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Hagiography in Coptic
Arietta Papaconstantinou
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1 Coptic hagiography would have been slightly ambiguous, since Coptic can refer both to the language and to a cultural entity which encompasses texts in other languages, especially Arabic (on this question, see Orlandi, Letteratura copta, 445 and the references there). This survey will present various issues raised by Coptic hagiographical texts from a historical rather than a literary point of view. It is not meant to be an exhaustive list of vitae and martyrologies, access to which can be gained through the references cited in section (c) of the Bibliography. Transcriptions of place names are from the Coptic form, but the Greek and Arabic equivalents are given, for it is often they that appear in dictionaries and encyclopaedias. 2 Delehaye, Les martyrs dgypte, 148. 3 See, for instance, Reymond and Barns, Four Martyrdoms, 2. 4 There are two editions of the Copto-Arabic Synaxarion, neither of which is entirely satisfactory: see the comments in Coquin, Le synaxaire; Coquin, Synaxarion; and Colin, Le synaxaire thiopien, 27783. On the question of translations of the Ethiopic Synaxarion, Copyrighted Material

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Coptic hagiography has suffered from a bad reputation ever since 1922 when Hippolyte Delehaye, in an otherwise outstanding article, spoke of the artificial character of this wretched literature, which in his eyes defies both history and common sense, and bears witness to an inferior level of culture and a profound poverty of thought.2 Although nobody would use such terms today, the extravagance and absurdity of the situations narrated have often been noted, and seem to have become for many the defining features of that literature.3 However, this image is founded only on a specific group of rather late martyrologies, which can by no means stand as representative of all hagiography in Coptic. Hagiographical texts make up a substantial part of extant Coptic literature. With few exceptions, they were composed between the fourth and the eighth centuries, and are preserved in manuscripts dating between the ninth and the thirteenth centuries. Some are translations from the Greek, others were composed directly in Coptic. Many are lost in their original version and are only known through translations into Arabic or Ethiopic, several of which can be found respectively in the Copto-Arabic and the Ethiopic Synaxarion, often in abridged versions.4 Inventories of libraries dating back to the eighth and ninth centuries also mention a number of
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see the classic article by Peeters, Traductions et traducteurs, which does, however, display great contempt for both the Coptic language and its literature (see e.g. 243). 5 See Coquin, Le catalogue, 23037 and Papaconstantinou, Culte des saints, 3812. 6 A list of saints found only in documentary sources in Papaconstantinou, Culte des saints, 232 n. 8. 7 For a recent treatment of questions of language choice and the chronology of the use of Coptic, see Papaconstantinou, Dioscore et le bilinguisme and They shall Speak the Arabic Language. See also Bagnall, Egypt in Late Antiquity, 23060 for the relative standing of Coptic and Greek. 8 Delehaye, Martyrs dgypte, 14954. See Orlandi, Letteratura copta, 91. 9 Baumeister, Martyr Invictus; Kossack, Die Legende im koptischen; Schenkel, Kultmythos; Reymond and Barns, Four Martyrdoms, 12. Copyrighted Material 324
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texts of which no trace is left today.5 The loss of yet more texts can be inferred from the fact that inscriptions and papyri mention a number of saints about whose lives and deeds there must have existed at least a minimal narrative.6 Although many texts still remain to be edited, it is clear that what survives today is but a small part of the hagiography produced in Egypt during late antiquity and the early Middle Ages. The majority of the texts are written in the Sahidic (southern) dialect, which dominated literary production until after the Arab conquest. Eventually, however, the Bohairic dialect (from the North) survived longer, partly because of its use in the liturgy at a time when Coptic was no longer the everyday language, and several texts are extant in this dialect too. To some extent, the linguistic separation of hagiographical texts circulating within the same country is artificial. One could simply speak of Egyptian hagiography, including all the relevant texts in a single study. However, the linguistic question was not entirely neutral. The choice of writing in one or the other language within a bilingual society was a statement of cultural allegiance that must be taken into account it is more the result of choice than of necessity. In this respect, translations function more as a form of appropriation than as a sign that the original language was no longer understood. Texts in Coptic were composed for two and a half centuries while Greek was commonly used all over the country; and when Christian authors of the tenth century began writing in Arabic, Coptic was still used and understood by members of their community. In this sense, it is legitimate to speak of hagiography in Coptic alone, with the implicit idea that the choice of that language was meaningful to those who made it.7 Most works in Coptic fall into the basic categories also found in Greek hagiography: vitae, acts of martyrs, epic martyrologies, collections of miracles and homilies in honour of saints. This led Delehaye to the conclusion that Coptic hagiography was entirely dependent on the principles set out by Greek hagiographical schools, an idea embraced by subsequent scholars.8 However, although Greek rhetoric and narrative techniques evidently served as models for Coptic authors, who had been trained in schools with centuries of paideia tradition behind them, several scholars have also insisted on the indigenous elements of Coptic literature and its relation to local literary forms.9 It has even been suggested
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Hagiography in Coptic
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Barns, Egypt and the Greek Romance. The only chronological reconstruction of Coptic literature has been suggested by Tito Orlandi, in several successive articles; the most complete is Orlandi, Letteratura copta; more specifically focused on hagiography are Orlandi, Hagiography and Cycle; see the discussion in Papaconstantinou, Culte des saints, 314 and below, 32831. Copyrighted Material 325
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As the opening chapters of this book demonstrate, some of the earliest Christian biographies were produced in Egypt. They are idealised biographies of characters deemed to be exceptional because of their detachment from the world. Several of these seem to have been translated into Coptic at a relatively early stage, and we still have today Coptic versions of the Life of Antony by Athanasios and the Life of Paul of Tamma, a fourth-century anchorite under whose name several fragmentary works survive. The tradition of the monastic vita encompassed the biographies both of solitary monks and of founders of monastic communities. In the latter case, composition in Coptic seems to have been practised from the very beginning, alongside Greek texts, but independently from them. Thus several Lives of the founding father of coenobitism, Pachomios, were composed directly in Coptic from the late fourth century onwards, and so were those of his immediate successors.
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Vitae

