>2. <title xml:lang="la">De Hyacintho</title></bibl><bibl>3. <title xml:lang="la">De Narcisso</title></bibl><bibl>4. <title xml:lang="la">De Arione</title></bibl><bibl>5. <title xml:lang="la">De Icaro</title></bibl><bibl>6. <title xml:lang="la">De Oto et Ephialte.</title></bibl></listBibl></p><div><head>Editions</head><p>These were first published by Iriarte. (<hi rend="ital">Regiae Biblioth. Matritensis
           Codd. Graeci MSti,</hi> vol. i. p. 462. fol. Madrid, 1769), and are reprinted by Walz in
          the collection just cited, p. 357. They are very short.</p></div></div></div><div><head>Further Information</head><p>Fabric. <hi rend="ital">Bibl. Graec.</hi> vol. vi. p. 53.</p></div><byline>[<ref target="author.J.C.M">J.C.M</ref>]</byline></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>