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“Sozomen on Athanasius and the Council of Tyre, 335”
from Historia Ecclesiastica, 2.25 - Greek Text with English translation
In this passage Sozomen describes accusations which were made against Athanasius by Arian bishops who were seeking to have him removed from the See of Alexandria.
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 The plots of the enemies of Athanasius involved him in 
fresh troubles, excited the hatred of the emperor against him, and stirred up a 
multitude of accusers. Wearied by their importunity, the emperor convened a 
council at Cæsarea in Palestine. Athanasius was summoned thither; but fearing 
the artifices of Eusebius, bishop of the city, of Eusebius, bishop of Nicomedia, 
and of their party, he refused to attend, and for thirty months, although 
pressed to attend, persisted in his refusal. At the end of that period, however, 
he was forced more urgently and repaired to Tyre, where a great number of the 
bishops of the East were assembled, who commanded him to undergo the charges of 
those who accused him. Of John’s party, Callinicus, a bishop, and a certain 
Ischurias, accused him of breaking a mystical chalice and of throwing down an 
episcopal chair; and of often causing Ischurias, although he was a presbyter, to 
be loaded with chains; and by falsely informing Hyginus, governor of Egypt, that 
he had cast stones at the statues of the emperor of occasioning his being thrown 
into prison; of deposing Callinicus, bishop of the Catholic Church at Pelusium, 
and of saying that he would debar him from fellowship unless he could remove 
certain suspicions concerning his having broken a mystical chalice; of 
committing the Church of Pelusium to Mark, a deposed presbyter; and of placing 
Callinicus under a military guard, and of putting him under judicial tortures. 
Euplus, Pachomius, Isaac, Achillas, and Hermæon, bishops of John’s party, 
accused him of inflicting blows. They all concurred in maintaining that he 
obtained the episcopal dignity by means of the perjury of certain individuals, 
it having been decreed that no one should receive ordination, who could not 
clear himself of any crime laid to his charge. They further alleged, that having 
been deceived by him, they had separated themselves from communion with him, and 
that, so far from satisfying their scruples, he had treated them with violence 
and thrown them into prison. Further, the affair of Arsenius was again agitated; 
and as generally happens in such a studiously concocted plot, many even of those 
considered his friends loomed up unexpectedly as accusers. A document was then 
read, containing popular complaints that the people of Alexandria could not 
continue their attendance at church on his account. Athanasius, having been 
urged to justify himself, presented himself repeatedly before the tribunal; 
successfully repelled some of the allegations, and requested delay for 
investigation as to the others. He was exceedingly perplexed when he reflected 
on the favor in which his accusers were held by his judges, on the number of 
witnesses belonging to the sects of Arius and Melitius who appeared against him, 
and on the indulgence that was manifested towards the informers, whose 
allegations had been overcome. And especially in the indictment concerning 
Arsenius, whose arm he was charged with having cut off for purposes of magic, 
and in the indictment concerning a certain woman to whom he was charged with 
having given gifts for uncleanness, and with having corrupted her by night, 
although she was unwilling. Both these indictments were proved to be ridiculous 
and full of false espionage. When this female made the deposition before the 
bishops, Timothy, a presbyter of Alexandria, who stood by Athanasius, approached 
her according to a plan he had secretly concerted, and said to her, “Did I then, 
O woman, violate your chastity?” She replied, “But didst thou not?” and 
mentioned the place and the attendant circumstances, in which she had been 
forced. He likewise led Arsenius into the midst of them, showed both his hands 
to the judges, and requested them to make the accusers account for the arm which 
they had exhibited. For it happened that Arsenius, either driven by a Divine 
influence, or, as it is said, having been concealed by the plans of Athanasius, 
when the danger to that bishop on his account was announced, escaped by night, 
and arrived at Tyre the day before the trial. But these allegations having been 
thus summarily dismissed, so that no defense was necessary, no mention of the 