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that the Greek prose romance, often seen as a direct ancestor of hagiography, has Egyptian roots.10 Though it has dominated research on Egyptian hagiography to this day, the search for origins and influence is an idle task, and one that need not concern us here. It is perhaps more useful to consider when and how those texts were written, and what their authors were trying to achieve other than unsuccessfully imitating the Greeks. Although both are ultimately based on biography, Lives and martyrologies are in fact quite different in their content and scope. While the former aimed at edification or functioned as monastic foundation narratives, the latter were the supports of a cult and a shrine and were used liturgically. Miracle collections, of which none has been preserved in full in Coptic as an independent work, were typically companion volumes of martyrologies, and served the promotion of the martyrs shrines. This does not mean that miracles were absent from monastic hagiographies, but their role was rather to show the holy mans proximity to God, and they were usually performed during his lifetime. As for homilies on saints (enkomia or panegyrics), they usually adopted one of the two styles. Most often they are a compendium of the Life or the Passion and the corresponding collection of miracles, interspersed with exhortations about orthodoxy and Christian morality. In what follows, Lives and martyrologies will be treated successively in two separate sections, which will attempt to insert them in their respective contexts of production. A third section will more specifically address the chronology of martyrologies, which remains a subject of debate.11
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Besas authorship of the Life as we know it has been questioned: Emmel, Shenoutes Literary Corpus, I, 92 and n. 14950. Much has been written on Shenoute: see Frandsen and Richter-Aere, Shenoute: a Bibliography, and Emmel, Shenoutes Literary Corpus, II, 95485. 13 On the whole question see Orlandi, Letteratura copta, 712. 14 On the terms of the controversy in this text, see Florovsky, Theophilus of Alexandria and Apa Aphou of Pemdje, with critical bibliography on the edition, 275 n. 2. 15 Synaxarium Alexandrinum, ed. Forget, 889. 16 On the sources, see Orlandi, Letteratura copta, 989, and for a literary interpretation of the text, Emmel, Immer erst das Kleingedruckte lesen. Copyrighted Material 326
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Shenoute, the famous fifth-century abbot of what has become known as the White Monastery, and acclaimed as the first great Coptic-language author, is also the subject of a biography traditionally attributed to his disciple Besa (BHO 10745, 1077).12 Another important founding father was apa Apollo of Baw, who in the fourth century set up a monastery south-west of Hermopolis; this was to become a huge monastic settlement in later times, and was still thriving in the ninth century. Although Apollos Life has not come down to us, its approximate contents can be retrieved from the later anonymous Life of his companion Phib.13 Several monastic biographies are related in one way or another to controversies within the Church. Thus the fallout between Origenists and anthropomorphites in the fourth century was behind the fifth-century anti-Origenist Life of Aphu (BHO 77), recounting the career of an anchorite who became bishop of Pemdje (Oxyrhynchus/ al-Bahnas) at the turn of the fourth century and who is said to have argued on the image of God with Theophilos of Alexandria.14 No other hagiographical work is directly related to the Origenist controversy, but once again, it is quite probable that several such texts did circulate in the fifth century. It is however the Chalcedonian controversy that left the most durable marks on Coptic literature as a whole, and hagiography is no exception. Monastic vitae of the late fifth and sixth centuries do not only promote the virtues of the monastic environment and way of life: they see monks and monasteries as the main loci of the resistance to the decisions of the Council of Chalcedon. During that period a number of anti-Chalcedonian monastic vitae were produced, such as the Life of Abraham the Archimandrite (BHO 11) or the Life of Manasse (BHO 593). A group of texts referring to Dioskoros of Alexandria belong to this tendency, with a heavy insistence on the patriarchs monastic status: one Life of Dioskoros attributed to the deacon Theopistos is preserved in Coptic (see BHO 258), and another by the deacon Timotheos is known from the Arabic summary found in the Synaxarion.15 Attributed to Dioskoros is also the famous Enkomion of Makarios of Tkow, held to have been composed in the late sixth century, but either using sources from the period following the Council of Chalcedon and of Dioskoros exile, or actually written during that period itself.16 This was also the period of composition of an Ecclesiastical History in Coptic, which is organised around the figures of the successive bishops of Alexandria. It includes a series of patriarchal vitae, setting the tone for the later and more famous History of the Patriarchs of Alexandria, which incorporated the initial Coptic work. An
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Hagiography in Coptic
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17 On the early history of the see, and later Patriarchate, of Alexandria, see Davis, The Early Coptic Papacy. 18 On Benjamin, see Mller, Benjamin I. 19 On this classic theme of military victory translating Gods satisfaction and vice versa, especially in the context of the Arab conquests, see Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 5246. 20 Papaconstantinou, The Cult of Saints. Copyrighted Material 327

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official history of the anti-Chalcedonian see of Alexandria and the Church that was attached to it, this work presents as founders of what it considers as the orthodox Church such important pre-Chalcedonian figures as Athanasios and Cyril.17 Lives of Alexandrian bishops also circulated as independent texts, perhaps at a later date, as full-fledged developments of the shorter biographies of the Ecclesiastical History. This was especially true of symbolic figures of the Egyptian anti-Chalcedonian Church. Apart from the two Lives of Dioskoros mentioned above, we also know a late sixth-century Life of Athanasios, which depicts him as the founding figure of Egyptian orthodoxy: his fight against the Arianism of the emperors, his persecution and exile, are implicitly paralleled with those of Dioskoros. Athanasios uncompromising attitude is turned into an exemplum by the biographers of his post-Chalcedonian successors. In the late seventh century, the Life of Benjamin, who was patriarch at the time of the Arab conquest, followed along the same lines. Persecuted and driven to exile by the heretical Byzantine emperor, Benjamin is said to have found more understanding among the Muslim conquerors, who immediately recognised his holiness.18 Benjamins orthodoxy is authenticated through this recognition by an infidel, as it is also through the defeat of the Byzantines, which shows their doctrine had found disgrace in Gods eyes.19 The Life of Isaac of Alexandria by Menas of Nikiou (BHO 539), set under bd alzz (685705), but written after his death, paints an idyllic picture of the relations between the Muslim governor and the patriarch, that reposes on the latters charismatic personality and diplomatic skills. This is the last patriarchal biography that has come down to us in Coptic. Enkomia of bishops and monastic figures are relatively rare, especially in the early period. This is partly due to the fact that enkomia were written to be read during the feasts of the saints they praised, and that, until the late sixth century, hardly any monks or bishops were at the centre of a liturgical cult.20 Among the earliest are an Enkomion of Apollo, a mid-sixth-century archimandrite of the monastery of Apa Isaac, by Stephen, Bishop of Hnes (Heracleopolis/Ihns), and the Enkomion of Makarios of Tkow mentioned above, both with a strong anti-Chalcedonian flavour. A Panegyric on Saint Antony by John, Bishop of Shmun (Hermopolis/al-Ashmneyn) at the turn of the century, explicitly mentions the saints feast at a shrine outside the city. Johns is a highly rhetorical work, which contains praise for Antonys country as well as for his ascetic behaviour and spiritual elevation. As a founding figure of Egyptian monasticism, Antony is thus appropriated by yet another member of the anti-Chalcedonian hierarchy so as to lend authority to his vision of the holiness of Egypt and its Church.
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Martyrologies

