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The8-YearCycleandInventionofEpacts 111 immediatelyafterthefeastofthebaptismofJesus(6January).Demetriusand his fellow patriarchs ordained that the forty days of fasting should instead precedethePaschalfast.Afewpageslater(PG111.1007),Eutychiussaysthat theCouncilofNicaeaapprovedthePaschalcalculationestablishedbyDeme- triusofAlexandria,‘Gaianus’ofJerusalem,andVictorofRome. The Coptic calendar of Holy Days (Synaxarium), composed in Arabic in thetwelfthorthirteenthcenturyfromvariousmoreancientsources(Burme- ster 1938), supplements this information. On the 12th day of the month of Babah (9 October), theCopts commemorate the death in theChristianyear 224ofDemetrius,12thPopeofAlexandria.TheChristianerausedhereisthat ofAnnianusofAlexandria,correspondingtoad9(seeCh.16).Theyear224 thereforecorrespondstoad232andagreeswiththedatesgivenbyEusebius for the episcopate of Demetrius, ad 189/90–231/2. This entry in the Synax- arium (pp. 47–8) includes the information that Demetrius invented the epacts, that he established the Lenten fast of forty days, and that he sent letters to the bishops of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Rome. Prior to that time, according to the entry, Christians had observed the forty days’ fast immedi- atelyafterEpiphany. Anothernotice(p.93),withsimilarinformation,appearsatthe10thdayof the month of Hatur (6 November), commemorating a Council at Rome at which Victor received a letter from Demetrius and accepted his regulations forcalculatingthedaysofthefast.Itreadsasfollows: The reason for this council was that Christians used to celebrate the Feast of the Baptism,followedonthemorrow,onthe12thofthemonthofTubit(7January),by thefast.Thentheybrokethefastonthe22ndofMechir(16February).Theyobserved the feasts of the Passion and the Resurrection some days thereafter. But when Pope Demetriuswasconsecrated...heestablishedthecalculationbyepactsforregulating thedatesofthefastandtheResurrection.HesentletterstoVictorofRome,Maximus ofAntioch,andAgapiusofJerusalem. The entry goes on to report that when Victor received the letter he summonedacouncilof14bishopsandanumberofsavants.Atthatmeeting theyacceptedtheformulaofDemetriusandestablishedthestandardregula- tionsforfastingandforEaster. Another version of the tradition appears (p. 244) for the fourth day of Baramhat(31March),commemoratingacouncilontheislandofBani-Omar. ThebishopofthatplacehadsentletterstoSerapionofAntioch,Democratus [sic!]ofRome,DemetriusofAlexandria,andSymmachusofJerusalemonthe issue of Quartodecimanism. All replied that Easter was to be observed only on the Sunday following the Passover. The local bishop called a council of some eighteen bishops at Bani-Omar at which these letters were read. Some 112 PaschalCalculationsinEarlyChristianity ofthedissidentsagreedtoobserveSunday,otherspersistedintheirwaysand were excommunicated. Demetriusdecided to try tomediate thedispute.He calledameetingofastronomers,includingPtolemyofPharos,andwiththeir help established the reckoning by epacts to determine the day of the Jewish PassoverandtoWxtheFeastoftheResurrectionontheSundaythereafter. The Ethiopic tradition, which derives from the Coptic church of Alexan- dria, also celebrates Demetrius as the founder of the Paschal calculus. Job Ludolf(1691:438–9,448)publishedthreestanzasofEthiopicpoetrypraising Demetriusas‘theinventoroftheepacts’: HailtoDemetrius,whoregulatesabstinencefromdrink, whoorganizesthefastingfromfoodfortheFiftyDays, hadhenotbeeninspiredbytheHolySpiritofRevelation, howcouldheeverhavefoundanddiscovered thecalculationforperiodsoftimethatiscalled‘epact’? Hailtoyou,Opriests,toyoubegiventhanksandpraise thatyoucamediligentlyandwithoutdelay tothatplaceofgatheringandassembly wherethecalculationbyepacttaughtbytheHolySpirit wascommunicatedtoyouthroughthereveredDemetrius. Hailtoyourhands,ODemetrius,whichwrote thecalculationoftheepacts,bothpastandfuture... SeveralmanuscriptsoftheEthiopiccomputisticaltraditionrecentlystudied