- now lost pre-modern
Cyprianic literature with no
apparent connection to any
extant works beyond being inspired by the
Cyprianic legend. The Portuguese...
- ‘The
Principles of the
Cyprianic Age,’ 1695; 2nd edit. 1717, (by ‘J. S.’). ‘A
Vindication of … the
Principles of the
Cyprianic Age,’ 1695; 2nd edit. 1701...
- his bishop.
Sixtus is
thought by some to be the
author of the pseudo-
Cyprianic writing Ad Novatianum,
though this view has not
found general acceptance...
-
acquiring Cyprianic attribution along the way.
These include: De
laude martyrii (On the
Glory of Martyrdom),
mentioned in a
stichometry of a
Cyprianic m****cript...
- The
Plague of
Cyprian was a
pandemic which afflicted the
Roman Empire from
about AD 249 to 262, or 251/2 to 270. The
plague is
thought to have
caused widespread...
- that the
Incarnation also took
place on that date is
found in the pseudo-
Cyprianic work De
Pascha Computus, c. 240. It says that the
coming of
Jesus and...
-
achieved no
success on this
expedition because they were
struck by the
Cyprianic Plague. The
fleet probably also
sacked Troy and Ephesus,
damaging the...
- only 1:9 and 106:1–18 are known. The
first p****age
occurs in the Pseudo-
Cyprianic Ad
Novatianum and the Pseudo-Vigilian
Contra Varimadum; the
second was...
- particular, had
circulated for over a
century in an
earlier Latin version (the
Cyprianic Version),
before it was su****ded by the
Vetus Latina version in the...
- a
mortality of 15–30% in the
empire as a whole.
Zosimus describes the
Cyprianic outbreak as even worse. The
armies and, by extension, the
frontier provinces...