Papaconstantinou, Culte des saints, 1612. Cf. Abdel Sayed, Untersuchungen zu den Texten ber Pesyntheus, Bischof von Koptos (569632). 23 Here I follow Butler, The Arab Conquest, 185 and n. 2, and Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 286 n. 86, against the editors early ninth-century dating. 24 Evelyn-White, John Kham, 305 n. 1; the only surviving manuscript bears the date 1255. 25 See Papaconstantinou, They Shall Speak the Arabic Language. Copyrighted Material 328
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The writing of martyrologies was admittedly a much more productive activity among Coptic authors than that of straightforward sacred biography. Its origins are traditionally seen to lie in the official transcripts of the real martyrs trials,

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An important anchorite, and one whose cult was among the earliest to appear,21 is Onophrios, on whom, apart from a Life (BHO 818), we have an Enkomion by Pisenthios, the famous bishop of Keft (d. 631/632), containing a summary of Onophrios life and exhortations on Christian behaviour. Pisenthios himself is the subject of two Lives in Coptic, one in Sahidic by John the Presbyter and one in Bohairic by Moses of Keft (Koptos/Qif); another account exists in Arabic.22 The dates of these texts are not easy to define, but they can hardly have been written before the middle of the seventh century. Another late monastic biography is the Life of Samuel of Kalamun, a monk of the monastery of that name in the Fayyum who probably died just before the Arab conquest. The Life as it has come down to us claims to have been written four generations later, which would put its redaction in the 760s. The absence of any reference to the conquest, however, and the insistence on the persecution of the Monophysites by the governor Kyros (d. 642), who seems to be still alive as the author is writing, are signs that it was originally composed between the death of Samuel and that of Kyros and was later reworked.23 As we know it today, the Sahidic Life of Samuel contains passages that display a style very close to eighth-century martyrologies (see below), in particular scenes of torture embedded in the narrative that are presumably later additions to the original account. The frame story that puts the Life four generations after Samuels death gives a very plausible date for this reworking. The last monastic biography extant in Coptic is the Life of John Kham, a ninthcentury monk who founded a monastery in the Wdi n Natrn. It is modelled on early monastic Lives, insisting on the holiness and asceticism of its protagonist and eschewing all but a couple of contextual references. The date of its composition is difficult to establish, but should be set somewhere between the second half of the tenth century and the first half of the thirteenth.24 It was at the beginning of that period that Coptic quite swiftly gave way to Arabic as a literary language, apparently not without some resistance,25 of which this work may be an example.
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Hagiography in Coptic
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See Delehaye, Les passions, 171226. The process is well described in Aigrain, Lhagiographie, 14055. 28 Delehaye, Martyrs dgypte, 14954. 29 This practice is explicitly described and criticised by Shenoute (see Lefort, La chasse aux reliques), and was common in all parts of the Empire; see, for instance, Dassmann, Ambrosius und die Mrtyrer. 30 See Orlandi, La leggenda di san Mercurio; other texts include the Passio of Judas Kyriacos (BHO 234) and that of Eusignios: Coquin and Lucchesi, Une version copte de la Passion de saint Eusignios. 31 These are the martyrdoms of Apollonios and Philemon (BHO 80 and 973), of Asclas (BHO 111) and of Arianos himself (BHO 110). Copyrighted Material 329
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which were narrated without any additions to form what has been called the Acts of the martyrs. With time, details were inserted into those accounts, including information on the life of the martyr and miracles performed during his trial. This led to what Delehaye called the epic passions, no doubt the largest category among martyrologies in general.26 Acts in their original form have rarely come down to us. Only two are known in Coptic, recounting the martyrdom of Kolluthos in May 304, and that of the martyr Stephanos in early December 305, although these have already undergone translation from Greek. The second redaction of the Martyrdom of Kolluthos is a good example of the way Acts were turned into epic passions through the insertion of miracles, the description of tortures and the length and insolence of the martyrs answers to the persecutor.27 This phenomenon was slow and gradual, but probably came to maturity with the flowering of the cult of saints from the mid-fifth century onwards. Many of the texts in this early period were initially composed in Greek and later translated, often with a certain degree of poetic freedom.28 Some of these may be the result of multiple rewriting imposed on the original official Acts; most, however, were certainly literary inventions made up to justify the discovery of martyrs relics over a century after their supposed death, and the establishment of new shrines in their name.29 One first group of texts, described by Tito Orlandi as classical epic passions, includes the Martyrdoms or fragments thereof both of local martyrs like Papnuthios (BHO 840), Epimachos of Pelusium, Kyros and John, Djoore (BHO 326, 327), Herai of Tamma and Dius (BHO 262), and of foreign ones such as Pantoleon (BHO 837), Merkourios of Caesarea, James the Persian (BHO 396397), Leontios of Tripoli, Philotheos of Antioch and Eustathios of Antioch. Most of these texts are also extant in other languages and are usually considered to be translations from Greek originals. From this relatively early stage, the tendency to link martyrologies to one another by bringing up the same characters and elements of stories appears as a very typical feature of the Egyptian martyrological production. This has been described as the creation of cycles, and several such cycles have been identified. Among the earliest are a group of texts relating to the emperor Julian,30 and another built around the figure of the persecutor Arianos, whose conversion and martyrdom it describes.31 A later group of texts is made up of independent martyrologies whose
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32 Descriptions of the cycles are given in Galtier, Contribution; Orlandi, Hagiography, 11956; Delehaye, Martyrs dgypte, 13648; for the early period only, Orlandi, Letteratura copta, 11113. 33 For an interpretation of the Diocletian legend, see Papaconstantinou, Historiography, Hagiography; overviews in Schwartz, Diocltien and Van Den Berg-Ontswedder, Diocletian. 34 Les martyrs dgypte, 13848. Copyrighted Material 330