by Otto Neugebauer (1979a: 92–3) attribute to Demetrius a ‘Computus’ written in the 26th year of his episcopate and the 206th year since Christ. TheChristianeraisagainthatofAnnianus,andthe206thyearcorrespondsto ad214.The26thyearoftheepiscopateofDemetrius,inthechronologythat Eusebiusgives,wouldalsocorrespondto214. There are some problems, chronological and historical, with this tradition. EutychiussaysthatDemetriussentletterstoMaximusofAntiochand‘Gabius’ or‘Agapius’ofJerusalem.AccordingtoEusebius,Demetriusbecamepatriarch the year before Maximus of Antioch died in 190/191, while Victor became bishop of Rome in 193/4 and served for ten years.3 If the date in ad 214 for the‘Computus’ofDemetriushasanyhistoricalbasis,thenneitherMaximusnor Victor was still in oYce at the time that Demetrius ‘invented the epacts’. The nameof‘Gabius’or‘Agapius’asbishopofJerusalemisnotconsistentwithwhat Eusebiusreportsaboutthatchurch.Eusebiussays(HE4.5)thathewasunable toWndanyevidencefordatesofthebishopsofJerusalem,althoughhehadlists 3 Eusebius,Chronicle,pp.207,209Helm.HereandatHE4.24,themanuscriptshavethe name‘Maximinus’.Syncellus667.11writes‘Maximus’. The8-YearCycleandInventionofEpacts 113 ofnamesandsaystheirepiscopatesareknowntohavebeenveryshort.Eusebius includestwopersonsbythenameof‘Gaius’or‘Gaianus’asbishopsofJerusa- lem,numberedas22and24inalistofGentilebishopsbeginningwithoneMark inthetimeoftheemperorHadrian(HE5.12,Chronicle,p.204Helm).Neither nameappearsinthelistthathegivesfortheperiodofthe190sandfollowing (Chronicle, p. 209 Helm). He names Narcissus as bishop of Jerusalem, co- chairman with Theophilus of the conference of bishops who met at Caesarea todiscusstheEastercontroversies(HE5.25).Inhislistforthe190s,Narcissus wassucceededbyDios,Germanios, Gordios,andanotherNarcissus. Eusebius says that Alexander became bishop in ad 212/13, serving as coadjutor with Narcissus(Chronicle,pp.209,213Helm;cf.HE6.8.4). The notice for the fourth day of Baramhat names diVerent persons as occupantsofthevariousseesinthetimeofDemetrius—SerapionatAntioch, Democratus at Rome, and Symmachus at Jerusalem. According to Eusebius (Chronicle, pp. 209, 213 Helm), Serapion was indeed a contemporary of Demetrius, serving at Antioch from 191 to 210. The name of Symmachus appears in Eusebius’ list for Jerusalem at a much earlier period (Chronicle, p.204Helm;cf.HE5.12).No‘Democratus’ofRomeisotherwiseknown.Nor canDemetrius have summoned to ameeting theastronomerClaudius Ptol- emy,whodiedsometenyearsormorebeforeDemetriusbecamebishop. In addition to this problem with the names of the bishops, there is the historicalquestionofwhetheritistruethatDemetriusestablishedtheLenten fastoffortydays.AccordingtotheCoptictradition,theAlexandrianchurch had previously observed the 40-day fast after the festival of the baptism of Jesus in January, thus more directly commemorating the forty days that the Gospels (Mark 1: 13, Matt. 4: 1, Luke 4: 2) say Jesus spent fasting in the wilderness after his baptism by John. Demetrius established what became thestandardWftydaysofLentbytransferringtheforty-dayfasttotheperiod beforeEasterandaddingittothefastofHolyWeek. Againstthistradition,thereisevidencetosuggestthatitwasAthanasius,not Demetrius,whoestablishedtheLentenfast.ApartfromtheCoptictraditionon Demetrius,thereisnocertainreferencetoa40-dayLentenfastbeforethetimeof Athanasius.InhislettertoBasilides,DionysiusofAlexandriadiscussesonlythe fastofHolyWeekandmentionsadiversityofpractices.4 SomeofthePaschallettersofAthanasius,bishopofAlexandriafrom328to 373,havesurvivedinaSyriactranslation(seeCh.9).Attheendofeachletter, AthanasiusgivesthedatesforthebeginningofthefastandforEasterSunday. Nowhereinthebodyoftheletteristhereanyindicationoftheyear.Thatand 4 PG10.1277;pp.54–58Bienert. 