first was made in the transactions; most probably, I think, because the whole 
affair was considered too indecorous and absurd for insertion. As to the second, 
the accusers strove to justify themselves by saying that a bishop under the 
jurisdiction of Athanasius, named Plusian, had, at the command of his chief, 
burnt the house of Arsenius, fastened him to a column, and maltreated him with 
thongs, and then chained him in a cell. They further stated that Arsenius 
escaped from the cell through a window, and while he was sought for remained a 
while in concealment; that as he did not appear, they naturally supposed him to 
be dead; that the reputation he had acquired as a man and confessor, had 
endeared him to the bishops of John’s party; and that they sought for him, and 
applied on his behalf to the magistrates. Athanasius was filled with 
apprehension when he reflected on these subjects, and began to suspect that his 
enemies were secretly scheming to effect his ruin. After several sessions, when 
the Synod was filled with tumult and confusion, and the accusers and a multitude 
of persons around the tribunal were crying aloud that Athanasius ought to be 
deposed as a sorcerer and a ruffian, and as being utterly unworthy the 
priesthood, the officers, who had been appointed by the emperor to be present at 
the Synod for the maintenance of order, compelled the accused to quit the 
judgment hall secretly; for they feared lest they might become his murderers, as 
is apt to be the case in the rush of a tumult. On finding that he could not 
remain in Tyre without peril of his life, and that there was no hope of 
obtaining justice against his numerous accusers, from judges who were inimical 
to him, he fled to Constantinople. The Synod condemned him during his absence, 
deposed him from the bishopric, and prohibited his residing at Alexandria, lest, 
said they, he should excite disturbances and seditions. John and all his 
adherents were restored to communion, as if they had been unjustly suffering 
wrongs, and each was reinstated in his own clerical rank. The bishops then gave 
an account of their proceedings to the emperor, and wrote to the bishops of all 
regions, enjoining them not to receive Athanasius into fellowship, and not to 
write to him or receive letters from him, as one who had been convicted of the 
crimes which they had investigated, and on account of his flight, as also guilty 
in those indictments which had not been tried. They likewise declared, in this 
epistle, that they had been obliged to pass such condemnation upon him, because, 
when commanded by the emperor the preceding year to repair to the bishops of the 
East, who were assembled at Cæsarea, he disobeyed the injunction, kept the 
bishops waiting for him, and set at naught the commands of the ruler. They also 
deposed that when the bishops had assembled at Tyre, he went to that city, 
attended by a large retinue, for the purpose of exciting disturbances and 
tumults in the Synod; that when there, he sometimes refused to reply to the 
charges preferred against him; sometimes insulted the bishops individually; when 
summoned by them, sometimes not obeying, at others not deigning to be judged. 
They specified in the same letter, that he was manifestly guilty of having 
broken a mystical chalice, and that this fact was attested by Theognis, bishop 
of Nicæa; by Maris, bishop of Chalcedonia; by Theodore, bishop of Heraclea; by 
Valentinus and Ursacius; and by Macedonius, who had been sent to the village in 
Egypt, where the chalice was said to have been broken, in order to ascertain the 
truth. Thus did the bishops detail successively each of the allegations against 
Athanasius, with the same art to which sophists resort when they desire to 
heighten the effect of their calumnies. Many of the priests, however, who were 
present at the trial, perceived the injustice of the accusation. It is related 
that Paphnutius, the confessor, who was present at the Synod, arose, and took 
the hand of Maximus, the bishop of Jerusalem, to lead him away, as if those who 
were confessors, and had their eyes dug out for the sake of piety, ought not to 
participate in an assembly of wicked men.  | 
    
  
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original Greek text with English translation
Athanasius
Alexandria
Arian Controversy
Council of Tyre
Synod of Tyre
335
Corn
Constantine
Eusebius of Nicomedia
Sozomen in Greek with English Translation
Church Historian
Migne Greek Text
Patrologiae Graecae Cursus Completus
Patrologia Graeca