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only link is the claim to have been written by the scribe Julius of Kbehs (Aqfahs), who collected the bodies of the martyrs to offer them proper treatment, and was eventually martyred himself. In all the above cycles, the texts are bound together by their relation to one or two central characters. The last and most famous hagiographical cycle, however, goes well beyond this elementary level. Known as the Basilides cycle, it connects most of the characters mentioned in the different martyrologies, including the protagonists, through ties of kinship and friendship.32 Basilides was a member of an important Antiochene family, which counted such figures as Anatolios the Persian (BHO, p. 12), Eusebios (BHO 292), Makarios (BHO 578), Justus, Theodore the Oriental (BHO 1174), Apater and Herai (BHO 73), Claudius (BHO 195) and Victor, who all ended their lives as martyrs under Diocletian. Put together, their Passions thus form a kind of saga of the persecution of Basilides friends and relatives, all initially close to Diocletians court at Antioch, and later exiled to Egypt to be executed. Perhaps the most surprising legend to be found within that cycle is the one concerning Diocletian himself. He is said to have been born to a Christian family of the Nile Valley under the initial name Agrippidas; after some years spent as a shepherd in Egypt, he became a soldier and married into Basilides family. When he became emperor, members of his new kin-group formed his tat-major during the Persian wars. After being vexed on some matter by the patriarch of Antioch, Diocletian rejected the Christian faith and started a large-scale persecution against its practitioners.33 His generals and kinsmen did not follow him, and consequently, none of them was spared: they were all exiled to Egypt where they suffered martyrdom. As far as content and structure are concerned, the characteristics of Coptic martyrologies have most famously been described by Delehaye, whose systematic classification of literary motifs survives the irony with which he treated cette misrable littrature.34 More than other hagiographies, these are made up of a repetitive blend of a few core ingredients that hardly vary from text to text. Delehaye laments the lack of personality of the martyrs, and the all too extravagant use of stock images and motifs. Incredible tortures are piled up on the same individual, who always gets away through divine intervention, until God finally decides to bestow on him the crown of martyrdom and lets him die usually after giving him a speech of variable length on his future life and the success of his shrine and cult. Delehaye also identified and described the various cycles, and noted that they sometimes overlap: thus the Passion of Makarios of Antioch belongs to the Basilides cycle, but also claims to have been written by Julius of Kbehs. Delehayes conclusion was that all these martyrologies were translated from Greek probably Alexandrian
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There has been until now little agreement among scholars concerning the date of the martyrological cycles. Although he did not suggest any chronology for the texts he studied, Delehaye evidently believed them to date sometime between the fifth century and the seventh, i.e. between the rise of epic passions and the Arab conquest. Baumeister also gave a global date for the texts of the koptischer Konsens ranging from the first half of the fifth century to around 600, a period which saw the flowering of the cult of saints.37 This was in line with his definition of the texts as Kulttiologien, written to justify the existence of a cult. However, neither Delehaye nor Baumeister were really interested in dating the cycles. The first real attempt at a chronology of Coptic hagiography came from Tito Orlandi, who in several successive articles refined his argument and suggested a general pattern of literary development, on which the present chapter has heavily relied.38 According to this pattern, at first almost all works were translated from Greek, although gradually, from the mid-fifth century onwards, composition directly in Coptic started including hagiographical works, partly under the influence of Shenoutes writings and partly as a consequence of the Chalcedonian controversy. In the late sixth century, Orlandi identifies a wave of Coptic-language authors, mainly bishops in the network of patriarch Damianos (569605), such as John of Shmun, John of Paralos or Constantine of Siut, who produced enkomia both of martyrs and of monastic saints. He sees the initial formation of the cycles, and
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Les martyrs dgypte, 152. Baumeister, Martyr Invictus. Baumeister, Martyr Invictus, 723. See the references given above, n. 11. Copyrighted Material 331