114 PaschalCalculationsinEarlyChristianity otherinformationis,however,providedinaheading,whichseemstobethe workofoneormoreeditors(seeCh.9). Inseveraloftheseletters,numberedas1,4,5,and14,correspondingtothe years329,332,333,and342,AthanasiusprescribesafastonlyforHolyWeek, from Monday to Saturday. Intheletters numbered 2,3, 6,7, 10, 11, 13, and 19,fortheyears330,331,334,335,338,339,341,and347,Athanasiuscallsfor afastof fortydays,beginning onaMonday, severalweeksbeforeEaster. For theyear340,whenAthanasiuswasinexileinRome,theusualPaschalletteris not extant. The collection does preserve a letter to Serapion, one of the bishops of Egypt, urging him to proclaim the fast of forty days and to encourage the brethren to observe it, so that the Egyptians will not be alone among the Christians of the world in failing to fast during this period. The letterisnumberedas12andthereforeassignedtotheyear340.Rene´-Georges Coquin (1967) has therefore argued that it was Athanasius who transferred the40-dayfastfromEpiphany toLent. Some of the surviving letters seem to have been numbered and dated incorrectly. It makes sense that the letters providing only for a one-week fastshouldbegroupedtogetheratthebeginningofAthanasius’patriarchate, while those that add a 40-day Lenten fast should all be later. Several sets of years—330, 341 and 352; 331, 342, and 353; 333 and 339; 334 and 345; 335 and 346; 338 and 349—all share the same date for Easter Sunday in the Alexandrian cycle. It is likely therefore that letter 2 belongs to 341 or 352, insteadof330,andletter3to342or353,insteadof331.Letters6and7might belongto345and346,insteadof334and335,andletter10to349,insteadof 338.ThelettertoSerapionprobablybelongsto340or341.IftheLentenfast was a recent innovation atthat time, thenthe letter for 339would represent theearliest certain evidencefor that custom inEgypt.Alberto Camplanihas recentlyarguedthatletters6,7,and10arecorrectlydatedto334,335,and338 andthatitwasthereforein334thatAthanasiusintroducedtheLentenfast.5 In any case, the core of the Coptic tradition—that Demetrius was the ‘inventoroftheepacts’andthathehadaparticularconcernfortheregulation ofthefast—islikelytobetrue.AccordingtoEusebius(HE5.23),regulationof the fast was one of the issues under discussion in the time of Demetrius. TheinventionoftheepactsisthenecessaryWrststeptowardstheconstruction of a Paschal table. Someone in the early third century must have taken thatstep,andthereisnoreasontodenythatiswasDemetrius. TheearliestPaschalcalculuswasprobablyalistofdatesforthe14thdayof thePassovermoonsuchasthatweWndattributedtotheJewsinthedocument 5 Camplani1993;cf.Camplani1989:171–83,2003:178–9;foragoodbriefsummaryofthe entireproblemseeBarnes1993:183–91. The8-YearCycleandInventionofEpacts 115 fromtheCouncilofSardica(seeCh.9).Suchalistisconstructedbystarting withoneknowndateforthePassoverfullmoonandthensubtractingeleven days in each successive year. When that subtraction results in a date for the fullmoonsoearlythatitcannolongerbeconsideredasavernalmoon,when ‘the barley is ripe’ (Exod. 13: 4), one adds 30 days, so that the 14th day of Nisanadvancesby19daysinrelationtothepreviousyear. While such a scheme is based on the 11-day annual diVerential between the sun and the moon, it is not a system of epacts. The method produces a repeating cycle after 30 years, but 30 Julianyears is not a good Wt between solar days (10,957.50) and whole lunar months averaging 29½ days (10,957.50/29.5¼371.44). Lunar‘epacts’,asthenameimplies,areadditionstothemoon.Inasystem of epacts, the calculator adds 11 daysto the age of the moon eachyear as of some date in a solar calendar. Usually that date is either the Wrst day of the civil calendar or, to simplify calculations, the day before. The epact for the year,thenumberofadditionstothemoon,becomesthebasisfordetermining theageofthemoonasofanydateinthesolarcalendar. WhenDemetrius‘inventedtheepacts’,hediscoveredadeviceforcalculat- ing the date of 14 Nisan that would producea periodic list after eight years. WorkingwiththeAlexandriancalendaranditsequalmonthsof30dayseach, Demetrius decided to number the days of the moon from 1 to 30 and to express the age of the moon as of some date that would