Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity
View through CrossRef
Abstract
One of the most widely read and studied texts composed in Late Antiquity is the prison diary of Vibia Perpetua, a young woman of the elite classes who was martyred in March of the year 202 or 203 C.E. in Carthage, as part of a civic celebration honoring Caesar Geta. She was well-married and had recently become the mother of a baby son, but despite her advantages, she refused to recant her faith when she was arrested with other recent converts to Christianity. Imprisoned with her was her pregnant slave Felicity. Perpetua's steadfastness in her belief led to her martyrdom in the amphitheater. A description of the heroic deaths of both women, and the autobiography of one of the leaders of the Christian community, Saturus, is woven into Perpetua's diary by an anonymous editor, who tells us that, as they died, Perpetua, Felicity, and the other condemned Christians bid farewell with a kiss of peace. This text survives in one Greek and in nine Latin manuscript versions. This new study contains much that has never been done before, including a prosopography of all the individuals mentioned in the Passion, a new English translation and a detailed historical commentary in English on the entire narrative of the Passion. It also includes a newly edited version of the Latin text based on all the extant manuscripts and—rarer still—the Greek text. The book concludes with a complete codicological description of all of the known manuscripts and thorough scholarly indices of the text itself. Perpetua's prison diary is a revered text of early Christianity, and Heffernan's new translation and commentary brings unprecedented scholarly resources to the much-loved Passion.
Title: The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity
Description:
Abstract
One of the most widely read and studied texts composed in Late Antiquity is the prison diary of Vibia Perpetua, a young woman of the elite classes who was martyred in March of the year 202 or 203 C.
E.
in Carthage, as part of a civic celebration honoring Caesar Geta.
She was well-married and had recently become the mother of a baby son, but despite her advantages, she refused to recant her faith when she was arrested with other recent converts to Christianity.
Imprisoned with her was her pregnant slave Felicity.
Perpetua's steadfastness in her belief led to her martyrdom in the amphitheater.
A description of the heroic deaths of both women, and the autobiography of one of the leaders of the Christian community, Saturus, is woven into Perpetua's diary by an anonymous editor, who tells us that, as they died, Perpetua, Felicity, and the other condemned Christians bid farewell with a kiss of peace.
This text survives in one Greek and in nine Latin manuscript versions.
This new study contains much that has never been done before, including a prosopography of all the individuals mentioned in the Passion, a new English translation and a detailed historical commentary in English on the entire narrative of the Passion.
It also includes a newly edited version of the Latin text based on all the extant manuscripts and—rarer still—the Greek text.
The book concludes with a complete codicological description of all of the known manuscripts and thorough scholarly indices of the text itself.
Perpetua's prison diary is a revered text of early Christianity, and Heffernan's new translation and commentary brings unprecedented scholarly resources to the much-loved Passion.
Related Results
My Only Great Passion
My Only Great Passion
In an industry that celebrates extravagance and showmanship, Danish film director Carl Th. Dreyer was a rarity, a man who guarded his privacy fiercely and believed that film provid...
Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading
Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading
President Theodore Roosevelt had a passion for reading books, and he did not keep this passion to himself. He often wrote about his experiences as a reader and collector of books. ...
Indian Peace Medals and Other Medals at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Indian Peace Medals and Other Medals at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science
The Francis and Mary Crane Collection of Native American material culture at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science contains nearly 200 medals that they described as “relating t...
The Passions as Original Existences
The Passions as Original Existences
Hume’s thesis that reason and passion cannot be opposed depends in part on his defense of the claim that because passions do not represent, they cannot oppose the representations, ...
The challenge of modern art
The challenge of modern art
Allen Leepa, Modern Art, 2015-09-06, Beechhurst Press...
John Henry Newman
John Henry Newman
Newman has been much vaunted as a ‘master’ of non-fiction prose style, and justly so. His felicity of phrasing is astonishing: so precise, so elegant, so vivid. This chapter admire...