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The Dating of the Cycles

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originals, since they made intensive use of the epic writing procedures, which he defined as a Greek phenomenon.35 Building on the foundations set by the famous Bollandist, Theofried Baumeister devoted a full monograph to Coptic martyrologies in the early 1970s.36 However, after a thorough analysis of the texts, he reached very different conclusions. Although they may follow Greek compositional models, Coptic martyrologies are, in his eyes, essentially Egyptian in their conceptions and choice of literary motifs. Baumeister focused on what he calls the Wiederherstellungsmotif, namely the descriptions of the piecing together of the tortured martyr by an archangel before a new set of tortures can be heaped on him. In some cases, it even comes to one or more resurrections. To this theme of the enduring life, Baumeister found Egyptian antecedents, and he related it to local conceptions concerning the necessary integrity of the dead body. To describe the group of martyrologies that include this motif, he coined the expression koptischer Konsens, which has now gained wide acceptance.
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This comprises a series of texts on Theodore Stratelates and Theodore the Oriental: BHO 11667, 1169 (Strat.), 1174 (Or.), 1175 (a common enkomion edited by Winstedt). 40 Orlandi, Omelie copte, 1516. 41 This is a general tendency of martyrologies in all languages, but also touches other types of heroic narratives; telling examples are the development of biographies of the prophet Muhammad, or the growing extravagance of such modern cycles as the James Bond film series. Copyrighted Material 332
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more generally of the koptischer Konsens, as parallel to this surge of writing in Coptic, which became the norm from the seventh century onwards. According to Orlandi, the Basilides cycle evolved from what he calls the ancient Antiochene cycle, which appears to be established at the end of the sixth century, in such texts as the two panegyrics of Claudius of Antioch by Constantine, Bishop of Siut (Lykopolis/Asy). Orlandi attributes to this early stage the Passions of Claudius, of Victor of Antioch, of Kosmas and Damianos, of Epima, as well as the late redaction of the Passion of Psote. Basilides is among the people mentioned in these texts, but without the prominence he has in the cycle that bears his name. That last phase of the Antioch legend, together with the cycle of Julius of Kbehs and with what he describes as the cycle of the Theodores,39 Orlandi would date to the first century after the Arab conquest. The principal reason given for this dating is stylistic. The martyrologies of the cycles have a strong resemblance to another category of texts, the homiletic cycles. These are groups of homilies, sometimes but not always enkomia of saints, attributed to the same author, usually a patristic figure, real or fictitious. Although these attributions are generally false, they have served to define a number of cycles, such as the cycle of Athanasios or that of John Chrysostom. Orlandi explains this production of pseudepigrapha by the cultural circumstances that made them necessary, namely a prohibition of the writing of new texts after the Arab conquest that he thinks might have existed alongside the more well-known prohibition of the erection of new churches.40 Attribution to patristic authors was, in his opinion, a way of making these texts acceptable to the new authorities. Thus the homiletic cycles should be dated to the first century after the conquest, and the hagiographical ones with them. At the other end, Orlandi rightly sees the ninth century as a terminus ante quem for the composition of these texts, because in manuscripts of that time, the various martyrologies were re-ordered so as to follow the liturgical calendar, and were no longer grouped together according to content. Though extremely useful, and certainly right in its main lines, Orlandis remains an ideal model and does not go without some difficulties. First the internal succession of the texts: the proposed scheme takes for granted that the development of the cycles towards greater integration was entirely linear, from simpler to more complex, and that the more elements of that integration one finds in a text, the later it comes chronologically. The tendency of legendary biographies to grow more and more baroque with time is of course a common feature,41 but this does not exclude the coexistence, during the same period, of various levels of complexity within the same group of texts, or of the production of works in different styles. In
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42 On the Ordinances of Umar, see Noth, Problems of Differentiation, 104, 1089, and on the continuing activity of church construction or repair in Palestine, see Schick, The Christian Communities, 11923. 43 So John III, Panegyric of Saint Menas, Menas of Nikiou, Panegyric on the martyr Macrobius of Pshati, Isaac the Presbyter, Life of Samuel of Kalamun among many others. 44 On this question, see the discussion in Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 3440. 45 Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 2825, on a text of the Athanasian cycle which contains an apocalypse; see, however, Dcobert, Sur larabisation, 2945 and n. 45 (not cited by Hoyland), who on different grounds would date the text no earlier than the middle of the eighth c. Hoylands arguments seem decisive here, and on closer examination, several points made by Dcobert could actually fit this earlier date. Copyrighted Material 333

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particular, some translations from Greek may have been made at a much later date than Orlandi allows for. The way Orlandi relates the dating of the hagiographical and homiletic cycles to the historical context also requires some qualification. First of all, nothing supports the idea of a prohibition for Christians to write new texts, not even the parallel with churches and monasteries: there are indeed a couple of clauses to this effect about places of worship in the Ordinances of Umar, but they do not seem to have been enforced with much energy.42 Many texts were produced after the Arab conquest by Christian authors who signed them without hesitation.43 The pseudepigrapha should certainly be explained otherwise, perhaps simply as a way of lending greater prestige and legitimacy to the homilies, for reasons that are outside the scope of this survey. A second problem is that of the relation between homiletic and martyrological cycles. Although the stylistic argument carries some strength, it is also weakened by the nature of the transmission of such texts. They are all known from later manuscripts of the ninth, tenth or eleventh century, produced by scribes who were not copying their texts in the way we understand this term today. They and their predecessors reworked them and adapted them continuously to the changing situation, so that, in a way, composition and transmission became tangled up, and the fact that authorship was unclear only made this easier.44 Thus, what we have today is the result of a long process of redaction which has produced groups of texts that seem homogeneous in content and style. Precisely when this homogeneity was created, though, will remain uncertain, and can date back to the original redactions or to any given time during the transmission process, but can also be a gradual achievement. The date for the initial redaction of the pseudepigraphic cycles assuming they are all of the same date is far from established, although a strong case has been made in favour of an early eighth-century date for one of the texts.45 The martyrological cycles lend themselves much less to contextual dating, which may explain the extremely varied dates that have been suggested until now. There are however good reasons to date them no earlier than the eighth century too, perhaps even no earlier than the second quarter of that century. Manuscripts containing martyrologies are extremely rare before the seventh century, and only after 700 do
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See Clarysse, Coptic Martyr Cult, 3945. On the Theban documents and their relation to hagiography, see Papaconstantinou, . 48 For what follows, see Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 33647, and the references there. 49 At the time of the patriarch Michael (743767), 24,000 Christians are said to deny their faith: Copto-Arabic Synaxarium, 16 Barmaht, Basset (1922), 233; references on early neomartyrs in Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 346. 50 All these accounts are in Arabic, except one, the thirteenth-century Martyrdom of John of Phanijoit (BHO 519) which survives in Coptic. John, however, is not executed as a result of pressure to convert, but because after converting to Islam, he forsook it and reverted to the Christian faith, an act normally punished by the death penalty (see Hoyland, Seeing Islam, 344). 51 Orlandi suggested an allegorical reading of the martyrologies, where behind Diocletian and the Romans one should recognise the first Abbasid caliphs and the Arabs. However, he only sees the texts as covert protestations against the Muslims from authors who did not dare express themselves openly, which may seem slightly exaggerated.
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47

46

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they actually become prominent in monastic or church libraries.46 A pseudepigraphic text titled Enkomion of Victor and attributed to Celestinus of Rome, which includes a collection of miracles and is closely related to the Martyrdom of Victor, contains a miracle relating the donation of a child to the saints shrine that bears a striking resemblance to the narrative parts of a series of 26 deeds on papyrus registering the donation of children to a monastery of the Theban area. These documents are dated between 730 and 785, and clearly belong to the same period and cultural milieu as the Enkomion.47 One may also adduce the considerable development of the genealogical motif in the Basilides cycle, which has no precedent in Coptic literature, and cannot but remind one of the fashion for such constructions among the Arabs from the early Abbasid period onwards. That there should be a flowering of martyrological literature at that time is not at all surprising.48 The attempts by Umar II (717720) and especially the Abbasids to tax non-Muslims more heavily than Muslims and to levy taxes individually rather than collectively through mediating bodies such as monasteries or village councils seem to have been instrumental in promoting conversions to Islam, and it is around this time that the first mentions of large-scale apostasy appear in Christian sources. Under Abbasid rule, in the second half of the eighth century, stories about neo-martyrs became common in Syria and Palestine.49 In Egypt, the number of accounts concerning neo-martyrs in general is strikingly small, and only one seems to go back to the early period.50 Instead, there was during the same period a rise of martyrological writing in which one is inclined to see a form of heroic narrative designed to serve as a model of behaviour for Christians tempted by apostasy, as a way of holding ones troops through the glorification of previous exempla.51 Although they have been the subject of much irony, the themes developed in the martyrologies show considerable coherence and contribute in various ways to the redefinition of the Coptic Church under Arab rule, by rewriting the history of its origins and defining a new foundation myth for the community. This they achieve through the appropriation of the persecutions and the epos of the martyrs
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Bibliography