be convenient for calculating the date of the 14th dayof Nisan. We do not know what date he chose, but it may very well have been he who adopted what was later the standard practice of deWning the epact as of the last epagomenal day in the Alexandriancalendar. Thenextstepistodecidewhatdateshouldbesetasthelimitbeforewhich the Paschal full moon cannot fall. In the classical Alexandrian system, that datewas21March,thevernalequinox.Intheearliestperiod,the14thdayof themoonwasallowedtoprecedetheequinox,solongasEasterSundayitself followed the equinox. The rule that Eusebius (HE 7.2 0) attributes to Dio- nysiusofAlexandriastates,‘nototherwise thanafter thespringequinoxisit propertoobservethePaschalfeast’.IfinthetimeofDemetriusandDionysius the equinox was already deWned as of 25 Phamenoth¼21 March, then the earliestdateforEasteris26Phamenoth¼22March.Theearliestpossibledate for 14 Nisan would therefore be 19 Phamenoth¼15 March, but the actual dateinanygivenyear woulddependonthedaysoftheweek. If Demetrius wanted to construct a list in which the dates of 14 Nisan wouldbegin torepeat after someperiod, hewouldneedto modify theyear- to-yearadvanceoftheepactssuchthattheaccumulationequalledamultiple 116 PaschalCalculationsinEarlyChristianity of30atsomepoint.Theshortestperiodwithinwhichthatwouldbethecase is eight years—the octae¨teris. After eight years, the epacts total 88 days; and duringthesameperiodtherearetwoadditionaldaysforleapyear.Thus,one needonlyaddanadditionallunarday ineachoftwoleapyearstomake the epactmoveby12,insteadof11,withatotalof90,insteadof88. Eusebius Wrst associates the use of the octae¨teris with Dionysius of Alex- andria.Sozomen(7.18)attributestheuseofan8-yearcycletotheMontanists of Asia Minor. The origins of the Montanist community are approximately contemporarywiththeepiscopateofDemetrius.EusebiusdatesMontanusto the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161–80), Epiphanius to the 19th year of Antoninus Pius (157).6 T. D. Barnes (1970) has argued in favour of the Eusebian chronology. How early the Montanists might have adopted an 8-yearcycleandfromwhatsourceisdebatable(Strobel1977:178–85). According to the Ethiopic texts, Demetrius established his method of calculation beginning from the year corresponding to ad 214. The earliest extantPaschaltableofanykind—thatattributedtoHippolytus—isbasedon the 8-year cycle and begins in ad 222, exactly eight years later. The Paschal table of Hippolytus is a document of the Roman church. It is, however, writteninGreek.AsMarcelRichardhassuggested(1974:309),theHippoly- tan table probably represents the adoption in Rome of Demetrius’methods, adapted to the Roman calendar and to the Roman rules. Under those rules, according to Victorius of Aquitania (Krusch 1937: 19), Easter must not be observed before the 16th day of the moon nor after the 22nd. The Romans also prohibited any observance of Easter Sunday after 21 April, as we know from a letter of Pope Leo I on the subject.7 As we shall see, the Hippolytan tableadherestothoserules. 2. THE PASCHALTABLE OF HIPPOLYTUS Writing of the times of the emperor Alexander Severus (222–35), Eusebius (HE6.22)saysthatHippolytus,authorofmanyotherworks,composedalso, intheWrstyearoftheemperorAlexanderSeverus,atreatise‘OnthePascha’,in whichhesetforthatableofdatesandwrotealistfora16-yearcyclefor the Pascha.Eusebiuslistsafewofhisotherwritings,including‘OntheSixDays’, ‘AftertheSixDays’,‘AgainstMarcion’,‘OntheSong’,‘OnPartsofEzekiel’,and ‘Against All Heresies’. Until the sixteenth century, this brief comment of 6 Eusebius,HE5.3;Epiphanius,Panarion48.1,2:319Holl. 7 LeotoMarcian,Letter121,PL54.1057;Krusch1884:259. The8-YearCycleandInventionofEpacts 117 Eusebius and later authors dependent upon himwas all that we knew about thePaschaltableofHippolytus. i. The Inscribed Statue About1550, the headless statue of a seated Wgure was discovered near the ChurchofSanLorenzofuorileMura,inthesuburbsofRome.8Inscribedin Greekcharactersonaplinthontherearofthechairisalistofwritings.These includeawork‘OnthePsalms’,‘OnJohntheEvangelistandtheApocalypse’,a ‘Chronicle to the Greeks’, an ‘Apostolic Tradition’, and a ‘Demonstration of the dates of Easter in Tabular Form’. On the right side of the chair thereis a heading above a 16-year table of Paschal full moons. On the left side of the chair there is a 112-year list of dates for Easter Sunday, under the heading, ‘FirstyearofAlexanderCaesar:theSundaysofthePaschayearbyyear:points indicate the bissextum.’ The inscriptions belong paleographically to the Wrst halfofthethirdcentury(Brent1995:3–4).Attheheadofthe16-yeartablethe inscriptionreads: In the Wrst year of the Roman emperor Alexander Severus, the 14th of the Paschal moon fell on Saturday, the Ides of April, during an embolismic month. For the succeedingyearsitwillbeasindicatedinthetablebelow.Eventsofthepastwereas noted.OnemustbreakthefastwhenSundaycomes. AlexanderSeverusbecameemperorinMarchof222.9Modernastronomical calculations agree that the moonwas full on 13 April of that year. No name appears on the statue. The inscription led its discoverers to believe that the16-yeartableisthesamethatEusebiusattributedtoHippolytusandthat thestatuewasarepresentationofHippolytushimself.Thestatuewassubse- quentlygivenanidealizedheadandarmsandnowstandsattheentranceofthe VaticanLibrary.MargheritaGuarducci(1977)hasarguedthattheWgurewasin fact female, perhaps a representation of Wisdom (Sophia) or speciWcally the EpicureanphilosopherThemista. The16-yeartableofPaschalfullmoonscontainedinthisinscription,begin- ningwiththeWrstyearofAlexanderSeverus,iscertainlythesameasthatwhich EusebiusattributestoHippolytus. The list of writings on the statue,however, does not overlap with Eusebius’ list, except for the Paschal table itself. The identityoftheHippolytustowhomEusebiusattributesa16-yearlistisinfact amajorproblemonwhichscholarshaveyettoreachagreement(Cerrato2002). 8 For discussion of the discovery and its date, see Brent 1995: 3–50; for the text of the inscriptions,PG10.875–84;therearephotographicreproductionsinBrent1995. 9 HistoriaAugusta,SeverusAlexander7.1–2. 118 PaschalCalculationsinEarlyChristianity ii. The Hippolytan Problem ThenameofHippolytusappearstwice elsewhereintheEcclesiasticalHistory of Eusebius. Eusebius says (HE 6.20) that during the time of the emperor Caracalla(198–217)therelivedseverallearnedchurchmen,whoselettersand otherwritingsEusebiuswasabletoconsultinthelibraryestablishedatAelia (theformerJerusalem)byAlexander,whohadsucceededNarcissusasbishop in that city. Among these writings were letters and other compositions by Beryllus,bishopofBostrainArabia(modernBosrainSyria),andbyHippo- lytus,the‘president(proestos)ofanotherchurchsomewhere’.Elsewhere(HE 6.46),EusebiussaysthatDionysiusofAlexandriasentalettertotheRoman church,usingoneHippolytusasacourier.Eusebiusdoesnotquotefromthe letter nor explicitly state its subject, but he does say that Dionysius wrote several letters on the subject of repentance for those who had lapsed during therecentpersecutions. St Jerome knew little more about Hippolytus than did Eusebius. In his collection of short biographies, arranged in rough chronological order, Jer- ome listsHippolytusafter Beryllus andbeforeAlexander (De virisillustribus 61). Jerome gives a more extensive list of the writings of Hippolytus than Eusebius, including commentaries on the Psalms, Isaiah, Daniel, Revelation, Proverbs,andEcclesiastes. LikeEusebius,Jeromestatesthathewasunabletoascertainofwhatchurch Hippolytus was the bishop. From as early as the sixth century, however, Byzantine authors cite a number of exegetical texts as being the work of ‘Hippolytus of Rome’. Leontius of Byzantium (c.550), quotes from a book on the Oracle of Balaam by Hippolytus ‘bishop and martyr’ (PG 86. 1312). JohnofDamascus(c.725)quotesfromawork‘OnChristandAnti-Christ’by ‘Hippolytusbishopof Rome’(PG96. 