The "De Trinitate" Of Didymus the Blind: Book I. Translation and introduction
by Saieg, Paul Robert, M.A., UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER, 2006, 108 pages; 1439457

Abstract:

The book contained within these pages was composed at the height of the vast and difficult debates that filled the minds and pages of those men who were to become the great saints and heretics of the Roman Empire's first Christian century. It represents the brilliant, but, at times, not altogether clear reflection of long life over a long century's controversies. With all the erudition of Alexandria, the De Trinitate consolidates the arguments of Nicene Christianity against its fourth-century opponents, and searches them out among the scriptures with the enormous memory of Alexandria's famed exegetes. The following is a translation of Book I of Didymus the Blind's De Trinitate together with a short critical and theological introduction to the text and a list of errata in both the text of the TLG_E and printed text of J. Hönscheid of which it is a relatively faithful transcription.

 
AdviserNoel Lenski
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER
SourceMAI/ 45-02, p. , Feb 2007
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsReligious history; Philosophy of Religion; Church History
Publication Number1439457
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