(a) Editions of Primary Sources Cited by Saint or Title


Life by Athanasios: ed. G. Garitte, Vita Antonii, CSCO 11718, scr. copt. 1314 (Leuven 1949). Panegyric by John, Bishop of Shmun (late sixth c.): ed. G. Garitte, Pangyrique de saint Antoine par Jean, vque dHermopolis, OCP 9 (1943), 10034, 33065.
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Antony (d. 356)

Life (BHO 77) (fifth c.): Italian tr., T. Orlandi and A. Campagnano, Vite di monaci copti, Collana di testi patristici 41 (Rome 1984), 5565.

Apollo of Baw (fourth c.)


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Life (reconstruction of the text from the Life of Phib) (4th/5th): T. Orlandi and A. Campagnano, Vite dei monaci Phif e Longino (Milan 1975), 2037.

For a complete argument on this question, see Papaconstantinou, Historiography, Hagiography; see also the remarks by Harvey, Introduction, xi. Copyrighted Material 335

52

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Aphu (late fourthearly fifth c.)

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NB: For comments on early drafts of this chapter the author is indebted to Anne Boudhors, Batrice Caseau, Muriel Debi, Stephanos Efthymiadis, and above all, Stephen Emmel, whose careful reading and learned suggestions greatly improved this text; her thanks also go to Jason Zaborowski for providing unpublished material.

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and their translation into a local Egyptian idiom, where all the important characters and events are naturalised.52 In this respect, the interconnectedness of the cycles can be seen as a way of creating a common historical account without actually producing a unique narrative, but linking together a number of independent ones. Although it started after the Council of Chalcedon, with the production of Lives of anti-Chalcedonian monks and the slow rise of Coptic-language composition, this process of redefinition of the Coptic Church found a new impetus and took a different direction in the century and a half that followed the Arab conquest, an event which provided an unexpected solution to the power struggle that for two centuries had opposed the imperial Church to what was being slowly constructed as the local Church.
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Enkomion by Stephen: ed. K.H. Kuhn, A Panegyric on Apollo, Archimandrite of the Monastery of Isaac, by Stephen, Bishop of Heracleopolis Magna, CSCO 3945, scr. copt. 3940 (Leuven 1978).

Athanasios (ca. 293373)

Life (BHO 115): Italian tr., T. Orlandi, Testi copti (Milan 1968), 87161.

Benjamin (590661)

Epima

Passio: ed. T. Mina, Le martyre dapa Epima (Cairo 1937).

Epimachos

Passio: ed. R.-G. Coquin and E. Lucchesi, Une version copte de la Passion de saint Eusignios, AB 100 (1982), 185208.

Eustathios

Passio (BHO 376): new fragments in A. Pietersma and S.T. Comstock, Coptic Martyrdoms in the Chester Beatty Library, Bulletin of the American Society Papyrology 24 (1987), 14363.

Isaac of Alexandria (late seventh c.)

Life by Menas of Nikiu (BHO 539): re-edition and French tr., E. Porcher, Vie dIsaac patriarche dAlexandrie de 686 689, PO 11 (1915), 30190; English tr., D.N.
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Herai

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Passio: ed. E.A.W. Budge, Coptic Martyrdoms in the Dialect of Upper Egypt (London 1914), 10227, 35680.

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Eusignios

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Passio (BHO 274): re-edition, M. van Esbroeck, Saint pimaque de Pluse, III: les fragments coptes BHO 274, AB 100 (1982), 12545.

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Life: ed. . Amlineau, Fragments coptes pour servir lhistoire de la conqute de lgypte par les Arabes, Journal asiatique, 8th ser., 12 (1888), 36878. Life: ed. B. Evetts, History of the Patriarchs of the Coptic Church of Alexandria, PO 1 (1907), 487518.

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Bell, Mena of Nikiou, The Life of Isaac of Alexandria and the Martyrdom of Saint Macrobius (Kalamazoo 1988).

Life: ed. M.H. Davis, The Life of Abba John Kham, PO 14 (1919), 31772.

John of Phanijoit (thirteenth c.)

Passio: ed. E.O. Winstedt, Coptic Texts on Saint Theodore the General, Saint Theodore the Eastern, Chamoul and Justus (London and Oxford 1910), 18899, 21121.

Kolluthos (fourth c.?)

Passio: ed. W.C. Till, Koptische Heiligen- und Mrtyrerlegenden. Texte, bersetzungen und Indices, vol. I, OCA 102 (Rome 1935), 15468.

Kyros and John

Passio: ed. G. Garitte, Textes hagiographiques orientaux relatifs http://www. facebook.com/?ref=home saint Lonce de Tripoli. I. La passion copte saidique, Le Muson 78 (1965), 31348.

Makarios of Tkow (fifth c.)

Enkomion: ed. D.W. Johnson, A Panegyric on Macarius Bishop of Tkw Attributed to Dioskorus of Alexandria, CSCO 41516, scr. copt. 412 (Leuven 1980).
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Leontios

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Passio: ed. B. Groterjahn, Saidische Bruchstcke der Vita des Apa Kyros, Le Muson 51 (1938), 3367.

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Kosmas and Damianos

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Martyrdom: ed. E.A.E. Reymond and J.W.B. Barns, Four Martyrdoms from the Pierpont Morgan Coptic Codices (Oxford 1973), 259, 14550; 2nd redaction: ibid., 1413, 1113 (with English tr.).

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Justus

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Martyrdom (BHO 519): ed. J.R. Zaborowski, The Coptic Martyrdom of John of Phanijoit. Assimilation and Conversion to Islam in Thirteenth-Century Egypt, History of Christian-Muslim Relations 3 (Leiden 2004).