525).Several fragmentsofa commen- taryontheBookofGenesisareattributedto‘StHippolytusbishopofRome’ (frr.1–4,ed.Achelis).ThepatriarchPhotius,inhiscatalogueofthelibraryat Constantinopleintheninthcentury,hastwoentriesforHippolytus(Bibl.cod. 121, 202). In the Wrst, he says Hippolytus was a student of Irenaeus and a contemporary of Origen and was the author of a work ‘Against the 32 Heresies’. In the second, he says Hippolytus was a ‘bishop and martyr’, who wrote a commentary on Daniel and a book ‘On Christ and Antichrist’. Substantial portions of the commentaryon Daniel havesurvived, attributed inthemanuscriptsto‘HippolytusbishopofRome’. AlistoftheearlybishopsofRomepreservedintheChronographof354does notincludeanyHippolytusasbishop.Thatlist(Mommsen1892:74–5)does associateone‘Hippolytusthepresbyter[priest]’withPontianus,whobecame The8-YearCycleandInventionofEpacts 119 bishopduring the reign of Alexander Severusin the consulship of Pompeia- nus andPelignianus (ad231).Pontianus andthepresbyter Hippolytus were deported to Sardinia, in the consulship of Severus and Quintianus (235), where Pontianus died on 28 September. A calendar of martyrs’ days in the same work lists for 13 August ‘Hippolytus at the cemetery on the Via Tiburtina’and‘PontianusatthecemeteryofCallistus’(Mommsen1892:72). To complicate matters, several Byzantine writers refer to Hippolytus as bishop, not of Rome, but of Portus. The Chronicon Paschale (c.630) quotes (12. 22–13. 1) from a composition ‘Against all Heresies’ as the work of ‘Hippolytus the martyr, bishop of a place called Portus near Rome’. George Syncellus (c.800) gives a list of works (438. 7–16) that he attributes to ‘Hippolytus the holy philosopher, bishop of Portus at Rome’. The list is similartothatofEusebius,butaddscommentariesonDanielandRevelation. Elsewhere (381. 23–4), Syncellus includes ‘Hippolytus the holy martyr and apostle,archbishopofRome’amongthosewhodatedtheNativitytotheyear 5500 or 5501 of the world. Zonaras (c.1100) says that Hippolytus was a learned manwhowrote manycommentaries and served as bishop of Portus whenUrbanwasbishopofRome(Epitomehistoriarum,iii.123).Nicephorus Callistus(c.1300),inhisEcclesiasticalHistory(4.31,PG145.1052),saysthat ‘Hippolytus bishop of Portus at Rome’ Xourished in the time of Alexander Severus.Hegivesalistofworksfuller thanthatofSyncellus. Portus was the harbour of Rome during the imperial period, a short distanceupriverfromOstiaintheTiberdelta.Oneoftheearliestreferences to Hippolytus of Portus comes from the Latin poet Prudentius (c.400), who wrote an encomium (Carmen 11) on the Passion of St Hippolytus, whose shrine on the Via Tiburtina he visited. Although Prudentius does not refer explicitlytoPortus,hedoessaythatHippolytuswasmartyredataplacenear themouthoftheTiber(ostiaperTiberina).ExcavationsatPortushaveshown that there was a church dedicated to Hippolytus the martyr from as early as the fourth century’ (Brent 1995: 385–6). A sarcophagus bears an inscription of the ninth century reading: hic requiescit beatus Ypolitus mar<tyr>. The poemofPrudentiusseemstocombineelementsofseveraldiVerenttraditions. How many persons named Hippolytus are at the root of these cults and the traditionsarisingfromthemremainsthesubjectofscholarlydebate.10 Among the works that Eusebius and Jerome attribute to Hippolytus is a ‘Refutationof AllHeresies’. TheauthoroftheChronicon Paschalecitesfroma book of similar title as being the work of Hippolytus, ‘Bishop of Portus near Rome’.Nosuchtitleappearsinthelistofworksonthestatue.In1841,Minoides Mynasdiscoveredat Mt.Athos andtransported toParisa fourteenth-century 10 Do¨llinger1853,pp.28–63intheEnglishtranslation;Cerrato2002:3–13.

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The system of numbering the years A.D. (Anni Domini, Years of the Lord) originated with Dionysius Exiguus. Dionysius drafted a 95-year table of dates for Easter beginning with the year 532 A.D. Why Dionysius chose the year that he did to number as '1' has been a source of controversy and speculation
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