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John Kham (eighth c.?)

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Passio: ed. T. Orlandi, Passione e miracoli di S. Mercurio (Milan 1976); reviews by P. Devos, AB 94 (1976), 4258 and G. Godron, propos dun rcent ouvrage concernant saint Mercure, IFAO. Livre du Centenaire (Cairo 1981), 21323.

Onophrios (fourth c.?)

Patriarchs of Alexandria

Paul of Tamma (fourth c.)

Phib (late fourth c.)


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Life: Introduction, edition and Italian translation by T. Orlandi and A. Campagnano, Vite dei monaci Phif e Longino (Milan 1975).

Passio: ed. T. Orlandi, Il dossier copto di S. Filoteo, AB 96 (1978), 11720.

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Philotheos (uncertain date)

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Life: fragments are published by T. Orlandi, Papiri copti di contenuto teologico (Vienna 1974), 1548; also M. Pezin, Nouveau fragment copte concernant Paul de Tamma (P. Sorbonne inv. 2632), in Christianisme dgypte. Hommages RenGeorges Coquin, Cahiers de la Bibliothque copte 9 (Paris and Louvain 1995), 1520; and R.-G. Coquin, Paul of Tamma, The Coptic Encyclopaedia 6 (New York 1991), 19235. What remains of his works has been edited by T. Orlandi, Paolo di Tamma, Opere (Rome 1988).
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History: ed. and Latin tr., T. Orlandi, Storia della chiesa di Alessandria, 2 vols (Milan 19681970).

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Lives: French tr. on the re-ordered fragments in L.T. Lefort, Les Vies coptes de saint Pachme et de ses premiers successeurs (Louvain 1943); ed. of Sahidic fragments by L.T. Lefort, S. Pachomii Vitae sahidice scriptae, CSCO 99100 (Paris 1933); and of the Bohairic Life with Latin tr., L.T. Lefort, S. Pachomii vita bohairice scripta, CSCO 89, 107, scr. copt. 7 and 11 (Leuven 19521953).

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Pachomios (ca. 292346)

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Enkomion by Pisenthios, Bishop of Keft: ed. W.E. Crum, Discours de Pisenthius sur saint Onnophrius, ROC 20 (19151917), 3867.

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Merkourios

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Psote (uncertain date)

Passio: ed. T. Orlandi, Il dossier copto del martire Psote (Milan 1978), 4770.

Samuel of Kalamun (d. mid-seventh c.)

Shenoute (ca. 360ca. 450)

Martyrdom: ed. and English tr., P. Van Minnen, The Earliest Account of a Martyrdom in Coptic, AB 113 (1995), 1338.

Synaxarion

Theodore Stratelates and Theodore the Oriental


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Enkomion (BHO 1175): ed. and English tr., E.O. Winstedt, Coptic Texts on Saint Theodore the General, Saint Theodore the Eastern, Chamoul and Justus (London and Oxford 1910), 1133.

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Copto-Arabic: ed. and French tr., R. Basset, Le synaxaire arabe jacobite (rdaction copte), in PO 1 (1907), 215379; 3 (1909), 243545; 11 (1916), 505859; 16 (1922), 185424 and 17 (1923), 525782, with indices in PO 20 (1929), 73990. Also ed. and Latin tr., I. Forget, Synaxarium Alexandrinum, CSCO 479, 67, Scr. arab. 35, 11 for the text and CSCO 78, 90, Scr. arab. 1213 for the tr. (Leuven 19531954).
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Stephen (first c.)

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Life (BHO 1075): English tr., D.N. Bell, Besa, The Life of Shenoute, Introduction Translation and Notes (Kalamazoo 1983).

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Life (BHO 1035): re-edited with English tr., A. Alcock, The Life of Samuel of Kalamun by Isaac the Presbyter (Warminster 1983), 137, 74118, with fragments of a second, presumably much longer, Sahidic version, 6773. Fragments of a Bohairic Life are preserved: see W.E. Crum, Catalogue of the Coptic Manuscripts in the British Museum (London 1905), 3812, no 917.

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Lives (in Coptic): ed. E. Revillout, Vie de S. Pesunthius, vque de Coptos, Revue gyptologique 9 (1900), 1779 and 10 (1902), 1658; one in Sahidic by John the Presbyter and one in Bohairic by Moses of Keft (Koptos/Qif); another account exists in Arabic: De Lacy OLeary, The Arabic Life of S. Pisentius, PO 22 (1930), 313488.

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Pisenthios (569632)

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Passio: ed. E.A.W. Budge, Coptic Martyrdoms in the Dialect of Upper Egypt (London 1914), 145, 25398.

(b) Secondary Literature

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Victor

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Kulturwissenschaftliche Studien zu gypten, dem Vorderen Orient und verwandten Gebieten, donum natalicium viro doctissimo Erharto Graefe sexagenario ab amicis collegis discipulis ex aedibus Schlaunstrae 2/Rosenstrae 9 oblatum, ed. A.I. Blbaum, J. Kahl and S.D. Schweitzer (Wiesbaden 2003), 91104. Emmel, S., Shenoutes Literary Corpus, 2 vols, CSCO, Subs. 11112 (Leuven 2004). Evelyn-White, H.G., John Kham and his Monastery, in H.G. Evelyn-White, The Monasteries of the Wdi n Natrn, vol. II, The History of the Monasteries of Nitria and Scetis (New York 1932), 3058. Florovsky, G., Theophilus of Alexandria and Apa Aphou of Pemdje. The Anthropomorphites in the Egyptian Desert, II, in Harry Austryn Wolfson Jubilee Volume (Jerusalem 1965), 275310. Frandsen, P.J. and E. Richter-Aere, Shenoute: a Bibliography, in Studies Presented to Hans Jakob Polotsky, ed. D.W. Young (Beacon Hill 1981), 14776. Galtier, E., Contribution ltude de la littrature arabo-copte, Bulletin de lInstitut Franais dArchologie Orientale 4 (1905), 105221. Harvey, S.A., Introduction, in Encomiastica from the Pierpont Morgan Library, ed. L. Depuydt (Leuven 1993). Hoyland, R., Seeing Islam as Others Saw It. A Survey and Evaluation of Christian, Jewish and Zoroastrian Writings on Early Islam, Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam 13 (Princeton 1997). Kossack, W., Die Legende im koptischen. Untersuchungen zur Volksliteratur gyptens (Bonn 1970). Lefort, L.T., La chasse aux reliques des martyrs en gypte au IVe sicle, La nouvelle Clio 6 (1954), 22530. Mller, C.D.G., Benjamin I, 38. Patriarch von Alexandrien, Le Muson 69 (1956), 31340. Noth, A., Problems of Differentiation between Muslims and non-Muslims: Rereading the Ordinances of Umar (al-shur al-Umariyya), in Muslims and Others in Early Islamic Society, ed. R. Hoyland (Aldershot 2004), 10324 (originally published in German in 1987). Orlandi, T., La leggenda di san Mercurio e luccisione di Giuliano lapostata Studi Copti 4 (Milan-Varese 1968), 89145. Orlandi, T., Omelie copte (Turin 1981). Orlandi, T., Un testo copto sulla dominazione araba in Egitto, in Acts of the Second International Congress of Coptic Study, Rome, 2226 September 1980, ed. T. Orlandi and F. Wisse (Rome 1985), 22533. Orlandi, T., Coptic Literature, in The Roots of Egyptian Christianity, ed. B.A. Pearson and J.E. Goehring (Philadelphia 1986), 5181. Orlandi, T., Cycle, in The Coptic Encyclopaedia 3 (New York 1991), 6668. Orlandi, T., Hagiography, in The Coptic Encyclopaedia 4 (New York 1991), 11917. Orlandi, T., Letteratura copta e cristianesimo nazionale egiziano, in LEgitto cristiano. Aspetti e problemi in et tardoantica, ed. A. Camplani (Rome 1997), 39 120. Papaconstantinou, A., Le culte des saints en gypte des Byzantins aux Abbassides. Lapport des inscriptions et des papyrus grecs et coptes (Paris 2001).
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The Ashgate Research Companion to Byzantine Hagiography


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Acts of the Second International Congress of Coptic Study, Roma, 2226 September 1980, ed. T. Orlandi and F. Wisse (Rome 1985).
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As with other Oriental languages, the BHO (1910) is an essential guide to Coptic hagiography. However, many texts have been published since then which will not be found grouped in a single publication. Entries on individual saints in The Coptic Encyclopaedia (New York 1991) are usually of great assistance. One may also consult the Corpus dei Manuscritti Copti Letterari (CMCL), an online compendium of Coptic literature (http://cmcl.let.uniroma1.it), which includes a bibliography on hagiographical texts. Updates and reports on recent work in the fields of Coptic literature, CoptoArabic studies, and monasticism, all of which contain information on hagiography, can be found in the Acts of successive International Congresses of Coptic Studies since 1980:
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(c) Tools and Bibliographic Essays

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Papaconstantinou, A., . Les actes thbains de donation denfants ou la gestion monastique de la pnurie, in Mlanges Gilbert Dagron, TM 14 (2002), 51126. Papaconstantinou, A., The Cult of Saints: a Haven of Continuity in a Changing World?, in Egypt in the Byzantine World, 450700, ed. R. Bagnall (Cambridge 2005), 35067. Papaconstantinou, A., Historiography, Hagiography, and the Making of the Coptic Church of the Martyrs in Early Islamic Egypt, DOP 60 (2006), 6586. Papaconstantinou, A., They Shall Speak the Arabic Language and Take Pride in it: Reconsidering the Fate of Coptic after the Arab Conquest, Le Muson 120 (2007), 27399. Papaconstantinou, A., Dioscore et le bilinguisme dans lgypte du VIe sicle, in Les archives de Dioscore dAphrodit cent ans aprs leur dcouverte. Histoire et culture dans lgypte byzantine, ed. Jean-Luc Fournet, tudes darchologie et dhistoire ancienne (Paris 2008), 7788. Peeters, P., Traductions et traducteurs dans lhagiographie orientale lpoque byzantine, AB 40 (1922), 24198. Reymond, E.A.E. and J.W.B. Barns, Four Martyrdoms from the Pierpont Morgan Coptic Codices (Oxford 1973). Schenkel, W., Kultmythos und Mrtyrerlegende. Zur Kontinuitt des gyptischen Denkens Gttinger Orientforschungen, IV. Reihe, gypten, 5 (Wiesbaden 1977). Schick, R., The Christian Communities of Palestine from Byzantine to Islamic Rule, Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam 2 (Princeton 1995). Schwartz, J., Diocltien dans la littrature copte, Bulletin de la Socit darchologie copte 15 (19581960), 15166. Van Den Berg-Ontswedder, G., Diocletian in the Coptic Tradition, Bulletin de la Socit darchologie copte 29 (1990), 87122.
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Hagiography in Coptic
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Similar surveys can also be found in the following journals: Archiv fr Papyrusforschung 44 (1998), 14071; 45 (1999), 281301; 47 (2001), 196228 and 49 (2003), 12762, the first two by M. Krause, the others by S. Richter and G. Wurst. Zeitschrift fr Antikes Christentum 3 (1999), 184201 and 6 (2002), 23252, by H.-G. Bethge, U.U. Mller and U.-K. Plisch.

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Coptic Studies. Acts of the Third International Congress of Coptic Studies, Warsaw, 2025 August 1984, ed. W. Godlewski (Warsaw 1990). Actes IVe Congrs copte, Louvain-la-Neuve, 510 septembre 1988, 2 vols, ed. M. RassartDebergh and J. Ries (Louvain-la-Neuve 1992). Acts of the 5th International Congress of Coptic Studies, Washington 1215 August 1992, 3 vols (Washington, DC 1993). gypten in sptantiker und christlicher Zeit. Akten des 6. Koptologenkongresses, Mnster, 20.26. Juli 1996, 2 vols, ed. S. Emmel, M. Krause, S.G. Richter and S. Schaten (Wiesbaden 1999). Coptic Studies on the Threshold of a New Millennium. Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Coptic Studies, Leiden, 27 August 2 September 2000, ed. M. Immerzeel and J. van der Vliet (Leuven 2004). Actes du huitime Congrs International dtudes Coptes, Paris, 28 Juin3 Juillet 2004, 2 vols, ed. N. Bosson and A. Boudhors, OLA 163 (Leuven 2007).
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